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Old WFOS Studio - Chesapeake Center for Science and Technology - Chesapeake, VA - This is what remains of the old studio. A new studio was built 20+ years ago. Camera = Nikon F100 - Film = Ilford FP4+ 125
1946 Zenith Model 8H034
AM/FM Hi Band/FM Lo Band
Zenith Radio Corp.
Chicago, Ill.
During the mid 40’s the FCC was in a state of uncertainty as to which of two FM frequencies it would permit as the standard for FM broadcasting. Consequently some radio manufacturers (such as Zenith) temporarily included two different FM bands on their sets. The broadcasting of both bands simultaneously was very brief. Ultimately the high band won out rendering the low band obsolete. The introductory price for the 8H034 was $89.95 – a hefty price for a table radio in 1946.
As a kid, the year I remember finally having music in my room was 1983. The incredible, life-changing technology of the transistor radio allowed me that freedom to take music wherever I desired. Just trying to fine-tune your station on the dial could be a challenge. But whether it was music, a tornado warning, or listening to baseball games outside on a summer afternoon, portable transistor radios were awesome!
1983 was such a huge year for popular music, especially the next wave of music from the UK. I think of all the unforgettable songs from '83, from "Every Breath You Take" and "King of Pain" by The Police, to Adam Ant's "Goody Two-Shoes." YES had a huge hit with "Owner of A Lonely Heart," everyone couldn't get enough of "Come On Eileen" by Dexy's Midnight Runners, Def Leppard was blowing out speakers with "Photograph," and Big Country had such a catchy hit with "In A Big Country."
But the band that did it for me that year, and for more years to follow was Duran Duran. You couldn't go very far on the dial without finding another station playing "Rio" or "Hungry Like the Wolf" from the 1982 album "Rio." They were on MTV and "Friday Night Videos" constantly in 1983. The album cover was itself a piece of art, created by Los Angeles artist Nagel. The album went platinum in '83, and eventually double-platinum (2 million copies sold).
"Rio" vinyl album and Panasonic RF-504D transistor radio, lit with a Nanlite Pavotube and two LED flashlights.
Sony Walkman With
FM Radio
AM Radio
1988
Made in Japan
Found in a Box in my Closet
and made this picture of it
Handheld
Tonemapped
cropped
Portfolio ;
www.google.nl/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=aheroy&source=...
Darckr;
DSMP
(Dont Steal My Pictures)
© Copyright : You cannot use my photos !
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After he had dental work performed at Dr. Baugh's office, Bernard began to hear music from 88.0 to 108.0 MHz. He learned that by adjusting his jaw he could listen to different radio stations. Then one day as Bernard was walking underneath a painter's scaffold in Birmingham Alabama, he heard the painters ask each other "Do you hear that?" It was then that Bernard realized he was a human transmitter. With this revelation, Bernard began riding the bus and subway, secretly transmitting opera from National Public Radio and bringing high culture involuntarily to the masses.
Strobist: AB1600 with 60X30 softbox overhead. Reflector underneath. Triggered by Cybersync.
In 1959 the radio station started broadcasting out of Evergreen Plaza as WNUA. WNUA played Big Band music as their format. In the early 1970's with WNUA making a move downtown they switched to top 40 music. In 1976 WNUA changed its call letters to WMET which played Classic Rock. In 1978 WMET changed again to WEFM which played top 40. Shortly after for a couple of years they played Jazz under WNUA. Now it is a Spanish music station.
June. Downtown Music Festival. Yonge Street. Toronto. INDIE 88.1. Far left on your FM dial. NXNE is a raging annual 10-day summer festival and conference every June in Toronto,
.... CHUM-FM is a Canadian radio station in Toronto, Ontario, it broadcasts at 104.5 MHz with a adult contemporary format. CHUM's studios are located at 250 Richmond Street West in the Entertainment District, while its transmitter is located atop the CN Tower. CHUM-FM is consistently one of Toronto's most popular stations, CHUM-FM started broadcasting on September 1, 1963 ....
SEOUL FMRADIO hay dã man nhe nhe nhe :X:X=p~
Éhehe ;;). Rảnh rỗi làm nên điều lầm lỗi :)). Mấy bạn tha cái tô giùm mình nhaaa :)). Mình biết nó gớm r chỉ là ds đẹp nên up cho dui đó mà :">. nói chứ trog bonus nhìn cũg ngon =))
+bonus | >>>>>>click allsizes<<<<<<<<<<
hôm 25 @ Vincom v' Mèo,Ếch,Zoi,Híu,Supy,Sam,Jesi và ảnh ts :"> bữa đi đ' chụp đc j` :'). chỉ up 3 tấm m` ưng nhất thôi nhé =)) keo vậy đó hihi :-x
Ú là la \:D/ ~ Đã tiêu hết xiền và 14 ngày nữa bạn X mới đc lãnh lươg :))
Sau đó sẽ đi chơi wậy fá tanh bành với các t.y như đã hứa ;).
