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<p class="p">Their primary directory on Radionomy.com only lists stations
which radionomy itself hosts streaming servers for. It's over 6000
already. Both listening and station hosting are free (given agreement
to autoplay advertisements, and a minimum quota of daily listeners).
Radionomy is therefore pretty popular and growing.</p>
<p class="p">The extraction method in streamtuner2 uses a mix of RegExp,
DOM traversal, and JSON extraction, with some AJAX updating spiced
in. (It closely follows the website scheme to fetch station lists.)
</p>
</div>
<div id="options" class="sect"><div class="inner">
<div class="hgroup"><h2 class="title"><span class="title">Configuration</span></h2></div>
<div class="region"><div class="contents">
<p class="p"> You can configure the number of pages it'll try (<span class="key"><kbd>3</kbd></span> by
default) to influence the length of station lists.</p>
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>
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<p class="p">Their primary directory on Radionomy.com only lists stations
which radionomy itself hosts streaming servers for. It's over 6000
already. Both listening and station hosting are free (given agreement
to autoplay advertisements, and a minimum quota of daily listeners).
Radionomy is therefore pretty popular and growing.</p>
<p class="p">The extraction method in streamtuner2 uses a mix of RegExp,
DOM traversal, and JSON extraction, with some AJAX updating spiced
in. It closely follows the website scheme to fetch station lists.
Instead of favicons smaller station logos are displayed (25px
in contrast to the usual 16px).
</p>
</div>
<div id="options" class="sect"><div class="inner">
<div class="hgroup"><h2 class="title"><span class="title">Configuration</span></h2></div>
<div class="region"><div class="contents">
<p class="p"> You can configure the number of pages it'll try (<span class="key"><kbd>3</kbd></span> by
default) to influence the length of station lists.</p>
|