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Wikipedia Updates Radio Infoboxes
The volunteer editors at Wikipedia are shaking up some of the information included in radio station articles. A new “infobox” — basically a sidebar that provides a quick overview of the article’s subject — has been rolled out for radio stations.
The new template harmonizes the radio and television station infoboxes, reorganizing content and adding several new fields.
It went live on Aug. 8, although some maintenance edits are still being made to finish the migration.
Among the additions to the new infobox is a “licensing authority” field. For U.S. stations, if this is set to FCC and the station’s facility ID is in the infobox, it automatically adds links to the station’s LMS and public file database entries.
The documentation for the new radio station infobox, along with a listing of all the supported fields, can be found here.
Because Wikipedia pages tend to appear high in Google search results, it is worth checking your stations’ articles to see if there is incomplete or missing information, both in the new infobox and the article. However, take care in editing an article. Wikipedia’s rules against promotional and paid editing are strict and it’s easy for a company to run afoul of them.
Readily verifiable information, such as adding the station’s FCC facility ID, RDS program service name, or slogan to the infobox, will likely be uncontroversial.
Adding full program schedules and DJ bios to the article, however, will likely be reverted as too promotional. All changes to articles are tracked and connected to user accounts and/or IP addresses, so if edits are made from an IP address connected to the company, it may be flagged as problematic.
If significant information is missing from the page, consider posting something to the article’s talk page, along with links for verification, and asking an editor to incorporate it into the article.
Wikipedia’s Old Infobox for Radio StationsOn Wikipedia, third-party sources are always preferred, so a newspaper or magazine article is a more trusted source than a station’s website.
If a station logo is missing, one can be uploaded, but encyclopedia’s rules about non-free images can be complicated. Unless a logo is released for public use under a Creative Commons license (basically relinquishing trademark and copyright rights), it must be low resolution and limited to use only in an article infobox. This can be another situation where asking an editor for help may be the best strategy.
For more information about how radio stations are included in Wikipedia, visit WikiProject Radio Stations. The project includes a list of Wikipedians working actively on radio station pages who might be willing to help make sure your station’s page is complete.
The post Wikipedia Updates Radio Infoboxes appeared first on Radio World.
Inside the August 12 Issue of Radio World Engineering Extra
In this issue, Cris Alexander and the EE team bring you two special in-depth articles: a look at an RDS best practice topic from data guru Alan Jurison, and the full text of a white paper that Dave Kolesar and Mike Raide had planned to present at this spring’s NAB Show, summarizing and updating their findings about all-digital AM operation.
Prefer to do your reading offline? No problem! Simply click on the link above, go to the left corner and choose the download button to get a PDF version.
Metadata
Best Practices for RDS Subcarrier Injection
With dashboards using so much data, it’s important to maintain proper injection levels.
Digital Radio
A Case Study in All-Digital AM HD Broadcasting
Refinements, performance tests, multicasting and lessons learned at digital station WWFD(AM) in Frederick, Md.
Fundamentals
What to Know About Gain Structure
Larry Wilkins explains why broadcast engineers should take note of this concept even for digital operations.
The post Inside the August 12 Issue of Radio World Engineering Extra appeared first on Radio World.
Digital Alert Systems Updates EAS Equipment
Digital Alert Systems has made available an update for the FEMA IPAWS certificate in One-Net and DASDEC units. The current certificate expires in late October. Without the new certificate the units will not function properly within the EAS network after Oct. 28.
[Check Out New Products at Radio World’s Products Section]
Digital Alert Systems EAS Product Manager Jon Rue said, “We encourage our DASDEC and One-Net customers to update their certificate files before Oct. 28 to avoid any message delivery disruption. … While we understand this does take time, our customers should be encouraged to know we are working with FEMA IPAWS to automate this process in the future.”
Go here to learn more and download the needed file.
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Joe Rogan and “The Daily” Add to Audience Strength
Who’s on top of the podcasting world these days?
Media Monitors has released its latest Podcast Listener survey; the findings are shown in three charts below. The results reflect the ongoing popularity of certain podcasts but also the shifting relationships and acquisitions on the business side of podcasting.
Top Shows
Joe RoganMedia Monitors reported that “The Joe Rogan Experience” and “The Daily” from The New York Times remain at the top, but “both shows seem to have expanded their audiences since our last survey was taken. Each podcast doubled the total number of respondents that reported listening in the past seven days.”
The New York Times’ “1619” enjoyed strong gains, helped by national attention on racial issues including Black Lives Matter.
“Office Ladies” appeared for the first time this quarter, likely drawing on a dedicated fan base from the TV series “The Office.”
“My Favorite Murder” and “Crime Junkie” made repeat appearances, with MFM down somewhat. Comedy podcasts “The Misfits Podcast,” “Ear Biscuits” from Ramble, and “Unlocking Us with Brené Brown” from Cadence13 all were notable.
Top PublishersMedia Monitors noted that the second quarter “saw further consolidation in the podcast space” as Spotify purchased exclusive rights to “Joe Rogan” and SiriusXM closed its deal to buy Midroll/Stitcher/Earwolf.
The latter deal, it said, gives SiriusXM some level of access to Midroll’s represented shows “but it is unclear how that relationship will evolve moving forward.”
Also notable was the recent acquisition of Serial Productions by the New York Times. “Although the exact terms of the deal are unclear (including a reported “’creative and strategic’ partnership with ‘This American Life’), The New York Times has clearly moved to increase their footprint in upper echelon of podcasting.”
Two NPR’ daily news programs broke int the Top 25: “Up First” and “Consider This from NPR.” MM also recommended keeping an eye on Crooked Media, breaking into its Top 25 chart with “Pod Save America.”
iHeartMedia has the most podcasts in the top 200, 13 podcasts. “These include a mix of their radio-first properties published in podcast form, as well as their podcast-first Stuff Media properties. Coming in second is NPR with 12, followed by Wondery with 8. This seems to bode well for Wondery’s new standalone app and premium service, debuted in June.”
MM added that The New York Times (tied at 7) would jump to #4 if combined with This American Life & Serial Productions.
Top Genres
Comedy (including sub-categories) remains the most popular genre in the survey, while news is tied with society and culture at #2; also popular are true crime and sports.
Media Monitors is a network and local monitoring company that covers various media; its survey was conducted in late June. Participants had to be 18 or over and were screened on whether they had listened to a podcast in the last week, then were asked to list the titles, and were encouraged to consult their app during the survey. These “unassisted” responses were then matched back to RSS feeds that were polled to collect info about genre and publisher.
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