Conspiracy. Jazz. Podcast. Lincolnshire Poacher (numbers station) The precise date that the Lincolnshire Poacher began broadcasting is unknown; however, it is estimated that the broadcasts started around the early to mid-1970s.[6] While numbers stations have existed since World War I (making them some of the earliest radio transmissions) numbers stations such as Lincolnshire Poacher began appearing during the Cold War, when nations such as the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom needed to send messages discreetly to their operatives in other countries.[7] However, after the Cold War, the amount of numbers stations had greatly decreased.[7] The Lincolnshire Poacher remained operating after the end of the Cold War, though, and continued to be broadcast throughout the 1980s and 1990s.[3] Akrotiri, Cyprus, the believed location of the Lincolnshire Poacher's broadcasts and radio antennas.
The Lincolnshire Poacher was broadcast several times throughout the day, and was transmitted seven days a week, at various times and on various shortwave frequencies. Like.fm. The NBC Chimes Museum. Eighteen Streaming Music Resources. Chill. Broadcast Radio MCAs maps. Transmit.TV. Click on the map below to see the closest services and transmitter sites. You may also search by site or service name using the search at the bottom. Front Page About FAQ Feedback. Tech parameters | Ofcom. These documents were originally published by the Radio Authority, one of the organisations replaced by Ofcom at the end of 2003. It represents Ofcom's current policy. The following information comprises details of the technical parameters of all analogue VHF, MF, and DAB transmitters (including services on multiplexes) currently on-air. In-use parameters are included mainly for listeners and aerial installers who may wish to know more about the nature of the signals they are receiving and possibly optimise their aerial accordingly.
The maximum allowed parameters (within the terms of each licence) for analogue services are also included for the benefit of those, principally in the industry, who wish to make calculations, particularly about interference, for coverage-planning purposes. The format is intended more for ease of download and transfer into specialist databases, than for presentation. For an explanation of the parameters for Analogue (VHF/MF) services: Station : Is the callsign. Social Music Overview. Keeping with the theme of Mike’s Online Photo Editing Overview, I wanted to cover some of the entrants into social music.
Music was probably the first type of rich media to really go “Web 2.0″ and it’s become a pretty popular place for startups. As a result, there are some great Rich Internet Applications built around social music. Anyone who makes music a part of their daily lives has no shortage of options when it comes to finding new music and sharing with friends. FineTune Finetune is a relatively new application written in Flash. Pandora Pandora is the granddaddy of the bunch and it’s one of the Web 2.0 applications that Mike can’t live without. Last.Fm last.fm is another Web 2.0 veteran and is more socially-slanted than the others. MOG is all about a music community.
RadioBlogClub radio.blog.club is another music service that builds playlists based on an artist or song you specify. MyStrands iLike iLike is an iTunes plug-in that makes your music library more social. iJigg. Resonance 104.4 fm - Home Page. DJ Food. DJ Food - Raiding the 20th Century - Words & Music Expansion (starring Paul Morley and a cast of thousands) Raiding the 20th Century 'Everything Has To End...' "On January 18th 2004, Strictly Kev premiered the original 'Raiding The 20th Century' on XFM's 'The Remix' show in London.
It was a 40 minute attempt to catalogue the history of cut up music - be it avant garde tape manipulation, turntable megamixes or bastard pop mash ups. It rapidly spread throughout the web and managed to cause a full scale server crash on boomselection.info when they hosted it due to the volume of net traffic. Shortly afterwards he read Paul Morley's recently published book 'Words & Music' and was amazed that certain chapters mirrored parts of his mix.
Kev decided to expand his idea to make the defnitive document on cut up music including many other parts, omitted by the constraints of the original radio session. Track listing : Pt 1 - Time Machine Pt 2 - The Time Before Time Pt 3 - Say Kids, What Time Is it? Discover Music - Pandora. Radio 2 Sold on Song - Home. The New Radio Revolution. By Heather Green, Tom Lowry, and Catherine Yang How fast is technology turning radio upside down? Ask Brian Ibbott. Last September, when the wannabe Denver deejay started playing music on the Internet, the term for what he was doing -- podcasting -- had been around for two weeks. These days the 35-year-old produces a half-hour show of popular songs called Coverville. Some 9,000 devotees download it three times a week to play on -- what else? -- their iPods. For all the hullabaloo it's generating, podcasting is not even close to being a business yet.
EASIER ENTRY. The digital revolution took its time getting to radio. A host of new players is piling in. ADS AND MINUSES. Whatever the reason, there's no denying a stark reality: Listeners, increasingly bored by the homogeneous programming and ever-more-intrusive advertising on commercial airwaves, are simply tuning out and finding alternatives. The industry tumult comes down to a simple phenomenon. BUYING A SONG. SKY-HIGH AMBITIONS.