A Raspberry Pi with the right idea in mind can turn an ordinary object into something extraordinary. Such is the case today with this Raspberry Pi radio project put together by maker and developer trustMeIAmANinja over at Reddit. Unlike your average radio, this one lets you listen to stations from all over the world.

The Pi is housed inside an old radio which has been fixed up with a custom interface, a screen, and a series of knobs for seeking out stations. The screen has been mounted to the front of the radio and displays a map of the world with a crosshair overlay. The knobs are attached to rotary encoders, which enable you to tune the radio.


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The radio is driven by a Raspberry Pi 4 which is connected to a 5-inch LCD screen. A custom bezel was 3D printed to mount the display and rotary encoder knobs to the front panel. Audio is output to a 30-watt speaker that interfaces with the Pi using an audio HAT.

I am also a devoted listener of the di.fm and sky.fm network with a premium subscription to that broadcasting network. They have an amazing variety of hight quality radios. It sounded as if this was spam lol. I just happen to like that an other radios as rockradio1 (metal) and friskyradio (deep progressive house). If well negotiated, it could also be a two-way good publicity they could be announcing volumio and the proyect could reach a wide range of users.

My suggestion is to the staff to think on a better integration with radio networks. I know people that no longer listen to stored mp3 on their pcs and just listen to a variety of radio networks. Some dont even bother for quality radios and just listen to youtube and nothing more. Stored music is slowly becoming a thing of the past with high speed internet becoming more and more present and accessible to all everywhere and anywhere.

Mobile User Objective System (MUOS) satellites leverage smartphone technology to elevate military communications to next-generation levels. While the satellites still launch periodically, General Dynamics continues to test radios that will help drive secured communications to warfighters at the tactical edge. In fact, at the MUOS test facility in Scottsdale, Arizona, the company recently completed testing of a four-channel digital modular radio (DMR).

If, in the near future, your car radio suddenly cuts off a cassette tape in mid-Mozart, switches to an FM station, and cranks up the volume, don't search the skies for alien spacecraft - just listen for a brief traffic update.

The West German radio manufacturer, Blaupunkt, has just begun marketing such a sophisticated radio in New York City. Four local FM radio stations already broadcasting traffic information now are equipped with the technology to trigger the automatic functions of the new radio. A Blaupunkt spokesman says the company expects to have the Automatic Radio Information (ARI) system in ''at least 20 major city areas in the United States within the next two years.'' Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Houston, San Francisco, and the Los Angeles-San Diego corridor are among the cities targeted.

The European Broadcast Union selected Blaupunkt to develop the radio 10 years ago to help untangle massive traffic snarls on European highways during the peak weeks of summer vacation. Helicopter traffic observers could see that most cars were traveling on the same roads while alternate routes were wide open. The problem was how to get the message to drivers paying little attention to background music or the yammering of radio announcers.

The solution was a hybrid computer chip, built into each radio unit, that receives a subaudible tone broadcast over existing local FM networks. Signs along major roads tell West German drivers what station to tune to in each area. As long as the radio unit is tuned to the correct station, even at low volume, the traffic or emergency messages will get through.

Christian Stettler, an official of the International Consultative Committee for Radio Communications in Geneva, says the traffic information service, used throughout West Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, has been very successful. In the last five years, almost 90 percent of the FM radios in West German cars, he says, have come to feature the ARI technology. Bosch, Blaupunkt's parent firm, as well as Volkswagen, BMW, and Mercedes Benz officials confirm this.

Mr. Stettler says the receivers on the European market vary in price from $ 200 to $450. Japanese radio manufacturers including Sony and Pioneer also make the special car radios for European cars, using the hybrid computer chip under license from the German firm. So far, only Blaupunkt models (ranging from $160 to $450 in the US) are available in the New York area. However, a Blaupunkt spokesman says both American and Japanese manufacturers will be licensed to use the ARI technology as the American market opens up.

Richard Neer of WNEW-FM, one of the four FM stations involved with Blaupunkt's ARI system in New York City, says ''the service started one month ago, but it is too early to tell what effect it is having - there can't be more than a dozen radios out there.''

A Blaupunkt spokesman says each radio station is allowed a 10-second tag advertisement at the end of each broadcast, but the FCC requires that the station not abuse the ARI system by broadcasting anything other than public-service information.

