If youre under 35, chances are when you think of radio you think about listening to it on your computer at work via streaming audio, possibly satellite radio in your car if you can afford it and maybe as a last resort those AM or FM stations Mom and Dad like.
And, if youre under 20, you probably think the Net streams are cool but, you also like listening to radio on your iPod or other portable audio device after youve downloaded the files.
Folks: the fact of the matter is radio aint what it used to be.
A lot has changed in just the last 12 years.
In 1992, the Federal Communications Commission allocated a spectrum in the S band for satellite radio. In 1997, SIRIUS (formerly CD Radio) and XM Radio (formerly American Mobile Radio) forked over $80 million dollars each for the right to broadcast from space.
In 1995 software developers at RealNetworks were just starting to make progress with RealAudio their solution for streaming sound over the Internet.
Within a few years, portals emerged for hosting hundreds of webcasters who started up these new virtual radio stations. We had many names for it at first: netradio, webradio, netcasting, etc.
Today, there are hundreds of channels available between XM and SIRIUS and thousands of Internet radio stations to listen to.

