Radio Listening Software
Radio Listening Software: |
There are a number of Radio devices, in particular those TV tuner devices which also contain a radio receiver/tuner, for which V4L directly supports. The following list of software applications allow one to control a radio tuner.
Radio Applications
Gnomeradio and kradio, the most fully featured applications, are not yet available in all distributions and need to be compiled first. Some of the older applications are mature and readily available, but no longer actively developed.
- fftv [1]
- fmtools
- gkrellm-radio -- minimalistic gkrellm plugin to control radio tuners
- gnomeradio -- for Gnome, capable of recording
- GNU Radio -- the GNU software radio, testing phase; cf. wiki
- gradio -- in Debian, but not currently active
- ivtv-radio [2] -- part of the ivtv-utils package
- KRadio for KDE
- MPlayer -- media player for Linux. See link for radio usage information
- radio -- a n-curses-based radio application (part of the xawtv package)
- radioshark -- application to control the griffin radioshark
- XDRadio --- XDialog wrapper for radio listening
- xfce4-radio-plugin -- plugin for the Xfce panel
- xmms-fmradio -- plugin for XMMS, last version autumn 2004, Debian and Red Hat packages
Also See
- For devices capable of receiving RDS information, see the associated userspace applications.
- dvbradio (part of the v4 xawtv package) as an example of a specific application for listening to radio streams embedded within dvb transport streams
User experiences
If you're a user, post your installation and user experiences here!
gnomeradio
Clearly a more sophisticated application. There's only a debian package for i386, so I'll need to build from the tarball. Since I'm mainly interested in remote recording, I'll try fmtools and radio first.
gradio
I tried gradio on Debian amd64, as it's available; it's very basic. If you don't have the card on /dev/radio, start with
gradio -d /dev/radio2
No recording capability, stable gui, minimal functionality -- tuner and volume. I had to hand-edit the .gradiorc configuration file to get station presets; I may have missed some way of doing this through the gui.