That real time typing reminds me of chatting via direct modem connection to your friends. It gives a slightly better awareness of the person's feelings. Instant messengers now don't seem to do that, I guess the latency on the global internet is too high.
TuneIn's app (at least on Android) has got worse and worse over the years. I think there's even ads in the "pro" version now that I paid for a while back. Also, why does a radio streamer need access to my contact list?
Wow! This site is pretty amazing. I like how it picked up my location and tuned into a local San Francisco radio station. The I scrolled the globe and rotated into my Dad's hometown of Bombay (they call it "Mumbai" now) and it zero-ed in on a Gazhal station. This one => http://radio.garden/live/mumbai/planetradiocity/
Question to the creator / OP: Are the ads (voice ads) that play injected into the stream? I ask because even though I selected an Indian radio channel, it played a long AT&T get a go phone this holiday season blah blah blah for like 2 minutes, and the voice was American accent and also the address it said to go to was att.com/gophone (which I would think is only US customers). What gives?
As it appears to me (running Chrome on Linux) it's really hard to go looking for a particular location, since it's just dots on a solid blue browser tab. Is that by design? (Also, it shows stations in Madrid, Spain at a spot that I think is a bit west of Ames, Iowa.)
From the you-can't-please-everyone dep't: in a weird way, the non-functioning map made the discovery process a little more fun. The map just started working for me–I didn't know that it was supposed to–and I was slightly disappointed.
Tho I support using satellite imagery and nothing more.
Brilliant site, and very well done. Thanks for putting it together and sharing it.
Love the concept and simple design. Very cool. Resist those wanting land boundaries added; it will lose some mystery then.
Reminds me of that not-uncommon movie intro implying that aliens are listening to Earth, where the camera zooms in on the planet as random stations and static play.
I love this! I love the static when tuning as well as how quickly it starts playing from each station. The only suggestion I have it to put political boundaries so it is easier to see where you're at.
How did you populate this map? I looked at the Transnational Radio Encounters dataset and didn't find a list of stations, let alone a link to their stream.
I love this thing you've made. I've been exploring the world with radio since long before the WWW was invented. I used to carry a shortwave radio with me wherever I traveled back in the 1970s and 80s. I would lie there in the dark in Japan listening to the broadcasts out of North Korean screeching about the "Great Leader" (Kim Il-sung) or in Thailand listening to the Khmer Rouge (whom I couldn't understand, but I knew who controlled Cambodian broadcasts) or in the UK listening to Africans (not putting on a show for Americans but putting on a show for their own people) or on the East Coast of the US listening to callers to talk shows in the UK arguing about local issues. What do people there talk about amongst themselves? What do they like to listen to? What does such-and-such language sound like? I loved exploring the world this way.
My kids don't understand how magical the world is today--how they can do what cost me so much money and time and effort by doing nothing more than poking a few icons on their phones. These things don't mean much to them; they were born into a world where magic was just daily life.
But, things like this are still magical to me, even though I've been a developer for decades. Somehow, even knowing how the "tricks" are done, I still think it's magic. Just tonight, I fed YouTube into my HD TV and watched as someone walked around my old neighborhood in Tokyo with a 4K camera. Then again where I used to live in Seoul. And a couple of days ago, I found something for my father out in the desert a thousand miles from here by using Google Street View to "drive" down a remote highway, looking around until I found it. And now I can just spin the globe and point at a dot to hear a broadcast coming from that location. I've been listening to online broadcasts for 20 years using lists of online radio stations, but this is so much nicer.
I sometimes wonder if I'm the only one who sees all of this as real-world magic.
Not the only one - I agree. Actually I think Clarke's third law is wrong (Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic):
Technology is magic. The reason why many people get uncomfortable when speaking of magic is that they think it's something otherworldly, and thus non-existent.
But magic is what we do, it's just a mystery for those who don't know the incantations and methods. That goes for technology as well as rhetoric, or medicine, or politics or what have you.
We even call it magical but it's somehow OK only if we don't really mean it. :-D
I'm with you - I can remember copying a tape of french punk music from my high school language teacher and how I found it so fascinating that there was this whole other music and cultural thing happening that I'd probably never have access to and now I click on this globe and it pops right up.
I also want to add what a terrific user experience this site provides. It's "technically" no different than a list of radio stations from around the world, but the presentation definitely makes it seem magical.
