Category Archives: technology



Reader funmail

I lived in SeaTac ’83-85, as a student at PLU. Hated to leave the area. Big fond memories of KYYX in the “Rock of the 80′s” era – still have the last hour on tape (somewhere).

One KUBE story: my first night in town, Wendy Christopher talked up the ENTIRE intro of the album version of “Roundabout” by Yes. Years later, I put a blurb about that (not naming her) on All Access, and I think I heard from every jock I ever heard of at the time.

Sometime later, we’re streaming via Streamaudio, then headed by Bob Case, who was the KUBE PD at the time. I call up there, and Bob answers. So I share the story…

Hope to read more!

Todd

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KING Radio & TV helicopter [1954]


Broadcasting Magazine

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KXRX.net – new media pays homage to great radio

How do you take the best from a legendary radio station and not only try to mimic it, but improve on it in some areas? The answer can be found in new media, satellite and Internet radio. [Can we call this "cloudcasting"? Did I just coin a new word?] Here is an Internet broadcaster that Seattle radio listeners are “re”-discovering.

The newest radio station in Seattle might have a familiar ring to many old school rock fans although you can’t tune it in on any AM or FM radio and it’s broadcast from the owner’s home office/studio. The X – KXRX.net – Extreme Rock of Seattle is the brainchild of Jayden Prince, an Internet entrepreneur and native of the Pacific Northwest who says owning and operating a radio station has always been a dream of his.

“I just got tired of listening to the cookie cutter corporate radio being played out on AM and FM dials and thought there must be something else out there.” said Prince.

What he discovered was a very rich and diverse Internet radio community broadcasting from all corners of the globe — that is what got his creative wheels turning. With web enabled mobile devices becoming mainstream independent Internet radio is a very viable alternative to terrestrial radio specially in a city as wired as Seattle and it offers almost an unlimited variety compared to it’s terrestrial counterpart.

Having grown up in Seattle, Prince has fond memories of the now silent KXRX 96.5 FM which was the major rock station in Seattle from 1987 – 1994 and one he spent his youth listening too. Prince says “That station broke the mold, they were edgy and always seemed to play just outside the lines and I really wanted to pay them homage in some way because it was KXRX that gave me my love of rock and radio.”

KXRX.net has been broadcasting since November 2009 and Prince says their audience has been nearly doubling every 30 days despite being primarily voice tracked through all day parts. He says they recently have begun to add live programming to the station and have begun broadcasting The Marty Riemer Show. Marty is a familiar voice in Seattle radio, it was Marty Riemer who was first to report Kurt Cobains death during his show on KXRX 96.5 FM.

Prince says that they will also be carrying the DubRRadio Show hosted by Rick “Double R” Robertson who recently left the BJ Shea Morning Experience on KISW 99.9 FM.

Rock journalist Tina Peek’s “Big Rock Show” runs weekends on the station and Prince says that they plan to be very active with live broadcasts and events in the upcoming year.

The X playlist comes directly from Prince’s personal music collection and covers a wide variety of rock /metal music. On any given day you might hear Saving Abel, Linkin Park, Drowning Pool, Three Days Grace, Seether, Flyleaf and any number of other current rock bands, but what you also get are deep cuts and enough classics in the mix to make KXRX.net appeal to rockers of all ages.

Prince says “There is so much good music that never sees the light of day on terrestrial radio because it didn’t poll high enough to make it onto most stations very tight playlist or the DJ’s aren’t given the liberty to play tracks that they themselves would want to hear..” he added, “About 15% of our monthly spins are given to new and unsigned artists who rarely if at all get the chance to be heard on commercial radio which makes us very unique.”

Internet Radio: the Next Big Thing

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Grundig S350DL – DXing Delight

A late birthday gift or an early Christmas present to myself, the Grundig S350 Deluxe. The design gives the radio a solid look, even though the knobs look metallic, they are made of plastic. Yet, the tuning controls are very responsive. The unit has a lighted monochrome LCD display. This comes in handy for those nights in the field, on safari, or dx’ing in the back yard on a summer evening.
The S350 Deluxe has a synthesized digital tuner section, though the tuner is analog, the frequencies are displayed on a digital readout. This radio has fantastic sound quality from the large speaker and stereo sound with headphones.
The S350 Deluxe has stereo RCA line out jacks for connecting the unit to an amplifier or home stereo. The radio supports battery and AC power, and you can choose to use either D cell batteries or AA. On top of this, the radio has a clock, alarm feature, and snooze timer.
The radio can tune frequencies to the hundredth decimal place, and the shortwave/AM frequency lock circuit provides stability to reduce tuning drift.

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Freedom 1590, Nighttime DXing & Internet Radio

A reader writes concerning my earlier comments on the new Freedom 1590 KLFE:

Greetings,
Dennis Miller and Mark Levin are good, but Hugh Hewitt is one of the best interviewers in radio.
He is good too.
Thanks,
Chuck

Ok. this is true, in fact I also enjoy listening to Mike Gallagher occasionally. I was simply noting that Salem Communications uses the same talk hosts in every market. It was refreshing to have the addition of Dennis Miller and Mark Levin for a change.
Salem would serve a much larger audience by moving this talk format to another frequency. 1590 is not available to listeners here in the South Sound region after sundown. Thankfully, there is the online stream to make up for this.
Driving home through downtown Tacoma the other night, I tried to tune in 1590 KLFE. There was too much interference from other stations since KLFE must have cut power at sunset. I scanned the dial, picking up 1530 KFBK/Sacramento, 1510 KGA/Spokane, 1360 KKMO/Tacoma, 1300 KKOL/Seattle [with transmitter located at the Port of Tacoma], 1180 KLAY/Lakewood, 1160 KSL/Salt Lake City, 1130 CKWX/Vancouver BC, 1070 KNX/Los Angeles and 1000 KOMO/Seattle… all loud and clear.
Internet streaming has given me thoughts of buying an Internet radio. I have been looking at the various radio models, but just haven’t pulled the trigger on that purchase yet. Maybe a portable unit that I can carry in the car.
Last night’s wind storm also made me think about buying a battery-powered AM/FM radio. Ideally, I would want a unit that incorporates AM/FM & Internet radio. That would be keen!

