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Groups > comp.lang.basic.visual.misc > #3753
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.basic.visual.misc |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-01-07 18:08 -0800 |
| Message-ID | <b227f7dc-159c-4ce4-9d55-2349721d79c8n@googlegroups.com> (permalink) |
| Subject | Download World Radio Stations |
| From | Blenda Loveless <blendaloveless@gmail.com> |
I love interviewing experts from around the globe; teachers, designers, environmentalists, and earth activists who learn from and work with Nature. Sustainable World Radio started on my local community radio station, KCSB FM, and can now be heard online and on radio stations around the world. Tune in to discover practical, earth-friendly, and nature-based solutions that can lead us to a better world. I hope you enjoy listening. download world radio stations Download File https://t.co/7WhWJv6Diy Radio is an important player and an essential part of maintenance and transition to peace. Professional radio addresses both the root causes and triggers of conflict, before they potentially explode into violence. It offers an alternative methodology of conflict prevention by clarifying frustrations, or clashes of interest, clearing misunderstandings, and identifying issues of distrust. This can help counter hate, the desire for revenge, or the will to take up arms. Radio is uniquely positioned to bring communities together and foster positive dialogue for change. By listening to its audiences and responding to their needs, radio services provide the diversity of views and voices needed to address the challenges we all face. The United Nations Audiovisual Library presents UN Radio Classics, an online archive of documentary and dramatic programmes starring Audrey Hepburn, Kirk Douglas and Bing Crosby, among many others. These programmes, available free of charge with digitally remastered sound, offer a unique way of experiencing key historical moments of the United Nations and of the world throughout the second half of the 20th century. In an era marked by the dizzying speed of technological innovation and the rapid obsolescence of one shiny new platform after another, Radio is beginning its second century of service as one of the most dependable and widely utilized forms of media in the world. One of the opportunities of World Radio Day 2024 being made available by UNESCO is to provide your station, network or show with a list of radio outlets around the world available to participate in programming partnerships with their colleagues in other countries. You can schedule interviews/conversations (either live or prerecorded) with your broadcast colleagues worldwide to compare and contrast the history and role of radio in their respective countries on or leading up to February 13. These shows can be simulcast on both stations or simply be one personality interviewing another. On the occasion of World Radio Day 2024, UNESCO releases 20 audio files of one minute each, which can be broadcast, shared and used free of charge and without copyright restriction. You will be able to include them in your programs or events, and also upload them to your social media platforms. The following audios are in their original language, and you are welcome to do a voice-over for your radio station's broadcasts using the attached transcriptions. But we always knew when we had arrived, because there would be a sign, and it would tell you to tune to the Walt Disney World radio station on your dial to receive up-to-the-minute information about your day. This riveting site still lists them in a collection of Florida low-powered radio stations, but has notes that no transmission has been received since at least 2000. Maybe the Millenium Celebration shut them all down. The Disney radio stations were such a part of our car trips from Missouri when I was a kid! We definitely had our milestones (thanks to the AAA Trip Tik), and we really started getting excited by the Ocala preview center. The radio stations were the last step and always such a treat. I remember still having them as late as 1998. We drove down this past January with our kids, and it would have been great to have that marker when we arrived. So much nostalgia! Radio is a platform that allows people to interact, despite different educational levels, so somebody may be illiterate but still be able to call in a show to give a testimony and participate in radio, Mirta Lourenco, a UNESCO spokesman, told Al Jazeera. The arrival of mobile phones has changed the consumption habits of millions, but many come with built-in radio chips and this has helped to keep the radio industry effective more than 120 years after the first radio broadcast. We would like to thank Archive.org for having so many great old-time radio shows and tracks from the 1930's, 40's and 50's and having them free to use. We would also like to thank flyingomelette.com, and everyone that has commented, downloaded, and endorsed Old World Radio! We will soon be bringing on board another person here very soon and he will be making the actual Old World Radio building with some special NPCs you will really want to meet! His previous work is excellent and we are excited to see what he can do for Old World Radio! You have been listening to them on the air, and soon you will be able to meet them in person! com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest$HttpRequestException: java.net.UnknownHostException: Unable to resolve host "all.api.radio-browser.info": No address associated with hostname at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.code(HttpRequest.java:1562) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.stream(HttpRequest.java:1855) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.buffer(HttpRequest.java:1844) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.body(HttpRequest.java:1764) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.body(HttpRequest.java:1779) at com.henry.worldradio.WorldRadio$2.run(WorldRadio.java:353) at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:764) Caused by: java.net.UnknownHostException: Unable to resolve host "all.api.radio-browser.info": No address associated with hostname at java.net.Inet6AddressImpl.lookupHostByName(Inet6AddressImpl.java:157) at java.net.Inet6AddressImpl.lookupAllHostAddr(Inet6AddressImpl.java:105) at java.net.InetAddress.getAllByName(InetAddress.java:1154) at com.android.okhttp.Dns$1.lookup(Dns.java:39) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.resetNextInetSocketAddress(RouteSelector.java:175) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.nextProxy(RouteSelector.java:141) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.RouteSelector.next(RouteSelector.java:83) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.StreamAllocation.findConnection(StreamAllocation.java:174) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.StreamAllocation.findHealthyConnection(StreamAllocation.java:126) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.StreamAllocation.newStream(StreamAllocation.java:95) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.HttpEngine.connect(HttpEngine.java:281) at com.android.okhttp.internal.http.HttpEngine.sendRequest(HttpEngine.java:224) at com.android.okhttp.internal.huc.HttpURLConnectionImpl.execute(HttpURLConnectionImpl.java:461) at com.android.okhttp.internal.huc.HttpURLConnectionImpl.getResponse(HttpURLConnectionImpl.java:407) at com.android.okhttp.internal.huc.HttpURLConnectionImpl.getHeaders(HttpURLConnectionImpl.java:163) at com.android.okhttp.internal.huc.HttpURLConnectionImpl.getHeaderField(HttpURLConnectionImpl.java:207) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.header(HttpRequest.java:2114) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.parameter(HttpRequest.java:2209) at com.github.kevinsawicki.http.HttpRequest.charset(HttpRequest.java:2319) ... 3 more Caused by: android.system.GaiException: android_getaddrinfo failed: EAI_NODATA (No address associated with hostname) at libcore.io.Linux.android_getaddrinfo(Native Method) at libcore.io.BlockGuardOs.android_getaddrinfo(BlockGuardOs.java:172) at java.net.Inet6AddressImpl.lookupHostByName(Inet6AddressImpl.java:137) ... 21 more National Radio Day, celebrated on Aug. 20 in the United States, acknowledges the invention of the radio as an essential form of mass media communication. To mark the occasion, here are seven facts from Pew Research Center analyses about the state of radio in the U.S. For National Radio Day, Pew Research Center conducted this analysis to provide findings about radio listeners, radio journalists and the broader radio industry in the United States. All findings are based on previously published studies by the Center. Details about the methodology of each study, including survey sample sizes and field dates, are available by following the links in this analysis. White and Black Americans are equally likely to get news at least sometimes from radio (48% each). Meanwhile, 42% of Hispanic adults and 37% of Asian adults say they get news from radio at least sometimes. When it comes to age, adults 50 to 64 are the most likely to get news at least sometimes from radio, with just over half (55%) saying they do this; 48% of those ages 30 to 49, 46% of those 65 and older, and 35% of those 18 to 29 say the same. Note: Data from previous years is updated annually. The BIA Advisory Services database contains revenue data for every year shown in the chart for 15 of the 27 all-news stations; therefore, only those stations are included in the averages. BIA Advisory Services does not typically report revenue for stations that are not part of a radio market. Data includes full-power AM and FM radio stations in the BIA Advisory Services database in 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia. Unlike with radio, younger adults are more likely than older adults to listen to podcasts. Two-thirds (67%) of Americans ages 18 to 29 have listened to a podcast in the past 12 months, compared with just 28% of those 65 and older. A brief historical overview: The printing press was the big innovation in communications until the telegraph was developed. Printing remained the key format for mass messages for years afterward, but the telegraph allowed instant communication over vast distances for the first time in human history. Telegraph usage faded as radio became easy to use and popularized; as radio was being developed, the telephone quickly became the fastest way to communicate person-to-person; after television was perfected and content for it was well developed, it became the dominant form of mass-communication technology; the internet came next, and newspapers, radio, telephones, and television are being rolled into this far-reaching information medium. 35fe9a5643
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Download World Radio Stations Blenda Loveless <blendaloveless@gmail.com> - 2024-01-07 18:08 -0800
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