A brief look at di.fm - Digitally Imported Radio

A brief look at di.fm - Digitally Imported Radio
Digitally Imported Radio founded by Ari Shohat grew from operating in a dorm room in Binghamton U to an office in Manhattan. At any time, anywhere from 15,000 to 30,000 listeners would be tuned in to the station. The network is run mostly by part time staff and dozens of music fanatics and DJ's program the site's channels voluntarily. di.fm was ranked the top independent web-radio site by Webcast Metrics. Ari is a European Native and saw the need to share electronic news with Americans.

"Listeners write in, wanting to be a part of uniting this large, fragmented culture of electronic-crazed listeners," Ari says. "There are also companies and people that donate bandwidth to Digitally Imported Radio so that the music can reach more listeners. You’d be surprised at how many young CEOs and Executives are addicted to trance and house music". U.S. cities usually have about two designated electronic radio stations.



These one or two designated electronic radio stations, are limited to mainstream electronic favourites. The DJ's that make up the industry are often independent DJ's who perform at clubs and venues around the country. "As we expose different sub-genres of electronic music DJs are being discovered by labels and other industry giants." Ari says. "Listeners look forward to the live shows on our different channels each day. This leads to people writing in with ideas and requests to help, which fuels our growth and popularity."

Ari believes a major factor of its success is that its a free service. Most online radio stations either charge a monthly subscription or are funded by loads of advertisements. Digital Imported Radio plans to launch five more channels this year using the aacPlus format which delivers high quality music at lower birates, which is good for people with limited bandwidth.

Source:
di.fm


Thanks a lot to "Tyler" for submitting the story. Anyone can submit news to AfterDawn using the News Submission form.

Written by: James Delahunty @ 8 Feb 2005 2:06
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  • 4 comments
  • brolli666

    I listen to this site about 2 hours a day while doing homework and it is off the hook. I got some of the licensed stuff and I gotta hand it to hardcore .. you do NOT know techno till you listen to the hardcore channel!

    8.2.2005 05:51 #1

  • djscoop

    while I can't share your enthusiasm for techno/hardcore (yuk!) I have listened to DI's trance, hard trance, and house channels for a couple years now, and I've always been impressed. While its nice that the half-decent 96k streams are free, it is kinda lame that they are charging monthly fees now to listen to 128k and 160k streams. that kinda defeats the purpose of free streaming music.

    9.2.2005 13:10 #2

  • MXGzX

    yeah I felt that the hardcore was really weak in comparison to others...like the gabber station

    what's the difference between gabber and hardcore anyway?

    9.2.2005 16:24 #3

  • gladden

    Digitally Imported is the sh!t. I love their chillout and DJ Mixes channels . Listen to them a good 1-2 hours a day at least.

    10.2.2005 07:47 #4

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