Gia đình mình quá là nề nếp và nghiêm tắc nhỉ hehe =) may là mình hiểu :"x
Mình yêu mẹ nên chỉ ở nhà onl, đt, chơi bời trog xóm, tập nhảy, đi coi film + ăn uốg vs chị Kire yêu yêu, Kỳ Kỳ krazie và Lyzie thôi (cả mụ Chyp nữa mà mụ ý bận học thêm hoài) :x. Sắp tới thì du lịch đại gia đìnhhhhhh :-bd. Hú hú sẽ vui lắm đây <3.
My favorite radio station on the internet. They have an amazing morning morning show. They play "Heinz 57" music, Meaning you will hear everything from country to classic rock. Their slogan is "No Rap and No Crap"
They have a great variety of shows too. Born to ride Radio, The Wolfman Jack Show and the Southern Symposium just to name a couple.
1170am
Bushnell In Sumter County Florida
1330am
In Lakeland and Plant City Florida
1360am
Cypress Gardens Winter Haven
1390am
107.5fm
Avon Park, Sebring Florida
Camera used: Halina Vision XF
Film used: Fujifilm Superia X-Tra 400
Location: Croydon, Victoria, Australia.
Really hard to photograph this building, it was really hard to get a good angle.
At the end of our ride we tried to duct tape the camera to my raised seat and then get some sweet blurry riding shots. Most of them didn't work (at all), some looked OK on the little screen but not on anything bigger than a 2.5" screen, and then this one following Blake actually worked out pretty well.
Shot with Nikon D810 with Carl Zeiss 50mm f/1.4 ZE Planar T* Manual Focus Lens
Disclaimer: This shot is part of my test/experiments with product photography/table top photography. This is not any endorsement of any product(s). I wasn't commissioned by the company which owns this product or by any agency to shoot. This should not be used for any commercial / non-commercial use. This is purely for my portfolio.
Broadcasting live from Philadelphia Auto Show, Philadelphia, PA USA. The versatility of the Fuji X100 system's leaf shutter and flash capability.
During the 1960's and 1970's WRVR, was NYC's premier jazz radio station. In 1980 the station switched formats, eventually becoming light rock WLTE-FM (which also became a very popular nyc radio station)
This cassette is another item from the past; this photo, a document. After vinyl (singles and albums), after reel-to-reel, after recording on blank cassettes, after buying CDs and burning CDs, after Google Music (wasn’t that it, “Google Music”?), and music through Amazon Prime and Spotify, I turned to Apple Music. I’ve paid for that delivery service for several years now. I can still tire of a favorite song I’ve played to death on one of my playlists in Apple Music, and, when I do, I place that song in a playlist I’ve titled “Out of Rotation” and then delete the song from its original playlist. The song is still a favorite. I will want to hear it again, but not every day or every other day or even once a week. Then again, on occasion, I turn to the “Out of Rotation” playlist and listen to those songs with a fresh ear.
Recently, I’ve been thinking about songs I’d like to have played at my funeral. An easy choice for an instrumental would be J.S. Bach’s “Unaccompanied Cello Suite No. 2 in D Minor, BWV 1008: I. Prélude,” from the album BACH: CELLO SUITES NOS. 1-6 (a 2009 remaster from a 1983 recording by Yo-Yo Ma), easy in the sense that a selection of that ilk would seem appropriate to the mourners, and, most importantly, because I love its soufulness, thanks to Bach, of course, but also to the cello itself, a soulful instrument, in my estimation, and to Yo-Yo Ma, a great musician I’ve had the pleasure to see and hear live.
However, of late, I’ve settled on two songs. Settling on two songs has been very difficult. Part of me wants to provide a list of dozens of songs to be played. Why miss a chance like this to program the lives of other people—my captive audience—with quality music they need (whether they know it or not)? There will be time for more than two songs because there won’t be any time wasted on “religious” drivel at my funeral. However, at the moment, I’ve decided to limit myself to these two songs, and they should be played in this order:
“My Back Pages” by Bob Dylan, as it appears on his album ANOTHER SIDE OF BOB DYLAN.
The “older” and “younger” contrast here is sweet; however, Dylan said so much with these lyrics back in the 60s that I would say now. Dylan, a great writer of what he called finger-pointin’ songs, was mature enough to point the finger at himself with this song early in his career. His move reminds me of one type of poem called the “palinode.” In a palinode, poets retract some position or statement they had previously made in an earlier poem. They are strong enough to be critical of themselves (and isn’t it always easier to be critical of others instead?). They realize life is flux, life is change. They realize new facts may appear they had not known to consider; they realize that situations may well change and push them, if they’re strong enough to be honest, to change their minds. I’d play this song to point my finger at those self-righteous, praying-in-public excuses for professors and students on the far left of the political spectrum who remind me of their brethren, the Southern Baptist preachers on the fundamentalist Right, remind me of the Mormons and the Catholics, too, and don’t get me started on all the religions where people desperately desire some certainty that they can be so sure of that they are more than willing to beat others with that cudgel, and, yes, even beat them to death. Gee, thanks for ruining the academy, you self-righteous moralists, including secularists, who hold onto your “only truth” like the “grotesques” as described by Sherwood Anderson in his book WINESBURG, OHIO.
