![]() Paste it into the media player and modify as needed. Now the URL has been copied to the system clipboard. Right-click the '.m3u' link of the desired station and in RetroZilla select 'Copy link location'. Separators are typically slashes, periods and ampersands. Try the full HTTP URL first then systematically remove trailing snippets until it works or not. The key is extracting the embedded HTTP streaming link from the URL with some cut/paste and experimentation. The site only offers a few streaming URLs, mostly BBC, most appear to work. Best viewed in RetroZilla with View -> Use Style -> None. Search results display the station and all important streaming link.Ī mega list that works okay without JavaScript. In RetroZilla the 'search' box is only visible after changing View -> Use Style -> None. Either click on a genre or select a featured station. It loads okay in RetroZilla with JavaScript disabled. Below my current ever-changing VLC playlist. ![]() Stream at your own risk - HTTP only using an outdated OS and media player. If the media player doesn't store playlists save the URLs to text. However, thousands of channels are available via HTTP only and it doesn't take long to come up with some favourites. Many stations do not make it easy to find the streaming URL. Most Windows 98 media players use outdated HTTPS protocols or HTTP only. Haven't streamed audio for years, so international, less advertising. Thanks to forum member for bringing up streaming radio on another thread, got me curious. That's how you learn, that's how I learned too. You can look through the example script, change things here and there such as fonts or colors, see how that affects the output (but careful not to break the system). Thank you for taking the time to test and report back. Can't do that with a virtual 98 because Oracle don't provide the necessary extensions that would allow a seamless shared connection between guest 9x and host (Linux) system so can't (easily) transfer the scripts for testing. I did test briefly yesterday on XP in VirtualBox and it worked as expected for that kind of setup (and yes, Unicode change failed there too as there were no specific fonts installed). In the mean time you may try a test on an updated system if you got any at hand, such as a 98SE (maybe with SP3 and/or RP9 installed) or ME or XP. The Unicode change is expected, it's on a timer, and it most likely fails due to missing compatible font. I'll try to look through it, maybe build a special debug version to see what exactly fails. It's been quite a while since I worked on that code (about three years I think), forgot almost everything. The 'click me' field should provide some system info, such as the Common Controls version (comctl32.dll) which plays an important part. Oh well, it seems vanilla 98 is quite ill-equipped for such complex task.
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