Getting Your News as MP3s?
GreenKiwi asks: "I've been really interested in finding a news source that has MP3s of their brodcasts. I have an iPod and download the news in text form most mornings to it so that I can find out what's going on. However, I would love to download (preferably automatically) news in the form of an MP3 that I could download to my iPod in the morning so that I could listen to the news on my way to work. The BBC has Real Audio output, but no MP3s that I can find. NPR has them for Real and WMP. I guess I could download and then convert the files. If that's possible. I'd love to hear whether anyone is doing this and how."
Sorry, no clue at all.
You'll probably need to tweak the voice the TTS program produces to avoid involuntarily wetting yourself laughing when it makes hilarious speak-o's.
Also, you'll need to find a decent news site with few extraneous words and crap.
I get my current fodder from this excellent news site, but somehow I doubt the MP3 version, if they have it, would be quite so thrilling...
Hard News, broadcast by bFM in Auckland, New Zealand. Russell Brown is very love/hate, but it's quite an intellectual take on current events.
Prisoner #655321
Damn these domain name tussles...
:)
It's now at http://www.95bfm.co.bz.
Listening to tractors as mp3s probably isn't very enlightening!
Prisoner #655321
I guess this could be done using MPlayer and LAME.. Mplayer supports mms:// urls and about all codecs there is.. The proprietary extensions to rtsp:// (streaming realaudio/video) is also about to be supported.. It also supports writing audio to raw pcm or wav, which can be encoded to mp3 using LAME.
My other account has a 3-digit UID.
The Text-Mode RealMedia Player (TRPlayer) is a RealMedia player for Unix which has a command-line interface. It can play RealAudio, RealVideo, MP3, and all other media types supported by RealPlayer under Unix. TRPlayer was designed especially for blind Unix users, who don't yet have access to the graphical user interface. However, it is also useful to others; it is a good tool for background audio playback and for use on low-end hardware, such as Intel 486-based PC's.
Simply pipe this thru your favorite mp3/ogg encoder. You may need to use a cheap x86 Linux box, as OS X isn't supported by Real (yet).
next
As a diehard fan of BBC Radio 4 and the world service I'd love a Tivo type device for radio - preferably portable.
Anyone come across one ? or even cobbled together one ?
use a radio...
could apple include a radio?
The Awful Truth
I wholeheartedly agree with you. Festival is a particularly good text-to-speech program. It sounds like an English butler, so you will feel wealthy and pampered while listening to it.
Another benefit of this is that it can be modified with minimal effort to give you audio versions of not just any web site, but any plain text source, whether it be email, your grocery list, your "to do" list (so you can get in the right mindset before arriving at work), yesterday's server stats.
I first learnt of text-to-speech when my uncle lost his eyes in a fishing boat accident. He's a computer enthusiast, and I was soon impressed with his neat new software. Since then, I've noticed that many of the "accessibility" mechanisms put in place for the handicapped can be beneficial to normal people as well. I frequently browse the 'web with no images, and just use ALT tags (intended for the blind). Certain city intersections that "chirp" for blind people when the light is green allow me to cross the street while reading. Wheelchair ramps are easy on the knees, and handicapped parking spaces are usually open and very close to my destination. Text-to-speech may be your first step into a larger, more convenient world.
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
"Eugenia Loli is a fat pig"
Say what you want, but I've always thought she was kinda hot.
Most AM stations have news every half hour.
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
Streambox VCR can save any realaudio stream to a file. Streambox Ripper can convert any realaudio file into an MP3. Unfortunately Streambox VCR was sued into oblivion by Real. (At least as far as they know.)
"handicapped parking spaces are usually open and very close to my destination"
I just have to believe you are kidding since the rest of your post made such sense.
My father is a blogger.
That is what Apple ought to add to the next redo of the iPod: a text to speech reader to read your ebooks or news or email for you. And just consider that instead of wasting 1 MB per minute of MP3 audio news reading, you could have less than 32k of plain text for 5 to 10 minutes of news reading. That would be a kicker.
I first did the Powerbook "read me my news" trick in January of 1999, when it was only a month old for me. I learned quickly to put all of the stories I wanted in either one big text file or in multiple cascaded text files so that I wouldn't have to use the touchpad. Just hitting the Apple-A to select all the text and Apple-H to have it "speak the selection".
I surf over to Publicradiofan.com and find a station that broadcasts my favorite news program in mp3 format and then use streamripper to rip a copy.
Err, are you sure you know what you're talking about?
Hint: It's Mac OS X native.
hmmm... Apple has legacy support for those of us who still use older technologies?
hahahaha, NOT!
you must be thinking of some other company (like EVERY other company).
THERE IS NO DATA. THERE IS O
Have you looked at audible.com? They offer downloadable audio books, magazines, and newspapers. You can burn CD's of the downloaded audio. As of a couple weeks ago, they support iPod on Mac (with firmware 1.2), as well as several portable players for Windows.
Unfortunately, they don't support Linux (only Windows and Mac). Their files are not straight mp3's, they are something proprietary with copy protection.
