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I think I found the solution.<BR>
<BR>
Drive to Radio Shack and buy a $12 radio. Picks the stream up just fine. :-)<BR>
<BR>
Note that you will need to provide your own localization for this solution. In Japan I recommend Yodobashi Camera and Yen, for example.<BR>
<BR>
Thanks guys.<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
On Fri, 2004-03-26 at 01:42, Stephen Stocker wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE>
<PRE><FONT COLOR="#737373"><I> Hi,
NPR has the worst streaming audio arrangement I've ever run across.
Javascript, for starters, although that's all to common. :) But a
bigger problem is that they have at least three different formats,
depending on whether you're listening to a live stream, a recent
on-demand stream or an archived show. MPlayer won't handle at least
one of the archived formats, and one of the developers rewrote some
code to handle another one awhile back. I think they have Bill Gates
writing their code or something, because it's an absolute disaster!
I hope you have better luck than I did, I finally decided to hell with
NPR.
        Take care,
        Steve
>I have a streaming site mplayer can't seem to digest. The most flagrant
>is </FONT><A HREF="http://www.npr.org"><U>http://www.npr.org</U></A><FONT COLOR="#737373">. I am hoping someone can help me figure out what
>I might be doing wrong.
<snip>
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<A HREF="http://mplayerhq.hu/mailman/listinfo/mplayer-users"><U>http://mplayerhq.hu/mailman/listinfo/mplayer-users</U></I></A></PRE>
</BLOCKQUOTE>
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-- <BR>
Scott MacPhee <<A HREF="mailto:scott@macphees.org"><U>scott@macphees.org</U></A>>
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