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Open source radio automation
Open source radio automation







2.5.2.1 is the last version released on April 8 of 2015.

open source radio automation

Released on March 16 of 2015 under AGPL-3.0-only. Īirtime 2.5.2 added a new / rewritten installer, stability improvements and several new APIs. A bugfix update 2.1.2 was released on June 18.Īirtime 2.2 added smart blocks, live assist features and new streaming capabilities and was released on 29 October. On 5 June 2012, Airtime 2.1 added live stream rebroadcasting from remote sources and on-the-fly editing of live shows in a revised Now Playing interface. The Airtime 2.0 release on 25 January 2012 added new features including stream configuration through the browser, live stream preview, and uploading of any audio file to SoundCloud. 1.9.4 was released on September 27 with DEB packages for Ubuntu and Debian. Also added were SHOUTcast support, a one line Ubuntu install command and improved front-end widgets. Īirtime 1.9 was released on Augwith a new file storage system that allowed users to set 'watch' folders, to synchronise files and to browse their audio archives. Īirtime 1.8.2 was released on Jwith improvements to installation, upgrade, file upload limit and the interface. SoundCloud support, allowing users to automatically upload recorded shows, was announced in May 2011. Airtime's default output stream became Ogg, rather than MP3. Show repeat and rebroadcast made possible, and the calendar improved with reported loading times five to eight times faster. The ability to edit shows was introduced, 1.6 was released in February 2011 under GPL-3.0-only.Īirtime 1.8.1 was released on following up on releases 1.7 and 1.8 in April. The new product, known as Airtime, replaced the C++ scheduler of Campcaster with Liquidsoap, and includes a drag and drop web interface based on jQuery. In January 2011, Sourcefabric announced a rewrite of Campcaster, beginning with the 1.6 beta release. The development was originally coordinated by MDLF through its initiative, now spun off as the independent not-for-profit organisation Sourcefabric. The initial development was financed from a grant from the Open Society Institute's Information Program, through its ICT Toolsets initiative. The concept was further developed by Ákos Maróy, a software developer and then-member of Tilos Radio, Robert Klajn, a radio producer at Radio B92, and Douglas Arellanes and Sava Tatić from the Media Development Loan Fund (MDLF). The initial concept for Airtime, originally named LiveSupport, and then Campcaster was developed in 2003 under GPL-2.0-or-later by Micz Flor, a German new-media developer.

open source radio automation

  • 1.1 Stalled Development and LibreTime Fork.








  • Open source radio automation