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Post by Deleted on Apr 11, 2018 21:47:22 GMT
Zeno RadioPreviously talked about at part15-US, Zeno Radio provides a way of being heard on people's telephones and it costs nothing! Check Out Zeno Radio
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Post by mark on Apr 11, 2018 23:34:02 GMT
Looks interesting. Can hobby broadcasters do this too?
Does it really cost nothing...no license, fees, etc. May look into this.
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Post by mark on Apr 11, 2018 23:44:30 GMT
Went to site and looked around but when I want to see how it works I get nothing...won't bring up any info.
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Post by Admin on Apr 12, 2018 1:01:04 GMT
Seems like a great thing but what I have to wonder, how do they capture my programming since I have only a 1 mile range and I don't stream? Anyway I signed up and I guess I will find out. Zeno RadioPreviously talked about at part15-US, Zeno Radio provides a way of being heard on people's telephones and it costs nothing! Check Out Zeno Radio
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Post by Admin on Apr 12, 2018 1:21:59 GMT
After going through the sign up process it looks like this is not possible if you do not have an Internet stream, as I suspected. Zeno RadioPreviously talked about at part15-US, Zeno Radio provides a way of being heard on people's telephones and it costs nothing! Check Out Zeno Radio
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Post by part15engineer on Apr 12, 2018 15:19:01 GMT
if they were smart they would have a barix compatible interface that you could point to your instreamer and allow you to private stream direct to their servers without having to publicly stream.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2018 15:27:40 GMT
Other Solutions
Robert is right about the Barix Box method of feeding audio to Zeno Radio, and there is another way to do it for free!
By using streaming software it is possible to set the stream as "Non Public" and set it for "1_connection" in which case Zeno Radio would receive your signal on their Player, which I assume is how they do it.
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Post by thelegacy on Apr 12, 2018 22:30:31 GMT
I had Zeno radio. And you have to stream and they just pick up off of your stream. The link that goes to the phone sounds horrible though. I heard it on the phone and it was barely listenable.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 12, 2018 22:46:36 GMT
That Kills It
TheLegacy shares his real-world experience: "The link that goes to the phone sounds horrible though. I heard it on the phone and it was barely listenable."
That's all I need to hear. I won't bother with Zeno Radio.
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Post by Admin on Apr 13, 2018 0:49:56 GMT
Thanks Troy. I'm out then. I had Zeno radio. And you have to stream and they just pick up off of your stream. The link that goes to the phone sounds horrible though. I heard it on the phone and it was barely listenable.
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Post by Boomer on Apr 13, 2018 1:45:39 GMT
Maybe it's better for talk stations.. These days we have a complication, with the type of data compression used in cell phones, music audio doesn't sound as good as it could in analog times, the sound is ragged, frequency ranges missing.
That's not just frequency roll-off outside of the voice range, frequencies that aren't thought to be useful to voice clarity are cut out, even within the 300 to 3000 hz band.
For a stereo music station that probably won't do, but I'd think talk would come through fine, like usual mobile phone audio when talking with someone. That my impression from hearing both music and voice through cells, but try it and see.
Boomer
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Post by thelegacy on Apr 13, 2018 4:17:08 GMT
If I steelhead Zeno radio I would try to use a landline from somebody I know that has one and see what happens.
However when my sponsor changed providers the links changed and Zino radio never did catch up. Then I switch to ice cast and they were not able to stream icecast at least at that time. So I gave it up.
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