Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Webradios and free MP3s download - with steamwriter

Download music and legal as MP3? Anyone who likes to listen to the latest music without much effort is not necessarily dependent on paid streaming services such as Spotify. Just as simple, legal and free of charge is a medium that is increasingly forgotten in Web 2.0: Webradio. With the free Powerwriter tool, you can stream radio streams and download your favorite songs as MP3s to Ihem PC.


Getting Started


Even during the installation of Steamwriter you will be confronted with the first configurations. The Setup Wizard prompts you for a bandwidth restriction for stream writers. This is recommended if you want to run the program in the background without having to accept a sharp decrease in your download speed. For each radio station, the download can be more than 100 KB / s.


Also interesting is


You can also change this option later on in File / Settings / Bandwidth. If you select certain features of Streamwriter, it may be that the program requires the installation of add-ons. Do not be irritated. The add-ons are small and install automatically without major problems. Once the installation is complete, however, you should follow the actual configuration. Under File / Settings you will find almost your command center. To prevent the downloaded streams from overloading your hard drive, you can quit recording if memory is less than one GByte. So the program will terminate all streams if only X GB is available on the hard disk partition of streamwriter.


Find radios


To determine the location for downloaded songs, see Streams. Here you can also select the Add Saved Titles to Ignore List option. This ensures that the program does not download songs in duplicate. In the File name tab, you can specify the type of songs that are automatically named.


Take pictures


And last but not least, under the Cut tab, you'll find the option to use the streamwriter to automatically skip the ad on short songs. Here, under Advertising is shorter than the tolerance frame.


Let's go to the dashboard of the program. Under the tab Streams, all selected radio stations are displayed. If you already know the addresses of your desired radios, simply enter them under Playlist / Stream URL and click on the blue plus symbol. You can also search for new stations directly within the program.


To do this, right-click on the browser tab and type in a search term, select a genre and the streaming quality. With these filters, edit the list below, and then select the Radiostream you want with a simple double-click.


Do not worry, because: Personal backup copies are completely legal as long as no copy protection (which is not available for Webradios) is bypassed and as long as you do not distribute the copies commercially.


To listen to the radio station in the stream writer, select the radio and press the Play icon. There you will also find the recording symbol with the red circle. When you start the recording, the algorithm automatically detects the start and end of each song, thereby taking away the bulk of the work. With the clock icon, you can even set a recording schedule if you do not want to miss a particular show. The recorded files can be found under the Stored Tracks tab


But the particularly outstanding function of Streamwriter is found under the inconspicuous name lists. There you can manage wish lists and ignore lists. The latter are, as already mentioned, intended to prevent duplicate recordings or to exclude unwanted music from the start.


The wish list is your personal music download. Just enter the artist with the desired song name, and Streamwriter automatically searches all its streams for that song. Once any of the included radio stations play this song, it will automatically download even if you do not have the station in your list. In the test, it took less than five minutes to get Daft Punk's top ten hit "Get Lucky" on the hard drive.


The recognition algorithm is very good - in the test we did not have a file that contained advertising or commentation. However, if you do this, there is the edit function.


Just click the desired song with the right mouse button and select Cut. Here you can either select a range (red symbol) or set an intersection position (yellow-green symbol). Use the magnifying glass to zoom in to fit your cut to the millisecond. To confirm, click the scissors icon and do not worry - there is the curved arrow icon for resetting. Under the yellow flash, you can finally set the fade-in to make your song not quite abrupt.


MP3s as you like


Song editing

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