“The large and growing public will provide value to advertisers in coming years (…) Internet radio has become an important distribution channel for the music industry willing to become an important advertising channel for marketers” (Xapp, 2015, p.4) (Figure 3). Moreover, Internet radio brings huge economic benefits in compare to broadcasting on traditional electromagnetic waves. Internet radio has broken the inherent limitations of receiving via traditional radio like: listening only once, following time regulation (linear time) completely passive reception storage –information inability. More choice Listen to tens of thousands of Internet radio stations from around the world Resilient radio Radio will always be able to work even if. The appearance of the Internet, the popularity of smartphones, computers and the benefits of using Internet radio have explained the increase in the number of listeners of this type of communication. In 2015, 95% of the public received Internet radio via cellphones, only 5% listened via computers (Xapp Media, 2015). The popular Internet radio device in the US is smartphone. “The audience is expected to grow to 183 million by 2018, significantly outpacing population growth” (Xaap Media, 2015, p.5). In 2017, Americans spent 879 minutes (equivalently to 14.65 hours) each month listening to online radio (Statistics, 2018). There were 57% of the US population using online radio (Statistics, 2018) (Figure 1).
To 2016, this number was 50% and one year later - in 2017, there were more than half of the US population, which is equivalent to 53% of people listening to radio online every week. Six years later, the number of Americans listening online was 33%, approximately 86 million. In the US, in 2007, 12% of people listened to online radio at least once a month. The research by XAPP Media (USA) indicated: 44% of listeners supposed that the time previously reserved for AM / FM radio was replaced by time for Internet Radio (Xapp Media, 2015). Thus, according to experts, although it is not able to replace completely traditional radio, Internet radio will reset the listening time, listening method and at the same time listening content. Internet radio and streaming services are not completely capable of replacing broadcast radio, but it is changing the listening time and also creating incremental audio consumption” (Xapp Media, 2015, p.13). The answer is: “The number of Internet radio audiences is growing and the time they spend for the media is increasing rapidly. With the radio application which has already integrated on smartphones, networked computers and other hand-held visual audio devices, it comes as no surprise that many people wonder whether Internet radio can replace traditional radio or not. That means, more than 50% of the world's population has used the Internet. Three years after she was first charged, we find out how this saga finally ends.The new 2018 Global Digital suite of reports from We Are Social and Hootsuite reveals that there are now more than 4 billion people around the world using the Internet.
#WHAT PROGRAM TO USE FOR INTERNET RADIO SERIES#
Starting August 31, 2021, in a series of new episodes, "The Dropout: Elizabeth Holmes on Trial" will take you inside the courtroom, breaking down the evidence and keeping score for both sides until 12 jurors decide the fate of the Theranos founder and new mother. The radio sets up in minutes and is simple to use allowing users to search, find and bookmark their favorite programs with the touch of a couple buttons. You'll hear exclusive interviews with former employees, investors, and patients, and for the first-time, the never-before-aired deposition testimony of Elizabeth Holmes, and those at the center of this story.
Maine Public Radios music program featuring contemporary singer-songwriters, folk. How did the world’s youngest self-made female billionaire lose it all in the blink of an eye? How did the woman once heralded as “the next Steve Jobs” find herself facing criminal charges - to which she pleaded not guilty - and up to decades in prison? How did her technology, meant to revolutionize health care, potentially put millions of patients at risk? And how did so many smart people get it so wrong along the way? ABC News chief business, technology and economics correspondent Rebecca Jarvis, along with producers Taylor Dunn and Victoria Thompson, take listeners on a journey that includes a multi-year investigation. If you dont see Internet Radio, choose Edit (next to Library in the. The story of Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos is an unbelievable tale of ambition and fame gone terribly wrong.