Check it out, this may be what you are looking for!
Check out audible.com. It looks like it has most of the features you need. It's a pay service, but the content is excellent.
How about just connecting a cheap, AC-powered tape recorder to your sound card and if you want to automate it, plug it into a $10 lamp timer?
People used to do this all the time back in the days before streaming audio. It's called "hooking a tape recorder up to a timer".
Granted, these things called "tapes" can't go in your iPod, but they are compatible with those three "portable tape players" sitting in your desk drawer, and they also play on that thing called a "tape deck" that you normally stick the iPod's car adapter into.
I have a crontab entry which just records what I want to hear each day. It uses rawrec, sox, and bladeenc to do the job.
/archive/radio && /usr/local/bin/rawrec -c 1 -s 32000 -f u8 -t 3600 | sox -b -r 32000 -u -t raw -c 1 - -t wav - 2>/dev/null | /usr/local/bin/bladeenc -128 -quiet STDIN $FILENAME.mp3
Here is an example crontab entry:
0 18 * * 1-5 FILENAME=foo-`date +\%Y\%m\%d`_1 ; cd
Yes, that's a bit of a convoluted command line, but it does the job. I'm sure there's a better way of doing it, but the above has worked for me for quite a while. All you'd have to do is download it to your iPod.
Also, a lot of radio stations and programs have pre-determined times when they cut to commercials. If you're adventurous, you could have those automatically cut out. I've looked into doing it, but never got around to it.
I bought this program to convert books to mp3 for my exams. It's Windows based only at this point. It does a fine job.
Just start it up and copy the text you want to mp3 and it grabs it.
The best part-- is they have a program that does News from websites, just like you want it. I haven't tried that one though. I just wanted to listen to those boring manuals and exam crams instead of falling asleep reading them.
There is also Groups Aloud (for a News reader!!) and Stocks Aloud if you are still gambling in that arena. :-)
"You may all go to hell and I will go to Texas"
Sen. Davy Crocket to US Congress, Nov. 1, 1835
Follow this link. (I am way too lazy to do anything else but link today)
Check out audible.com you can buy a subscription that lets you download a book on MP3 every month and have a subscription to NPR news or the wall street journel on MP3 for about $15(us). You can also buy subscriptions or books individually, I've been thinking about subscribing.
Cheap storage VM.
http://www.af.mil/news/radio/latest.mp3
updated five days a week.
Perhaps not the general news that submitter is looking for, but it is news in mp3. I would certainly prefer Ogg Vorbis though.
Phillip
WAMU, one of DC's "public radio" stations streams in MP3 format. http://www.wamu.org
sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
With iTunes 3 and a new firmware update, you should be able to subscribe to one of the Audible newspaper digests. They have a daily collection from the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times, which you can automaticaly download to iTunes and thus your iPod. It will probably run you $10 a month.
Yawn.
Unfortunately, they don't archive these shows so you'd have to use something appropriate to save the stream.
A further consideration is the timezone. If you're on the west coast you might be better off ripping an east coast stream overnight, that way your entire morning news program is ready to upload by 6 am, some scheduled recordings could grab the hourly news bites to keep you on top of late breaking events.
Bleh!
Thats KCRW....
Bleh!
http://www.arrl.org/arrlletter/audio/
http://www.tapr.org/newsline/
. . . getting my MP3s as news.
CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.
I don't know if this is legal, but have you thought of rebroadcasting the news that is available in other formats? With coutcast or icecast it's possible just to broadcast out whatever is playing over the soundcard as an Mp3.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
I've found this magical device called AM radio.. it has lots of live news, all the time- and it's free!
Kuow is a seattle station that streams in low bitrate mp3. I setup crontab to record my favorite shows on my firewall pentium 90 then listen to it when ever I need my fix.
i cant belive i beat everyone else too it ....
......
try http://www.2600.com/offthehook/
for some informative news
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe." --Albert Einstein
there is no thing
what else could you want?
I use a program called Total Recorder, available at http://www.highcriteria.com/ for $11.95 (US). It records the output of Real player, M$ Media Player, or even Winamp digitally, and allows you to save the file as wav or mp3 (using Lame or Blade mp3 libraries). Even includes a timer, so you can leave the audio player running all day, with set start and stop times. Best $12 I've ever spent on software.
The Free Speech Radio News is available as an MP3.
Every day by around 2PM Eastern (US), DemocracyNow.Org - a progressive news show - posts their hour-long broadcast in mp3 format and keeps several days of shows. WebActive.com - a venture funded in part by Real.com - has a lot of progressive shows but they're all in Real format. Check out these progressive news sources; you'll be suprised to hear "the other side" of the story and a well balanced news broadcast unlike the goverment warhawk mouthpiece drivel you hear on Fox News and CNN.
Audible.com has their own format for audio, but you can burn the Daily New York Times or Washington Post to CD, and Windows users can burn the audio to CD. Goldwave can convert the Audible.com files to WAV, MP3 or other formats. Trying the site and content is free.
:(
I'm a customer, not an employee.
Windows only though.
"Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA