Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
myTuner Radio, or simply myTuner, is an Internet radio app directory/platform owned by AppGeneration – Software Technologies, Lda, [1] a development company based in Porto, Portugal founded by Eduardo Carqueja in October 2010. myTuner Radio has over 50,000 radio stations and one million podcasts from all around the world (except in the UK where only UK stations are available). [2]
Last.fm: Discontinued radio streaming service; now a database for tracking listening histories [93] 28 April 2014: Batanga Radio: Shut down [94] 25 December 2017: MixRadio: Shut down [95] 21 March 2016: Music Unlimited: Replaced by PlayStation Music powered by Spotify. [96] 29 March 2015: Musicovery: Shut down the interactive radio service and ...
Radioplayer is a radio technology platform, owned by UK radio broadcasters and operated under licence in some other countries. It operates an internet radio web tuner, a set of mobile phone apps, an in-car adaptor, and a growing range of integrations with other connected devices and platforms.
A podcast client, podcatcher, or podcast app, is a computer program or mobile app used to stream or download podcasts, via an RSS or XML feed. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] While podcast clients are best known for streaming and downloading audio podcasts, many can also download video podcasts, newsfeeds , text, and pictures.
An Internet radio studio in 2010. Internet radio, also known as online radio, web radio, net radio, streaming radio, e-radio and IP radio, is a digital audio service transmitted via the Internet. Broadcasting on the Internet is usually referred to as webcasting since it is not transmitted broadly through wireless means. It can either be used as ...
From 2019, the TuneIn website and apps allowed users to listen to more than 100,000 global radio stations including AM, FM, HD, LP, digital, and internet stations, and podcasts. [30] TuneIn's directory lists various sports, news, talk, and music broadcasts from around the world.
In November 2004, Canadian Satellite Radio filed an application with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to bring the XM service to Canada. Along with Sirius Canada and the consortium of CHUM Limited and Astral Media , CSR was one of three applications for national subscription radio services submitted to the CRTC.
These stations transmit an analog FM signal centered on 87.75 MHz, designated by receiver and station marketing as "87.7 FM". This is just below the lowest FM band frequency of 87.9 MHz, and within the internationally recognized Band II, which extends down to 87.5 MHz and is thus receivable by most consumer radios.