“I’m Ready,” written by Willie Dixon, as sung by Muddy Waters on THE BEST OF MUDDY WATERS.
This great blues song is not about being ready for death. Far from it. The dark humor portion of this choice for my funeral makes me smile.
For more lagniappe, click on the album with that title below. (To access the “lagniappe” album on your iPhone, click on the information icon at the bottom of this screen; then, when your next screen appears, scroll down just a bit, and you'll see that "album.")
Tapa del manual de usuario de un grabador de casettes marca National Panasonic, comprado en Asunción en 1976.
El modelo adquirido fue el RQ-358 (el de la derecha)
Con casi 35 años esta antigüedad (a pesar de estar casi toda destartalada) aún funciona!
Antes de extirparle varias partes (para un proyecto de electrónica) el aparato tenía un peso de aproximadamente 2.7 kilos (sin las baterías, unas 4 en total, tamaño R20, a.k.a 'pila grande')
The European 1GB edition of the Sandisk Sansa Express USB MP3 player, firmware version 01.01.12e, is shown. The manual talks about certain of these devices having an FM radio - for some reason, the European edition doesn't ship with this feature, while the American edition does.
I did some digging and discovered that all the devices have the FM radio hardware, but you'll need to flash the European firmware, replacing it with the American version, to enable the feature. Download the American version of firmware.
Instructions:
1. Download the firmware and unzip the files to your Desktop.
2. You'll see a file called "StMp3Rec.sys", move this to "C:\windows\system32\drivers\". If you already have this driver, no need to overwrite the files.
3. Put the player in USB mode as follows:
a) Right-click on My Computer then select Properties.
b) In the Hardware tab, click the Device Manager button.
c) Find the Sansa Express device. (It should be in the Windows Portable Devices category)
d) Right click on the device then select Update Driver.
e) Choose "No...", "Install from a list...", and then "Don't search...".
f) Check the "Show Compatible Hardware" checkbox if it is unchecked.
g) Select "USB Mass Storage Device", click Next, and then click Finish.
4. My device showed up as "G:" in Windows Explorer.
5. Copy everything from the device to a backup folder on your "C:".
Back up everything on your device. The firmware update may delete your files!
6. Open the firmware folder and double click on "SansaExpressUpdater.exe" - a box with a large yellow warning symbol and a progress bar will show the firmware update being applied.
7. Close the updater box once finished and unplug the device from the USB port.
8. Power on the device and check the firmware version in the player's settings.
Teleton TF 182 Solid State Portable. It is a "World Master" 8 band receiver and came with a time zone world map. 1970s.
Community fm 2005 @ Urbis, Manchester, UK
(left to right)
Techmaster Phil Edmunds,
Producers David Forgham-Bailey & Lloyd Frontline
Norway is switching off the FM-band,
here in this county it all died today at 11:11AM.
I celebrated the last few minutes by listening with this SONY ICF-SW7600, bought somewhere in Manhattan, on the East Side, some time during spring 1992.
It's been a faithful travelling companion, during my Istanbul years (mid nineties) Norwegian short wave radio was received with a quality of transmission that was equal to a transmitter across the street. These days it's all getting quieter and quieter.
I did a brief scan of the 31 meter SW a couple of days ago, and it's not much life there. Internet radio has taken over.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OM-D EM! with lens Olympus M.Zuiko 40-150mm f/2.8 PRO and teleconverter MC-14. Taken at ISO 200, 1/640sec f/6.3
When there is no longer any cell phone coverage in Algonquin Park, there is still a left over of "civilization" with the local and only Moose FM Radio :)
Hard to create a more iconic symbol of Canada....
Portable Transistor Radio. This is a 'Transistor 6' battery portable transistor radio by the KOYO Denki Co in Japan. c 1958. Powered by a single 9 volt battery, these small affordable and mass produced radios were the essential accessory of the pop generation of the 1960s.
I liberated this from the loft today. My brother's old Fisher STEREO QUADRAPHONIC tuner amp. It still works and it sounds GREAT.
Appropriately the first thing that came out of it was 'Baker Street' by Gerry Rafferty. God bless Sounds of the Seventies on Radio 2. 'Rubber Bullets' by 10cc and 'Jessica' by the Allman Brothers followed. They sounded good. Oh, and then 'There Is A Light That Never Goes Out' by the Smiths - that was from XFM's Best 1000 Songs Ever. I didn't realise this but apparently, according to XFM, Muse are better than The Smiths and Joy Division. Which is odd because 'Knights of Cydonia' (smashing in at that all-important Number Four position, pop-pickers) sounds like a bit of The Pixies (the thereminy bit at the start), a bit of Queen (high pitched harmonic vocals in the middle) and 10cc (the thwocking bass-line at the end) glued together. Okay as a party piece or a Bill Bailey sketch, but hardly one of the greatest pieces of music ever recorded.
Oh, and how many people have a joystick on the radio in their kitchen?