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解析:Radio’s got a problem.Although

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Radio’s got a problem.Although some 200 million people tune in each week to hear their favorite over caffeinatedDJ or catch those crucial rush-hour traffic updates, it’s getting tougher to hold listeners’ attention. Facing flat revenues and competition ranging from iPods to music phones, the 87-year-old industry is scrambling to reinvent itself.But not even satellite radio or the new HD、format addresses this analog medium’s fundamental flaw: it doesn’t give people any say in which songs they hear. If you don’t like a track or aDJ, your only option is to turn the dial—or turn it off.
That could change if the pioneers behind personalized radio continue to win over music lovers who are burned out on regular radio but can’t be bothered to constantly refresh their iPods with 99¢ iTunes. On websites such as Last.fm, PandorA、com and the new Slacker.com, personalized radio lets you train it to understand your tastes. You can, of course, just listen to the music passively as it plays on your computer.But it’s even better when you make it your own, by marking each song as a favorite, skipping past it or banishing it from the station’s play list altogether.And despite growing concern about how proposed new royalty fees for Internet radio stations could hamper the industry’s growth, on May 23 Sprint became the first wireless carrier to offer personalized radio on its phones.
Each customizable radio service has its own way of assessing what you like. Pandora refers to its database of more than 600,000 major-label songs- all of which have been categorized by musical attributes such as voice, tonality and chromatic harmony—then serves up similar-sounding tracks. That can get a little monotonous, so Slacker, which launched in March, uses professionalDJs to dream up constantly changing playlists that give you more variety while still adhering to your basic tastes. If you ask for Gwen Stefani, for example, you’ll also get theCars, Talking Heads andBj6rk in addition to more obvious matches such asBlondie and MadonnA、And Last. fm, which is based in London, taps into the collective wisdom of its 20 million users worldwide. For example, if you likeBeyoncé, and other Last. fm members who likeBeyoncé also listen to Mary J.Blige, then the service will put Mary on your play list as well.
Personalized radio isn’t just a quirky idea for tech geeks to fawn over and venture capitalists to gamble their millions on.Although its revenues are minuscule compared with the $ 21 billion of the terrestrial-radio industry, more than 4 million people in the U. S. visit Pandora and Last. fm each month, according to comScore Media Metrix. That makes them the fifth and sixth most popular Web radio stations in the country. "It’s the ideal middle ground between having an intact experience and being in control of what you receive," says Last. fm co-founder Martin Stiksel.
Making personalized radio portable could be the key to its long-term success. "The biggest problem with Internet radio is that it’s stuck on the PC," says SlackerCEODennis MudD、"What you really want is this device you can play in your living room, in your car or in the desert walking arounD、" In addition to Sprint’s move to put Pandora on phones, SanDisk recently demonstrated a prototype portable player that could run Pandora, and Slacker plans to sell a $150 iPod-like player this summer that can get wireless music downloads from its website.
Unlike iTunes, music from Slacker is free. "Most people don’t want to pay for radio," says Mudd, who hopes to bring in revenue through audio advertising spots. That model is showing some promise. The overall Internet-radio market brought in more than $ 400 million in ad revenue last year, according to JPMorganChase.About half of that came from online ads on websites owned by conventional radio broadcasters likeCBS Radio andClearChannel. "Internet radio, wh
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试题答案: 答案解析:Even people today have lots of options in getting music, live radio broadcasting still has its charms. People still love to listen to real-person DJs talk about interesting topics and what is going on in the world. Apple does not build a radio tuner in the iPod because it is scared of the competition. document.getElementById("warp").style.display="none"; document.getElementById("content").style.display="block"; 查看试题解析出处>>

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