Many independent labels forgo seeking radio airplay, preferring to save their money to pay for concert tour costs or to buy retail or print advertising. But that decision essentially guarantees lower sales and limits the ability of the small labels to expand.

Radio stations also varies to the location where the Google Nest speaker is set up. Could you try asking your Nest Mini to play a radio station available in Southern Oregon to see if this will play on the speakers?

Thanks, Princesss. I did some experimentation today, and I was able to get a radio station in my current area to play. However, when I tried playing some other radio stations that are available through TuneIn, the Nest Mini kept telling me it couldn't stream playlists on TuneIn radio and would instead start playing a YouTube channel that it thought was related.

My spouse has an Echo Dot, and when I tell it to "play radio station KZHP-LP in Sacramento on TuneIn radio," it immediately starts streaming the correct station, so I would think my location isn't a factor. I can also play the station on my computer, through a web browser, either directly on the station's web site or through TuneIn radio.

Thanks for trying out some steps. Could you please list down all the radio stations you've tried that is not working with your Google Nest Hub as well as the commands you've tried so we can try it here on our end?

Hi, Princess... it has been a very hectic week and I've not been able to do the testing with the Nest Mini. However, next week, I will get a chance to verify the Nest Hub still works with that radio station. Hopefully, the week after that, I can test the Nest Mini to see what radio stations I can hear with it. ...thanks!

Since it has a display, I can watch as it interprets what I tell it. When I say "play radio station K Z H P L P in Sacramento on Tune-In radio," it drops letters from what I'm saying. I enunciate very carefully, and it usually understands me well when I'm not asking for it to play radio. I suspect the Nest Mini is doing the same thing, but without a display, I can't verify.

The Count (Philip Seymour Hoffman), inspired by a real life pirate-radio DJ who called himself Emperor Rosko, is the designated leader of the ship's bawdy crew. But the middle-aged American finds his authority challenged by the arrival of Ifans' Gavin. Alex Bailey/Focus FeaturesĀ  hide caption

A little more than a year ago, Braithwaite said, Frederick, Robin Gilgeours and several other businessmen approached him with the idea of starting a Caribbean-themed radio station, but he thought the group was too large.

The station will sponsor a food, cake, arts and crafts festival tomorrow and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. at St. Andrews Park, at Kingston and Atlantic Aves. in Brooklyn. Call (718) 622-1081 for information, or check the Web site, www.onecaribbeanradio.com.

The simplest way for you to enjoy our music is to click on POP UP PLAYER at the top of theweb page. Alternatively use the LINKS at the bottom of the page and you will be able tolisten to our music via your favourite media player or third party radio portalpages.

WE ARE NON PROFIT AND WE PLAY COMMERCIAL FREE! If you wish, you can make a donation tohelp us support our radio station. You may send us any amount of money using Paypal forthe security it provides.

And so it was once more time for Quietus pilots Luke and John to load up on a pint of the most bracing coffee a popular American chain had to offer, and hie to Marylebone to record another radio programme, the fourth in our on-going series. Tune in on the Mixcloud dial below for music by Brian Eno, Death Grips, Bjork, Grace Jones, Azari& III, Frank Ocean and Dub Syndicate. We've also brand new music, including an exclusive of a new track by Brett Anderson, Walls, Arabrot, and Tinariwen. Plus the usual conversation on the artists listed, and musings on the history of the Henge, cake, nautical terms, our stage at the forthcoming Field Day festival, and much more. Thanks as always to the Noble Paul Noble for his work as producer.

Last week we started a discussion on viewing the brain as a receiver and transmitter of suffering rather than the source of it. Much like a radio tunes in and out of radio waves when we change radio stations, can we tune in and out of suffering? While pain is an unavoidable reality in life, do we have to have to suffer to endure this pain?

2. If your suffering is based on something specific like not having enough money, rather than focusing on how you do not have enough money, focus on methods that you can use to attract more to your life. There is a lot of money out there in the world. But tuning into the "money station" can be tricky. "Tuning in" does not simply mean moving from left to right like the red marker that moves with a radio dial. That red marker is actually marking a different frequency. "Tuning in" means changing your frequency to a state of consciousness located deeply within yourself. Some reach this by prayer, others by meditation, and still others by hard work and service. Whatever your method, if you can tune into the frequency where giving and receiving act in concert, you will attract money. And to attract more money, your giving has to be from the most valuable part of you in the most valuable way that you can give. When you reach this value and share it, the value will come back to you. 2351a5e196

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