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this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2024
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Asklemmy
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I liked the ones that had fm receivers in them and if you plugged in a pair of headphones they would act as the antenna and you could listen to local Radio stations.
forgot about that. I think that's how my Walkman worked as well
I honestly miss that in modern handheld devices. A lot of radio stations aren't even available as Internet radio, and if they are, there's often no common search database (except iHeartRadio, except fuck iHeartRadio) so you have to manually input the stream URL, and a lot of them make it a pain in the ass to even find the stream URL on their site.
In short: fuck Internet radio. FM's where it's at.
Edit: Sorry, I should have specified: I'm in the US, specifically the Midwest.
I don't know its source for stations, but Transistor has direkt links for many German radio stations and probably other regions too.
I still vastly prefer FM, DAB or Satellite radio, but when those aren't available Transistor is a nice alternative.
Sorry, I should have specified: I'm speaking from the perspective of a Midwestern American.
It seems to also have american stations, I'd recommend you still give it a try.
Okay, so I installed it through F-Droid and tried to find this station
but it couldn't find it even when I included the callsign.
Am I doing something wrong?
Nope, you're doing everything right. Unfortunately it seems like that station actually just isn't available in whatever catalog Transistor uses.
Balllllllllllllllllls...
...That being said, this is exactly what I was talking about.
You can also try https://f-droid.org/packages/net.programmierecke.radiodroid2/
Seems like it's no longer maintained, but it works fine, has search, sleep timer.
It uses data from https://www.radio-browser.info/
It's all FOSS