Last Updated on August 11, 2021
Other Features
Goodradio doesn’t have a large feature set.
But there’s some useful features, including:
- Multimedia keys support.
- Desktop notifications – you’re notified when the song changes.
- Autoplay – starts playing the last stream when the application starts.
- Sleep inhibition.
- MPRIS2 support – The Media Player Remote Interfacing Specification is a standard D-Bus interface which aims to provide a common programmatic API for controlling media players.
- Internationalization support – there are translations for Czech, Dutch, French, German, Norwegian, and Spanish.
On my test system, Curseradio consumes about 33MB of RAM which compares favorably with the other internet radio players, even the console based players.
Pages in this article:
Page 1 – Introduction / Installation
Page 2 – In Operation
Page 3 – Other Features
Page 4 – Summary
GOODVIBES is the best webradio player that I ever have used.
It’s fast and stable and I never experienced any hickups while streaming radio stations from around the world.
Part of the magic: It’s a no-frills application. In order to add a new station in GOODVIBES, you need to provide the stream-URL of that station. These URLs however are not always easy to find. Usually, the radio stations have links in several formats somewhere on their websites. Other streaming-URLs can be found in listings, forums or chatrooms. GOODVIBES, when freshly installed, doesn’t contain any URLs. But that’s ok with me.
Thanks for sharing your views Frank. Very interesting.
We recently published a roundup of internet radio software at https://www.linuxlinks.com/best-free-internet-radio-software/
The winner was Shortwave. And Tauon Music Box was pretty close to top spot given its recent improvements in the radio area. It’s always horses for courses though!
Goodvibes is pretty good, particularly if you’re running a somewhat older computer or a Raspberry Pi. I was a longtime user of the (now unsupported) “RadioTray”. It was much better in that you could create menus and sub-menus in your station database, while with Goodvibes everything is in one big list.
If your station list is maybe at most 30-40 stations, I’d recommend Goodvibes.
On the other hand, Goodvibes is much better at not “dropping” streams than RadioTray.
“Shortwave” (formerly “Gradio”) pulls its station info from the “Community Radio Browser” database, which is crowdsourced. You will want to run it on a slightly better computer instead of an older “clunker”.
Pulling station stream URL’s is not really that hard 90% of the time. I can figure most of them out in a matter of minutes. You can grab them in Firefox by just going to “Tools/WebDeveloper/Network” and just play the stream on the website. It’s similar in Chrome/Chromium. You get the hang of it after awhile. Occasionally, you need to do a “view source” on the website to find the stream URL. Most radio stations “outsource” their streaming to one of half a dozen companies and so you get used to the stream URL “patterns”.
There are a lot of radio station directories which provide you with streaming URLs.