Downloading music from the Internet has proved to be a very contentious issue
in the past and while
Napster and
Itunes are examples of how
to do it legally, many programs are exploiting the legal loophole.
Radio Tracker scans for Internet radio stations that use the
Shoutcast service and
will then record music from any streams it can find.
Tracks are then encoded into mp3 format and placed in a music folder,
complete with ID3 artist and track tags.
We quizzed publishers Avanquest on the legality of utilities such as Radio
Tracker. They replied that as long as the recorded streams are stored purely for
personal use, it's totally legal.
Depending on Internet connection speed, dozens of streams can be recorded
simultaneously - we managed to get 15 streams all downloading at once.
The bit-rate of each recorded track depends on the bit-rate broadcast by the
radio station - the highest we found was 192Kbits/sec.
In a few hours we accumulated more than 250 tracks, each of which being
advert, jingle and DRM-free and ready to play on a PC or transfer to a portable
media player.
Radio Tracker also normalises each track and adds a fade to the start and end
of recordings.
You can manually limit the bandwidth used by Radio Tracker, as well as the
maximum number of streams, the amount of data received and length of recording
times. You can also remove the fading from tracks.
Bad points are that it only supports Shoutcast stations and you can't flick
between station genres during recordings. Plus, many of the listed stations
aren't able to be recorded from.
For £20, Radio Tracker is a cheap way of getting an unlimited supply of
decent music onto your computer.
System requirements:
Pentium processor
Internet connection
Windows 2000/XP
Reader comments