About: Episode 1041   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/KcNVnWOfCI-Oo7mEf-Ol4g==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

I ran across this site and thought I'd pass it on to you guys. The concept is that listeners interact directly with the radio stations automation system to play the songs people want to hear. It brings crowdsourcing to radio. Being a radio engineer this was of interest to me. The system covers the big name social media outlets and adds a website widget that can be posted on any website, even text messaging when your favorite songs come on the air. They even boast an iphone app that lets people vote on the next song to be played and listen to an audio stream on the iphone. Anyway keep up the good work.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Episode 1041
rdfs:comment
  • I ran across this site and thought I'd pass it on to you guys. The concept is that listeners interact directly with the radio stations automation system to play the songs people want to hear. It brings crowdsourcing to radio. Being a radio engineer this was of interest to me. The system covers the big name social media outlets and adds a website widget that can be posted on any website, even text messaging when your favorite songs come on the air. They even boast an iphone app that lets people vote on the next song to be played and listen to an audio stream on the iphone. Anyway keep up the good work.
Episode Title
  • What does the brown Zune do for you?
mp3 link
Episode Date
  • 2009-08-13(xsd:date)
notes link
dbkwik:buzzoutloud...iPageUsesTemplate
Producer
  • Jason Howell
Guests
  • none
Episode Number
  • 1041(xsd:integer)
Duration
  • 2353.0
Hosts
  • Tom Merritt, Jason Howell Co-hosts: Brian Cooley & Rafe Needleman
abstract
  • I ran across this site and thought I'd pass it on to you guys. The concept is that listeners interact directly with the radio stations automation system to play the songs people want to hear. It brings crowdsourcing to radio. Being a radio engineer this was of interest to me. The system covers the big name social media outlets and adds a website widget that can be posted on any website, even text messaging when your favorite songs come on the air. They even boast an iphone app that lets people vote on the next song to be played and listen to an audio stream on the iphone. Anyway keep up the good work. Hey buzz crew, I have an opinion on why some companies might not want to show off their prototypes and early demo models. In projects that I have worked on in the past we have used additional debug tools and command line execution in test releases. It seems possible that marketing would get a hold of a product with similar implementations. If this is the case they wouldn’t want the slower response time to be documented. It is also possible they wouldn’t want reviewers to accidentally tap a debug button, or a button they know darn well that either doesn’t work or will crash the device. Keep up the great work, Hey buzz crew, now this may not seem relevant to the podcast but I’ve been noticing recently since I’ve started experimenting with garage band how common it is for podcasts to use garage band song samples (if that’s even what you call them). I started listening to a few of them and was like “oh that’s the buzz out loud theme” and then “oh that’s the hotspot theme”. So why is this; is it because these samples are cheaper or better? Thanks for presumably answering my stupid question Alameda
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