> Now I ask myself, if there is software available, which acts as a DJ
> playing mp3 files randomly and provides an internet live radio stream ?
Yes. Google has lots of them. You did look there first, right? Jinzora
is quite good for any media streaming.
--
Jon Solberg (remove "nospam." from email address).
Its a web interface to select and play music sitting on a server using
the local sound card. is it ?
What I'd like to have is somehow different.
I want something like a service/daemon running on a server, which
constantly plays randomly selecteded songs, but instead of outputting
them to a soundcard, creating a continuous live stream,
Eventuelly I'd like to listen to this live stream in contrast to
listening to other internet RADIO streams out there.
> On November 22, 2009 13:29, in comp.os.linux.misc, Loki Harfagr
> (l0...@thedarkdesign.free.fr.INVALID) wrote:
>
>> Sun, 22 Nov 2009 11:17:32 -0500, Lew Pitcher did cat :
...
>>> My advice covers the technical aspects only. You /will/ need a lawyer
>>> if you intend to "broadcast" (even by subscription) copyrighted audio
>>> material.
>>
>> nonsense, you don't need any lawyer to do it,
>
> Technically, you are correct. But, it is better to CYA beforehand than
> to get it handed to you on a platter afterwards. And a lawyer is a good
> place to start if you want an ironclad CYA.
the initial error is that one which turned that world on to a
place where you have to use the CYA principle. As recently seen
people who just looted the world and had an asbestos CYA shell
are by now just richer and greedier while the rank soldiers simply die.
Theses principles should be trashed to incinerators while
those people should be bashed to death, if they're rally that
greedy I may accept to bash them with a 5 Kgm gold bar ,->
>> you may eventually need some fucking lawyer to survive the assault from
>> the fucking crappy producers sucking lawyers bastards.
>
> Just remember the recent case of the college student who lost to the
> RIAA; $650,000 US ($22,500 for each of 30 songs "shared" through Kazaa).
Yes, the people using Kazaa should try and read a few man pages, besides
the people from the RIAA who iniitiated and followed that ordeal should
be sterilized and all their previous family and 'friends' should be
thrown in a fluoric acid lake.
Alternatively I'll consider the possibility to chain them to a
hi-fi set up 110 dB playing loops from their own productions,
maybe a selection off the dion the donna and other midlight howlers would do.
> I think that the OP would find the cost of "licencing for broadcast"
> (even including lawyer's fees for protecting the OP's rights) cheaper
> than the cost of losing to the RIAA in a court case (damages /plus/
> legal fees).
Agreed, stealing the greedy and burning the crooks is OK but
I agree that if you want to broadcast some precautions have to be taken
(including *stop the damn fookin elevator muzak*)
>
>> (just in case: note that I never typed any char in any word of any
>> sentence in this non post which I never wrote nor read, might be a side
>> effect of infra-red USB keyboard, really type anything goes, you know
>> all these techies with their satellites et al...)
>
> Nah. It's just an injection attack by a well-known and much-disrespected
> usenet troll. ;-)
maybe, maybe not, next time I'll put some tinfoil hat on my keyboard,
it seems it did again, I swear I never wrote those posts!