Saturday, November 28, 2009

Wake up your cell phone to streaming radio

Are you tired of using your cell phone only to make and receive calls? How would you like to used your cell phone to listen to the radio? Now you can enjoy streaming radio on your cell phone for unlimited, commercial-free music. Listen to your favorite group or artist anytime of the day, listen to the news whenever you want, or catch the latest weather report, or sports team play-by-play action. Don't leave home without your streaming radio and phone all in one unit without additional accessories or attachments. You can take advantage of Mobiradio with 50 stations or XM radio with 25 stations, so you will be sure to find exactly the style of music you're looking for. Say bye-bye to your boring cell phone and hello to your new and exciting radio phone. Tell all your friends, tell your family, but tell someone before your burst with excitement. Streaming radio on your cell phone is like adding a turbo boost to your cell phone. Why carry your cell phone, if you can't even enjoy it. Well, now you can definitely enjoy your cell phone with streaming radio. Prices vary depending on the radio package and carrier.

My disclosure policy.

1 comments:

  1. Web casting, or broadcasting over the internet, is a media file (audio-video mostly) distributed over the internet using streaming media technology. Streaming implies media played as a continuous stream and received real time by the browser (end user). Streaming technology enables a single content source to be distributed to many simultaneous viewers. Streaming video bandwidth is typically calculated in gigabytes of data transferred. It is important to estimate how many viewers you can reach, for example in a live webcast, given your bandwidth constraints or conversely, if you are expecting a certain audience size, what bandwidth resources you need to deploy.

    To estimate how many viewers you can reach during a webcast, consider some parlance:
    One viewer: 1 click of a video player button at one location logged on
    One viewer hour: 1 viewer connected for 1 hour
    100 viewer hours: 100 viewers connected for 1 hour…

    Typically webcasts will be offered at different bit rates or quality levels corresponding to different user’s internet connection speeds. Bit rate implies the rate at which bits (basic data units) are transferred. It denotes how much data is transmitted in a given amount of time. (bps / Kbps / Mbps…). Quality improves as more bits are used for each second of the playback. Video of 3000 Kbps will look better than one of say 1000Kbps. This is just like quality of a image is represented in resolution, for video (or audio) it is measured by the bit rate.

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