Campcaster

Campcaster
Developer(s) Sourcefabric
Initial release 2004
Stable release 1.4.1 beta / 29 November 2010
Operating system Linux
Available in English; translatable
Type Radio Automation Software
License GNU General Public License v2
Website campcaster.sourcefabric.org

Campcaster is a free and open source[1] radio management application for live broadcasting, remote broadcast automation (via web-based scheduler), and program exchange between radio stations. Campcaster was designed to allow implementation in a number of use scenarios, ranging from an unmanned broadcast unit accessed from remote through the Internet to a local network of Campcaster machines inside a radio station handling live broadcasts and delivering program automation by accessing a central audio storage system.[2]

History

The initial concept for Campcaster, originally named LiveSupport, was developed in 2003 by Micz Flor, a German new-media developer. 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 development was financed from a grant from the Open Society Institute's Information Program, through its ICT Toolsets initiative. The development was originally coordinated by MDLF through its Campware.org initiative, now spun off as the independent not-for-profit organisation Sourcefabric.

Components

Criticism

Despite the early enthusiasm and early adequate funding, Campcaster has yet to gain a greater foothold among radio broadcasters. A new Campcaster development team was recruited by Sourcefabric in June 2010, and the software has been deployed by Open Broadcast, a user generated radio station transmitting on Digital Audio Broadcasting frequencies in Switzerland.[3]

Airtime rewrite

In January 2011, Sourcefabric announced a rewrite of Campcaster, beginning with the 1.6 beta release.[4] The new product, known as Airtime, replaces the C++ scheduler of Campcaster with Liquidsoap, and includes a drag and drop web interface based on jQuery.[5]

See also

External links

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, September 24, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.