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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Like Altrok Radio On Your Computer? You'll Love It In Your Car...

This entry started out as a criticism of New York's K-Rock, on the air at WXRK-92.3 HD2, which you can get using an HD radio (there's one for $50 at Best Buy) but which, after a few days of pretty intense listening, is already starting to get a bit old. There's only so many times I can hear Silversun Pickups' "Panic Switch", and while Green Day are certainly a worthy band that's currently on a winning streak, they're pretty much played every hour.

But since that's about all I can say about that, the question becomes, well, what can you do to keep yourself entertained during, say, a long day at the office? My own preference would be to listen to Altrok Radio, but the workplace has a bit of a problem with streaming radio over the network. It tends to limit the bandwidth available for people to do things that are actually work-related. Those bloated Powerpoint presentations simply must get to their intended recipients!

So what to do? If your response is "listen to my iPod", well, we can work with that. The trick is to make it all automatic...and if there's one thing computers are good at, it's making things automatic.

So what has to happen?
  • Get the station playing on your computer. You can use one of the links on this page to make that happen.
  • Get something that'll record what your computer's playing. My choice for this in Windows is MP3DirectCut; it's actually meant for cutting MP3s apart and gluing them back together, but it can also be used to record whatever's playing on your computer to an MP3 file.
  • Once you've saved an MP3 or two, get something that'll tag your MP3s so that your player will show you what you're listening to. Here's one, simply called "Tag", that works from the Windows command line. (Since MP3DirectCut has command-line interfaces, too, you can use Windows Task Scheduler to set your computer up to do things automatically.)
  • Then drag your newly created and tagged MP3s into iTunes - or whatever you use to maintain your MP3 player's library - to listen to them.
So go get those two programs - the savvy among you will figure out how to use them with Wondows Task Scheduler and start recording Altrok Radio almost immediately. If that's not you, then sometime in the very near future we'll talk about how you can use them...

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Welcome to Altrok.com, also available at AltrokRadio.com and AltrockRadio.com. Here's where the remaining listeners of several fine radio stations have retreated, regrouped, and built a replacement strong enough to stand on its own. It builds on the independent legacy of New Jersey's FM106.3, New York's WPIX and WLIR, Oklahoma's 105.3 The Spy, the pre-buyout mindset of KROQ, WBCN and WHFS and of every other alternative station that was destroyed at a moment's notice - not because they weren't making money, but because there was bigger money to be found elsewhere.
 
We've stood by as truly independent alternative rock radio died. Sure, something called "alternative" took its place, but we know for sure that anything that "tests well" with soccer moms just ain't alternative. (Even if some of us happen to be soccer moms.) So we've taken matters into our own hands.
 
This really is independent alternative rock radio, visible here at Altrok.com and audible at our web radio station. It has the classic music that fired our passions back in the day - or that we maybe only heard about from our elders - but it's mostly made of the new music that does precisely the same for us now. We're paying attention to scenes all over the world, watching the energy build, and waiting to see what it creates. Wherever it happens, we'll make sure you can hear about it here. We've been slowly building all this since 2001, and now that you've noticed us, we're glad you're here.
 
Of course, it's only here because you want it to be here, and it can only stay if you help it along - especially by checking out our advertisers (they support us) and by listening (the more that listen, the more visible we are.) Please use the "feedback" link above to let us know whether it works for you, and what you want it to be as the future unfolds. (And if you need help hearing it, let us know that, too.)