The Radio Station of Tomorrow

Written Jun. 16, 2009 by Tom Webster in Internet Radio + Social Networking + Technology with 6 Comments

Earlier today, Norway-based Opera released a preview version of Opera Unite, which incorporates innovative new technology into the latest version of their eponymous web browser software. After playing around with it a bit today I've come away quite impressed--especially by its potential as a interface to media.

Opera Unite basically connects browsers to browsers without using client-server technology. In other words, if I want to access media on one computer from another, as long as they are both running Opera Unite they are connected without any intermediary or third-party server. While these sorts of connections have been possible before, they haven't been built into the browser, and haven't been very easy to use. The promise of Opera Unite is that, one day very soon, my parents could fire up their browser and look at new pictures of their grandson on my machine without needing IT support or using yet another login at yet another third-party file/photo sharing site.

For the purposes of this space, the real paradigm shift lies with Opera Unite's media technology, which lets me play music from my home computer on my Macbook Pro using only a web browser--and also lets my friends do the same. OK, that's not revolutionary--but that isn't the end of the vision. Imagine, as Opera's Lawrence Eng has, that I could play a song on my browser, and all my friends could hear it at the same time while browsing the web. Then imagine that Opera Unite Jukebox, as Eng paints it, allows me to put 10 songs into a "queue," and 9 of my friends to do the same. What we've just created is a true, participatory radio station--the ultimate manifestation of bringing your CDs over to a friend's house and having a listening party. Throw in the ability to vote for/rank songs and comment, and you have the radio station of tomorrow.

The trick here for broadcasters of today is not to "beat" this--you can't beat personalized radio--it's to join this. The best way to join is to be one of those 9 friends. As I've written in this space before, social networking connects people with other people, not stations or brands. If you are a music station, the time is now to brand or re-brand your air talent as credible arbiters of musical taste. The fleeting, short-term rewards of the PPM jukebox aside, you cannot out-jukebox the Internet. It's time to find the voices in your community that are knowledgeable and influential on music and give them a platform--regardless of their "jock skills"--and reclaim radio's place as an important platform for music discovery. These voices don't necessarily have to be local--my first "arbiter of taste" was Rock Over London's Graham Dene--but they have to be real people with the freedom to take chances and open the mic again.

Today, when I want to learn about new electronic music, I ask my friend Mike. When I want to learn about new Indie rock, I connect with my friend Chris MacDonald at IndieFeed. These two have earned their place on my Opera Unite Jukebox because I trust them to steer me to the good stuff. Music broadcasters need to stop worrying about the short-term vagaries of PPM and start finding the folks like Mike and Chris in their market who can speak authoritatively about a genre and make informed recommendations to an audience the likes of which no algorithm or database has yet to touch. For music broadcasting to survive, it can't continue to "install formats." Radio has to fundamentally rethink how it connects with listeners, and how it can serve as the intermediary between listeners and advertisers. People will never connect with jukeboxes.

Reader Comments

Your 2¢, in chronological order — add your comment below.
1  Bob Mills on June 16, 2009 8:51 PM

Very interesting, but in the real world of internet radio in which I have broadcast for over nine years, sharing music with the public in this manner will require the music sharer and/or the provider of this technology to pay songwriter and performance royalties to ASCAP/BMI/SESAC/SoundExchange or its non-U.S. equivalent.

2  Tom Webster on June 17, 2009 5:31 AM

If this were a "broadcast," Bob, you'd be right--but it isn't being shared with the public. If I want to share a stream with a few friends, with the media files moving point-to-point with no central server, even if there were applicable laws they are practically unenforceable.

3  Bugsy on June 18, 2009 4:41 AM

Yes in a sense Radio in it's varyed state has to go back to basics. Local talent is best , if they know how the music (songs) impacted that market and demo.

4  Paxton Guy on June 18, 2009 8:59 AM

Major points for namechecking Graham Dene. Listened to ROL religiously back in the day.

5  Tom Webster on June 18, 2009 11:01 AM

Thanks! I need all the points I can get!

6  Tibor Vovesz, Hungary on June 23, 2009 4:21 AM

While you may argue the royalty and other questions of this entertainment sharing option it still is a good point about the changing role of the radio station in general. Also, Mr. Webster's article warns us about the changing role of the on air personality on music stations. I think that is worth concidering.

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