History
The first Internet "radio
station",
Internet Talk Radio, was developed by
Carl Malamud in 1993. Malamud's station used a technology called
MBONE (IP Multicast Backbone on the Internet). Later that year,
Austin Arts BBS begin broadcasting pre-recorded information for
members of the
screenprinting community and artists from a
Bulletin Board System in
Austin, Texas. Austin Arts BBS, originally created in 1983 by
Bill Hood was the first online screenprinting community. Hood
created the first online radio presence for the screenprinting
industry with Screenprinters Radio which featured interviews,
stories, tips and tricks as well as music.
In February, 1995, the first
full-time, Internet-only radio station, Radio HK, began broadcasting
the music of independent bands. Radio HK was created by Norman
Hajjar and the Hajjar/Kaufman New Media Lab, an advertising agency
in
Marina del Rey, California. Hajjar's method was to use a
CU-SeeMe web conferencing reflector connected to a custom
created audio
CD in endless loop. Later, Radio HK converted to one of the
original RealAudio servers. Today, Internet radio stations such as
VoyagerRadio utilize the technologies of web services like
Live365 to webcast 24 hours a day.
WXYC (89.3FM
Chapel Hill,
NC
USA) was the first radio station to announce broadcasting on the
Internet on
November 7,
1994. WXYC used an FM radio connected to a system at SunSite,
later known as
Ibiblio, running CU-SeeMe. WXYC had begun test broadcasts and
bandwidth testing as early as August, 1994.
WREK (91.1FM,
Atlanta,
GA USA) also claims to have started streaming on
November 7, using their own custom software called
CyberRadio1, although the stream was not advertised until a
later date.
KJHK 90.7FM in
Lawrence,
Kansas, began to stream its live broadcast using
CU-SeeMe on
December 3,
1994. KJHK was the first radio station to maintain a
continuous, live signal over the Internet. This has been
verified by the
National Association of Broadcasters,
Sports Illustrated, and
CNN.
KPIG also began to transmit a live, 24/7 feed, in August 1995,
first using
Xing Streamworks and later switching to RealAudio. Bill
Goldsmith, who was KPIG's Operations Manager & morning DJ at the
time, and the one responsible for starting the webcast, now operates
the popular Internet station
Radio Paradise.
WUEV launched its live simulcast in January 1996, also using the
Xing Streamworks technology at first, then adding RealAudio and
moving from the Xing platform to Windows Media Technologies as
equipment (and budget sizes) changed.
The first radio station to
stream 24-hours a day in Europe was the UK's
Virgin Radio, who started streaming a live simulcast using Real
Networks in March 1996.
Tuning in to a broadcast like a
traditional radio is not possible on internet, so finding different
broadcasts has to be done with a
search engine or a website that collects on-line radio
broadcasts.
In 1996 GBS Radio Networks,
founded by radio veteran Guy W. Giuliano, was one of the first to
launch an internet radio programming service. The firm syndicated
two commercial formats, hip-hop station BombRadio, and hard rock
format LoudRadio. In 1998, GBS was purchased by the Emusic.com
corporation in a highly publicized cash and stock deal. In 1999,
LoudRadio.com became the first online radio station to be syndicated
on a commercial broadcast station via KLOD-FM in Flagstaff, AZ.
In 1999, one of the first
University/College stations to operate was in
Antigonish,
Nova Scotia at
St. Francis Xavier University
CFXU.
In 1999 a company called BMP
released a tool that allowed anyone to Netcast in 10 minutes. The
MyCaster tool was cleverly simple. It was basically a software MP3
player, similar to
Winamp, that as the user listened to music it simultaneously
sent a stream to the MyCaster Website. MyCaster then amplified the
stream and listed it on its site for listeners to access. The free
service allowed even people with little technical skill to easily go
live with their own Internet radio station. Like many early Internet
radio endeavors, MyCaster succumbed to the dot com bust in 2001.
Peercasting uses
P2P technology. Its requirement of communicating a
URI before transmission and the lack of a centralized repository
of such addresses reduced peercasting's widespread adoption.
Mercora IMRadio, a combination of
social networking and Internet radio, streams music in the Ogg
Vorbis format. Mercora allows users to
webcast music and pays royalties to the
copyright collectives such as
ASCAP,
BMI,
SESAC, and SoundExchange.
RadioVague, in 2003, acquired a transportable satellite internet
broadcast system and started broadcasting live shows from events and
music festivals around Europe using only free and open source
software, broadcasting in OGG/Vorbis format using Icecast and
Icecast2 servers, their first event being the
February 15, 2003 anti-war protest. Since then they have
extended their distribution platform to allow both traditional FM
radio stations and other internet radio stations to achieve a global
audience. |