| RobT | 17 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 20.07.17 um 19:20 Uhr | | So, yesterday I had automated recordings of radio shows land, woot!
Now I wonder: I would like to get these to show up in an RSS feed so that I can use a tool like RSSRadio to listen to them on the go. I don't know much about that, so I wonder if anyone here has experience with it?
Thanks, Rob T |
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| alex | 2549 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 25.07.17 um 20:29 Uhr zuletzt bearbeitet von alex am 25.07.17 um 20:30 Uhr | | This will be complicated to setup… The recorded files need to be made available for access from the internet, maybe they need to be converted to a podcast format, and additionally they need to be published to the RSS feed. This is possible but not easy. |
| | | | LG/Best regards, Alex
"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations." - George Orwell
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| RobT | 17 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 06.08.17 um 08:45 Uhr | | I figured this out, both for a personal podcast of streamWriter shows, but also for my own radio show.
I am good at Unix shell scripts, and worked on my Solaris machine and then under the Cygwin environment under Windows. I figured out the RSS-XML format and wrote a script to produce one based on my recordings, and found I could upload it to a few places and subscribe to it. The audio files are not magic, just regular mp3 or aac files as streamWriter writes out - the only magic is the RSS-XML file. I found I had to be picky about where to host the audio files:
- Google Drive could host my RSS-XML files, does not permit large downloads without prompting for interactive confirmation that it can skip a virus check - Dropbox permits large downloads, but doesn't give very much space for free - Amazon Drive seems comparable, but I didn't check it out because … - archive.org worked, because it permits large downloads, and even has predictable URLs
I got the basics working with uploads and maintenance through the website, and then learned to automate the uploads with the 'ia' Python-based tool. Now, every time I add or delete a file and run my script, what needs to be deleted gets deleted, what needs to be uploaded gets uploaded, and the latest RSS-XML file gets put in place. My final thing was to get this running on a set schedule under 'cron'. Pretty happy right now.
Oh, and I should say it loudly - I really like streamWriter, as it makes all of this work!
Take care, Rob T |
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| alex | 2549 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 18.08.17 um 20:21 Uhr | | Wow! I am really happy to read this. Usually people posting here do not write shell or python scripts, so my answer to this topic was a little short. The way you did it could be how I would have done it myself! |
| | | | LG/Best regards, Alex
"Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations." - George Orwell
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| RobT | 17 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 23.08.17 um 17:09 Uhr zuletzt bearbeitet von RobT am 23.08.17 um 17:10 Uhr | | I've got this working even better now - fixed some bugs, but also cleaned up the XML I generate so that it's iTunes friendly, and for my radio show feed, I am automatically grabbing my playlist from Spinitron and adding that to the episode. I'm happy to share if someone finds this useful.
My radio show podcast is here: https://archive.org/download/CelticJourneysKRFC/celticjourneys.xml All of the shows since mid-July were from streamWriter
Rob T |
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| piezanno | 3 Beiträge | |
| schrieb am 09.12.17 um 02:49 Uhr | | RobT Hi, I just finished building a similar system to record radio talk shows and publish them (to myself) and listen using RSS Radio.
Here's how I did it. 1. I installed "tinyweb" server on windows 10 (http://ccm.net/faq/2568-tinyweb-server-on-windows) 2. I have a windows shell ".bat" file that runs after every streamwriter file save that: a. checks to see if tinyweb server is running and starts it if it is not. b. passes the "just saved" file name to a vbScript I wrote. 3. The vbscript reads in the file name, opens a settings xml document, and then writes out an xml for every file in the show's group. Since I rewrite the file every time, if I delete any files, they aren't included on the next xml create.
Right now the code is ugly and not cleaned up, but happy to share if anyone wants it
What I really like about streamwriter is that if the station uses a playlist, I only save the actual show files and skip all the commercials! |
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