When Radio Stations give out tickets for a concert, Are they usually good seats?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under radio | 3 Comments »

I won tickets for my sister to go see Britney Spears this March by calling in a radio station and naming the 5 songs they played. She is planning to buy extra tickets because she doesnt know if the ones I won from the radio station are good seats. Does anyone know? Anyone with expirience?

UGH I HATE YOU! i was trying to get tickets like crazy on 103.5 kiss fm (my chicago radio) and it was impossible to even get through. i had everyone i know trying for me too. and nothing. im so jealous of you right now. you suck.J/K i honestly envy you and you are lucky.

Is there an all Christmas music radio station in portland?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under radio music | 1 Comment »

Is there an all Christmas music radio station in portland? If so, which radio station is it? Or what about northern California? I’m driving form Seattle to Mesa, Az and i would like to listen to christmas music all the way down the coast. Please give me all the radio stations you know.

I know you’re probably referring to Portland, Oregon…though you didn’t specify. But do you know there is also Portland, Maine. I just had a situation this morning where someone didn’t even know Portland, Maine was in the US…they thought it was in Canada. But one thing I know is that both Portlands are in the US. Though, about your question….a lot of radio stations start playing mostly Christmas music a few days before Christmas….so just by flipping thru the dial, you’ll get one you like with Christmas music. Merry Christmas.

How can i listen FM radio on a sony ericsson phone using bluetooth?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under fm radio | 3 Comments »

I tried using a bluetooth headset to listen to FM radio on my sony ericsson phone but it doesn’t work because FM requires the wired handsfree to be plugged in to act like an antenna and there doesn’t seem to be any way to send the radio’s sound to the bluetooth headset after that.

you can’t unless your phone supports fm radio, if it does then you have to plug in the headphones. enjoy your phone

How old do you feel when all the songs that were popular when you were in highschool play on oldies radio?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under oldies radio | 13 Comments »

Debby Gibson….ugh!

<—-10 years younger than you
Ha ha loser

Where can I find a good online radio station?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under online radio | 1 Comment »

I have an LG VU and I want to find a good radio station I can stream off of through the mobile web. I know there is pandora but they want a fee. Is there somewhere online that is totally free and that works for mobile phones?

you may try http://www.soltrago.com/

How do i turn off a internet radio station that keeps coming on my computer?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under internet radio | 4 Comments »

I was wondering if anyone knows how to turn off internet radio stations? I have one that keeps coming on all by itself on my computer and i have tried EVERYTHING to turn it off and nothing is working. If anyone could i help me i would appreciate it, i am not even sure what radio station it is. I am running windows vista and i have a hp computer.

<start menu<control panel<add&remove programs, find the internet radio station and remove it, remove all icons and any other source and use www.pandora.com, I have it and does not have this feature. I also have a vista.

What are some LIVE radio websites for hindi music?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under live radio | 3 Comments »

I wanted to hear LIVE radio from India (Bollywood songs, Delhi, Mumbai). I did search a little on google but I wasn’t able to identify which was real soo it be greaat if I could get some website/link suggestions for LIVE radio from india.

www.bollywoodworld.com/radio/

or

www.apnaradio.com/

or

www.surfmusic.de/format/bollywood.html

or

www.indian-music.com/liveradio/

.
aa

What is the best talk radio station you listen to?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under radio station | 11 Comments »

What is the best talk radio station you listen to? Why do you like it? Please note the city/state you are in so I can find the radio station through the internet.

Alex Jones, & and Coast 2 Coast AM with George Noorey are awesome Radio Shows.

But I couldn’t suggest a frequency because I listen to them ONLINE. ( through winamp)

www.winamp.com

How to get Radio Stations from a further distance?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under radio stations | 2 Comments »

I have a Boombox, RCA RS 2620, is there anything I could do to it that I would get radio stations that are further?

put it closer to a window and get a bigger intena

How much "bandwidth" does streaming internet radio take?

Posted by admin on December 31st, 2009 and filed under streaming radio | 1 Comment »

We have a workgroup with about 30 local workstations, and 2 VPNs with about 4 users on each (remotely) we’re hosting an exchange server, the 2 VPN connections, and general browsing and email. Would it be a bad idea to open up internet radio streaming to the users?

We have (2) T1’s for a total of 3MBx3MB. I would like to allow users to stream radio at their desks, but would it consume too much bandwidth?

Thanks.

Streaming media storage size (in the common file system measurements megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes, and so on) is calculated from streaming bandwidth and length of the media with the following formula (for a single user and file):

Storage size (in megabytes) = length (in seconds) · bit rate (in kbit/s) / 8,388.608 (since 1 megabyte = 8 * 1,048,576 bits = 8,388.608 kilobits)

Real world example:

One hour of video encoded at 300 kbit/s ( a typical broadband video) encoded in a 320×240 pixels window size) will be:

(3,600 s · 300 kbit/s) / 8,388.608 = 128.7 MiB of storage

If the file is stored on a server for on-demand streaming and this stream is viewed by 1,000 people using a Unicast protocol, you would need

300 kbit/s · 1,000 = 300,000 kbit/s = 300 Mbit/s of bandwidth

This is equivalent to 125.73 GiB per hour. Of course, using a Multicast protocol the server sends out only a single stream that is common to all users. Hence, such a stream would only use 300 kbit/s of bandwidth.