The next step will be AR/VR where I can hold a globe in the palm of my hand and spin and poke at it to get radio stations.
You are not alone. I've been online for over 30 years now, since the mid-1980s, and deeply involved in Internet technology. And yet I still find applications of that technology that are wonderfully magical. (This radio.garden is one of them!)
Not alone! I'm more into TV though. I have international free streaming TV channels as bookmarks. Starting from DW to NHK World. These international TV channels give a glimpse into the culture, viewpoint of a country IMO.
It would be very nice to have similar interface for TV channels instead of sites like filmon.
- Let the radio keep playing while the user scrolls the map and until they click on a different spot.
- Run a kickstarter for creating a mobile app for this and getting a paid key to the Bing maps. Having the MVP already running I think it'll sell like candy!
- Labels for the stations, cities, etc. The UI should be great on this, so the user feels like traveling across the world! Maybe even include Google Street View? Not sure, just a thought..
I'm not seeing any volume control on the page, weird.
To be clear, of course my macbook volume control works, but even with that set at the minimum, the radio volume is punishingly loud (to these ears at least)
I actually like the Arcgis imagery better. It's easier to tell at a glance where I am in the world. Then again, I don't know if it was fully functioning when I saw the Bing imagery.
Hey, amazing project! Surfed over Eastern world radio stations for about an hour. Didn't found any convenient way to report bug, but currently Georgia (country, not state) is shown as "Tbilisi, United States".
I love this!
There are some missing stations in Norfolk, UK, Suffolk, UK and London, can I submit these?
You are missing:
Future Radio (107.8fm)(Norwich, Norfolk)
Radio Caroline (DAB)(Norwich, Norfolk)
North Norfolk Radio (96.2fm, 103.2fm)(Norwich, Norfolk)
Norwich 99.9FM (99.9fm)(Norwich, Norfolk)
Kiss 105-108 (Norfolk 106.1, Suffolk 106.4)
TheBeach (103.4fm, 97.4fm)(Lowestoft, Suffolk & Gt. Yarmouth, Norfolk)
Town 102 (102.0fm)(Ipswich, Suffolk)
ICR FM (105.7fm)(Ipswich, Suffolk)
Dream 100 (100.2fm)(Colchester/Clacton On-Sea, Essex)
Magic (105.4fm, DAB)(London)
Kiss100 (100.0fm, DAB)(London)
Did you really create this? - this is awesome. This is a no BS world radio tuner. I love it, you really get a grasp of what's happening on the radio waves live all around our little planet rather than feeling cocooned in your local area.
An extra feature I would love is if I could store favourite radio stations. Also I notice many stations are missing in certain countries especially S Asia.
BTW, you'll get a lot of interest from certain shady characters in the government who will ask you to block certain political talk radios to shield the public from alternative impartial news. As you know western media is also under heavy control and they don't like us listening to Radio Sputnik/RT/Press TV for example.
Please can you keep this a non biased station no matter what money they throw at you?
Radio Garden has been stuck on "Planting Radio Garden" (http://i.imgur.com/ncmxjrm.png) for a while now. Is this because of poor connection on my part, or is it le Reddit Hug of Death?
Amazing website, though.
edit: Apparently it's a Chrome problem. Works fine in Firefox. Cheers!
Brilliant concept and execution!
I figured, it must be every station that has a live stream, but no, my nearest station, KZSU Stanford, has multiple streams and isn't there. And the list of presences in the one green dot in SF is much too short. So... what's the source?
Beautiful! What a great ui for such use case! And it works perfectly on android huawei honor 7 (because somebody said it doesn't work well on smartphone!)
Oh man, this is so much fun. I'm listening to radio in Islamabad, Pakistan, and the male and female host are bickering about how winter is, in fact, NOT coming this year. And now they're playing John Mayer.
So much more perspective than just whatever the news media wants the narrative to be about some of these places. (And I've traveled plenty, but this is just a lovely taste of day-to-day for people on the other side of the planet, but fortunately in English!)
One suggestion: maybe change the background to something black. Then it will feel more like the Earth is a part of cosmos - a context will be shown and will create a nicer feeling.
122 comments
[ 2.1 ms ] story [ 192 ms ] threadThe designer's website is a trip too[0].
