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| Monday, October 6, 2003 |
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And we're off
| | Travel day today. Unless I get on wi-fi at Logan or LAX, I'll see you next in Santa Barbara. |
| | [Later...] I'm back, and I'm tired (easy trip; just a long one). See ya tomorrow. |
RouteAround Radio
| | A bunch of us from BloggerCon went to dinner last night it was effectively the last event of the conference and talked, among other things, about radio. One of us worked with a school that wanted to start a radio station. Should they try to put the station on the air in the conventional way, with a small local signal on the FM band, or on the Net? |
| | I recommended the latter. Partly because it's a lot cheaper and easier, and partly because the Net can easily be extended to the air in a clean and unlicensed way. |
| | For example, this morning I listened to Chris Lydon's latest interview, with Len Apcar of the New York Times. I listened in the shower at the hotel, on the radio. The station was on 88.5FM, a relatively open channel here in Cambridge, MA. The transmitter was an iRock 300w Wireless Music Adapter that I picked up for about 25 bucks at Radio Shack. The range is short, but probably not much shorter than a wi-fi signal. |
| | Whether by wi-fi, digital cellular, satellite or something else, big licensed brute-force radio transmission will eventually become a thing of the past. Not only because it's woefully costly, bureaucratized and ineffecient, but because it's a bottleneck between supply and demand. The Net will route around that bottleneck. Count on it. |
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