The challenge would be to get the Reciva radios to accept an alternate source. Even if you put in a trick DNS to route the requests it would not work because the radios make a connection using an encrypted datastream (not SSL) to get the content. So - unless there is a secret setting to make the radios use a plain text transfer (a bit like we did with the Turtlebeach Audiotron) or someone breaks the encryption then it would not work.
Paul On Fri, 13 May 2011 16:19:08 -0400, you wrote: >A thought -- if the unthinkable happens and Reciva no longer maintains >its station database, could one use a UPnP server on another computer >visible in the home network to actually keep the URLs? > >It would also appear that the Coherence platform has a "backend" that >can read from the Radiotime directory service, so you wouldn't have to >necessarily maintain it on your own. > >See http://coherence.beebits.net/ > >and also http://coherence.beebits.net/wiki/Radiotime > >It appears there are Unix flavors as well as Windows flavors. > >This looks like a fun project to investigate when I have some "free time". _______________________________________________ Internetradio mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/internetradio To unsubscribe: Send an E-mail to [email protected]?subject=unsubscribe, or visit the URL shown above.