[0] http://puckey.studio/
global time machine with http://radiooooo.com/ and streaming with http://tunein.com/radio/regions/
Question to the creator / OP: Are the ads (voice ads) that play injected into the stream? I ask because even though I selected an Indian radio channel, it played a long AT&T get a go phone this holiday season blah blah blah for like 2 minutes, and the voice was American accent and also the address it said to go to was att.com/gophone (which I would think is only US customers). What gives?
Didn't think of that. Wouldn't put it past them.
Tho I support using satellite imagery and nothing more.
Brilliant site, and very well done. Thanks for putting it together and sharing it.
Reminds me of that not-uncommon movie intro implying that aliens are listening to Earth, where the camera zooms in on the planet as random stations and static play.
It seems our non-profit Bing maps key was revoked.. Switched to Arcgis imagery instead for now. Too bad, the Bing imagery was really great.
Perhaps talk to MapBox? They might be amenable to giving you a few more map views.
In my case, I am in North Bend, WA. It shows the nearest station as KBBR:
http://radio.garden/live/north-bend/1340kbbr/
The problem is that it is actually physically located in North Bend, OR:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KBBR
My kids don't understand how magical the world is today--how they can do what cost me so much money and time and effort by doing nothing more than poking a few icons on their phones. These things don't mean much to them; they were born into a world where magic was just daily life.
But, things like this are still magical to me, even though I've been a developer for decades. Somehow, even knowing how the "tricks" are done, I still think it's magic. Just tonight, I fed YouTube into my HD TV and watched as someone walked around my old neighborhood in Tokyo with a 4K camera. Then again where I used to live in Seoul. And a couple of days ago, I found something for my father out in the desert a thousand miles from here by using Google Street View to "drive" down a remote highway, looking around until I found it. And now I can just spin the globe and point at a dot to hear a broadcast coming from that location. I've been listening to online broadcasts for 20 years using lists of online radio stations, but this is so much nicer.
I sometimes wonder if I'm the only one who sees all of this as real-world magic.
Technology is magic. The reason why many people get uncomfortable when speaking of magic is that they think it's something otherworldly, and thus non-existent.
But magic is what we do, it's just a mystery for those who don't know the incantations and methods. That goes for technology as well as rhetoric, or medicine, or politics or what have you.
We even call it magical but it's somehow OK only if we don't really mean it. :-D
I also want to add what a terrific user experience this site provides. It's "technically" no different than a list of radio stations from around the world, but the presentation definitely makes it seem magical.
The next step will be AR/VR where I can hold a globe in the palm of my hand and spin and poke at it to get radio stations.
It would be very nice to have similar interface for TV channels instead of sites like filmon.
Where are you getting the data? How do you find the stations and coordinates?
Ubuntu 16.04: it works in Opera, doesn't work in FF (I'm probably blocking something vital with one of the various privacy add ons).
Android 6 tablet: it doesn't work in either the stock browser (updated yesterday) and Firefox.
Suggestions:
- Let the radio keep playing while the user scrolls the map and until they click on a different spot.
- Run a kickstarter for creating a mobile app for this and getting a paid key to the Bing maps. Having the MVP already running I think it'll sell like candy!
- Labels for the stations, cities, etc. The UI should be great on this, so the user feels like traveling across the world! Maybe even include Google Street View? Not sure, just a thought..
Again, amazing work!
One suggestion: add a volume control. It's far too loud even at minimum volume on my Macbook.
To be clear, of course my macbook volume control works, but even with that set at the minimum, the radio volume is punishingly loud (to these ears at least)
http://www.communityvoices.in/directory/community-media-maps...
http://imgur.com/a/l4iqP
I'm running chrome 54.0.2840.100 (64-bit) in ubuntu 14.04 with nvidia proprietary drivers
Alex Two Lochs Radio www.2lr.co.uk
Amazing website, though.
edit: Apparently it's a Chrome problem. Works fine in Firefox. Cheers!
I have seen plenty of websites which lists the radio stations from all over the globe, but this interface makes it so much more interesting and fun.
Really well done to the devs.
I see you host some broadcast segments (e.g. "jingles"). Do you have the rights to broadcast them, regarding copyright rules?
This is a project lead by several universities, maybe these audio segments are part of a public dataset?
I love it in the background when working, for the dose of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overview_effect.
So much more perspective than just whatever the news media wants the narrative to be about some of these places. (And I've traveled plenty, but this is just a lovely taste of day-to-day for people on the other side of the planet, but fortunately in English!)