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#1
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Greetings:
I would appreciate some comments on Internet accessible receivers; to me they represent a useful resource for propagation studies, signal chasing, RDF and a great many other applications. Have you used any and for what purposes? I would also appreciate someone willing to test a receiver that I have put online; that person must be willing to install a SIP softphone and set up a VoIP account (free) if they don't already do VoIP, and also use a browser that supports java applets. TIA, Michael msg _at_ cybertheque _dot_ org |
#2
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msg wrote:
Greetings: I would appreciate some comments on Internet accessible receivers; to me they represent a useful resource for propagation studies, signal chasing, RDF and a great many other applications. Have you used any and for what purposes? No, if I would be interested in that, I would listen to streams from radio stations right away. Half the fun is building your own antenna's, etc. But I can understand that others are interested in it. I would also appreciate someone willing to test a receiver that I have put online; that person must be willing to install a SIP softphone and set up a VoIP account (free) if they don't already do VoIP, and also use a browser that supports java applets. Why not use Windows Media for that? Far easier for the listeners.... -- JeroenK |
#3
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msg wrote:
JeroenK wrote: msg wrote: snip I would also appreciate someone willing to test a receiver that I have put online; that person must be willing to install a SIP softphone and set up a VoIP account (free) if they don't already do VoIP, and also use a browser that supports java applets. Why not use Windows Media for that? Far easier for the listeners.... This is a hands-on controllable and tunable receiver, not a web-form click contrivance. Using WMA, streaming MP3, etc. incurs unacceptable audio delays that make hands-on tuning unusable. Streaming the audio with RTP using SDP (or RTSP/RTCP when practicable) removes the offending latencies for the most part). Just so you don't think I'm daft, Kenwood employs the same strategy in streaming audio to their proprietary receiver control software; here is an excerpt from the TS-480 User Manual: ARCP-480 is compatible with the Kenwood Network Command System, enabling control of the TS-480 over a network and, using H.323 (VoIP), making voice transmission/reception possible. I don't require installation of any proprietary software, just a VoIP 'phone call' Regards, Michael |
#4
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msg wrote:
Just so you don't think I'm daft, I know this group has members treating each other in such ways, I had no intention too! Excuses if it came off that way. -- JeroenK |
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