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TV, Newspaper & Radio Notes

Belo’s KING Seattle and the Seattle Times newspaper are working side by side on a local online advertising network.

The beLOCAL Ad Network aggregates local media and pairs the content with advertisers. The venture “provides an opportunity for local web publishers to leverage the media sales teams of these two organizations,” said Belo in a statement.

“We have such a rich diversity of communities in Western Washington and each community blog has their own news stories, events, reviews and forums and that’s just the tip of the iceberg,” said KING Seattle President/General Manager Ray Heacox. “We believe this partnership we have with The Seattle Times will help these online community news sites to grow and increase their viability.”

Belo is pushing the beLOCAL network at its stations.

“This new partnership combines the power of The Seattle Times and KING 5 sales forces to help contribute to the viability of the great variety of local community blogs,” said Alan Fisco, Seattle Times Company VP of sales and marketing. “The Seattle Times already has strong content-sharing partnerships with many of these independent sites. Our new sales network will only make those partnerships stronger.”
[Michael Malone - Broadcasting & Cable]

Luke Burbank now becomes a permanent co-host with Dave Ross, 9 to Noon on KIRO FM. The synergy between these two broadcasters has brought positive listener reaction and this is yet another phase in the metamorphisis of the “News Authority”. Burbank, of TBTL [once a KIRO evening show], brings a huge following, in the younger/hipper demographics, with him.

KIRO shares Tony Minor now with KTTH 770. Minor takes the reigns as Assistant PD at the Rush Limbaugh affiliate. Tony will continue to fill-in as anchor at KIRO FM.

We have two very different news/talk FM stations in Seattle. KOMO, which is shedding talent, cutting costs and declining in ratings — appearing to slim down in preparation for a sell-off, and KIRO FM — innovative, progressive [not in the political sense], and entertaining.

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Tacoma.FM – Go Local [audio]

Tacoma.FM is LIVE from the Antique Sandwich @ North 51st & Pearl for the Tuesday night Victory Music Open Mic 7-10, listen LIVE at www.tacoma.fm

Audio MP3

Remember when stations would actually haul their remote gear to a local bar or car dealership for a “live” broadcast? Lately, I have been hearing “remotes” which are actually pre-recorded! Voice-tracking a remote broadcast is the lowest form of radio. Most recently, a broadcaster in the South Sound area brought us updates from a community event, which were obviously pre-recorded, because the background noises kept repeating [looping].

Tacoma.FM actually does broadcast from the Antique Sandwich Company each week. This brings back memories of my youth, of Open Mic Night, great sandwiches, community and RADIO – live & local, not canned.

Terrestrial broadcasters should clean up their act, pay the talent what it is worth, provide honest entertainment and clever content – or lose listeners to stations like Tacoma.FM These Internet/community broadcasters have the right idea and are keeping quality radio alive, though on a shoestring budget, often through the help of volunteers.

Listeners have thousands of radio stations to choose from via computer, cell phones and other devices. My car radio does not have XM/Sirius access or Internet radio capability. I listen to a select few local stations. Lately, on the drive to work, I listen to the Mike Lonergan program on 1180 KLAY. Mike keeps us up to date on local news and events. In the evening, I’ll switch between KGY FM and KXXO FM for music. The DJs are local [not voice-tracked, as far as I can tell].

It’s sad to see radio [AM & FM] die this slow death. But when these few local stations let their people go, sell out to the corporate mutha giants and fade away, we will be listening to the likes of Tacoma.FM and the new generation of radio stations on the world-wide-web.

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KIRO FM Live Stream


mynorthwest on livestream.com. Broadcast Live Free

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Unreliable, insecure and incompetent = ixwebhosting

I am so relieved to have moved away from ixwebhosting.com! The service was a nightmare and the downtime far exceeded what is advertised. My sites were unavailable at least once each week, sometimes for hours at a time.
Response from customer service was extremely poor. They just don’t give a damn at ixwebhosting and it shows. There were also two incidents of virus attacks which were not handled in a timely manner by ixwebhosting.
To put it simply, they are a bunch of ass clowns at ixwebhosting.
–for info on the shabby disservice provided by ixwbhosting, visit: http://ixwebhostwarning.wordpress.com/2008/12/10/ix-web-hosting-hacked/

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MSNBC.com name change being considered

NBC Universal and Microsoft, the parents of MSNBC.com, are holding high-level talks about a name change, something that could be a risky endeavor for the third most popular news Web site in the United States.

The two parents have determined that the brand of MSNBC.com, a strictly objective news Web site, is widely confused with MSNBC, the cable channel that has taken a strongly liberal bent in recent years, according to internal memorandums obtained by The New York Times this week.

Charlie Tillinghast, MSNBC.com’s president, wrote in a memo last March, “Both strategies are fine, but naming them the same thing is brand insanity.” The channel and Web site are already separate companies.
[New York Times]

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