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Thursday, June 20, 2002
 


I added the same macro to display my subscriptions along the right.  I don't care for the initial format and it renders oddly in IE (a new line after each space).
10:45:37 PM    

Playing with Radio


I'm trying to implement some of the enhanced features out there for Radio.  So far I've been using the outliner to build a blogroll in combination with the blogroll macro.  I've also installed Marc Paschal's Kit which has some cool enhancements to the whole thing.  Next up is some work on the outline presentation tool.

I'm also going to have to smarten up some of the styling for the blogroll, and will be including a subscription list soon.


10:31:34 PM    

kuro5shin and online community


Kuro5shin, one of the best slashdot-like online communities, is going to become a non-profit.  Maybe it's time to start the eccentric academy as an online non-profit.

Rusty at K5 pioneers the non-profit model for collaborative Websites. Not a bad way to make a salary to do something you love to do. [John Robb's Radio Weblog]


7:09:26 PM    


I know why I don't listen to the radio any more and I discovered the reason after getting a cable modem and started listening to streaming radio: most of what is on the radio I don't like.  Yet I'm never at a loss for new CDs to purchase or music to listen to.  I find most of it at sites like emusic.com and by reading reviews in magazines and online.  Of course my interests in twentieth century classical music, avant-garde jazz and punk rock were never really popular on the radio to begin with.

Hang The DJ.

Radio, Radio: Where Did All the Music Go?

"Radio listeners are listening less. In 1993, they spent an average of 23 hours per week with the radio on; last year, it was down to 20 1/2 hours, according to Arbitron numbers.

Those most likely to turn off the radio: teen-agers, long among the medium's mainstays. Among girls age 12-17, the radio is on just 16 hours a week. For boys, it's just 12 1/2 hours. That's bad news for the country's 11,047 commercial radio stations.

Why the turn-off?

Some, like musicians Prince and Little Steven Van Zandt, blame playlists so strict they make the old Top 40 format seem extravagant.

Others blame a 1996 law that opened the door for corporate ownership of hundreds of radio stations, replacing often-eccentric local owners with a legion of sound-alike voices and formats....

Today, Infinity Broadcasting -- home to Stern and Imus -- owns 180 radio stations in 22 states. Emmis Communications' three New York stations control 14 percent of the revenue in the nation's No. 1 market; in other markets, that number can quadruple.

But the big daddy of the business is San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications, which owns 1,200 stations in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Clear Channel estimates that each day, it reaches 54 percent of people age 18-49 in the United States.

[The Shifted Librarian]
7:06:06 PM    



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