[QUOTE BY= gaulois] Would the Vive board be on board?[/QUOTE]<br /> <br /> I'll bring it up at the next Meeting of the Bored. <img align=absmiddle src='images/smilies/wink.gif' alt='Wink'> Should be one in the next couple weeks.<br />
I have got my shoutcast server up and kicking (&winamp client) for a small group audience (10-20 listeners), which seems a reasonable way to get started.
qaulois is your station in french, english or both?
En français en ce qui me concerne mais ca dépend qui est au micro!
What's the website? Do you have a link to how it was created? You did say it was easy right? Is it through your host's service?
It is on my Canard. Check welcome screen left and click is under Radio-Canard. I seldom broadcast at this (it is talk show stuff). It is installed on my own PC seat and yes it is through my shaw ISP.<br /> <br /> It is a matter of installing shoutcast (see shoutcast.com), follow the instructions, install the DSP plug-in (as per instruction) and WINAMP media player if you are not using iet (pas per instructions).<br /> Microphone input (-vs- media filse) is selected by operating winamp as part of your broadcast (as per instructions).<br /> <br /> You may have to tweek your Window Firewall (to let 8000/8001 UDP port trafic through. You may also have to do 8000/8001 port forwarding to the PC DHCP IP address where you will be broadcasting from. If your main IP address is not fixed (e.g. in ADSL) you simply have to communicate this IP address to whoever is listening to you (or make it available via a click on your own web site). Plan 4-8 hours to get it going, first test broadcast on your own LAN and get a friend to listen to your broadcast afterward. The shoutcast tech forum is quite good but I can also help you out as needed. It is fun stuff.