Portable Screamer Radio 0.4.4 Beta / 0.4.3

An Internet Radio Player, that will stream audio data to your PC via your internet connection

Screamer Radio is designed to stream audio data to your system via Internet connection. The application cannot be used for broadcasting your own radio station.

You may however listen to your local radio stations if they support online radio streaming, most stations have a "listen now" button and that's usually a dead giveaway.
Here are some key features of "Portable Screamer Radio":

· Major Features
· Freeware
· Simple to handle
· Not bloated!
· Recording of streams
· Minor Features
· Unobtrusive (easy to hide)
· Cool Peakmeter :)
· Can use multiple soundcards
· Auto updating presets
· Playback Features
· Shoutcast and Icecast MP3 Streaming
· Icecast OGG Vorbis Streaming
· Windows Media Audio Streaming
· Recording Features
· Recording buffer: start recording in the middle and still save the entire song!
· Direct MP3 Audio stream saving, no loss of quality!
· Direct OGG Vorbis stream saving, no loss of quality!
· Or encode OGG Vorbis as MP3 using Lame
· Encode WMA to MP3 using Lame

DOWNLOAD HERE 

Rousseff falls short of outright win in Brazil election

Brazil's presidential election will go to a second round after Dilma Rousseff failed to win an outright victory in Sunday's voting.
With 98% of votes counted, President Lula's former cabinet chief has 47% with Jose Serra trailing on 33%.
The two will contest a run-off vote in four weeks' time.
A strong showing by the Green Party candidate, Marina Silva, who polled 19%, may have cost Ms Rousseff a first-round win.
"We can confirm there will be a second round in the presidential elections," Ricardo Lewandowski, the president of the High Electoral Tribunal, told reporters in Brasilia late on Sunday.
Workers Party candidate Dilma Rousseff is the favoured successor to President Luis Ignacio Lula da Silva, who has completed two terms, and cannot run for a third.
Until just a few days ago, a second round had seemed unlikely. But Dilma Rousseff lost support late in the campaign.
The votes of the third-placed candidate will be crucial in deciding the outcome.
Marina Silva of the Green Party, a devout Christian, enjoyed a late surge in support - some of which appears to have come from evangelical Christians who turned away from Dilma Rousseff amid concerns about her stance on abortion.
Addressing supporters, Ms Rousseff said she welcomed the opportunity to explain her policies in more detail.
"We are warriors, and we are accustomed to challenges," she said in a speech in Brasilia after the result was announced. "We do well in second rounds."
Ms Rousseff was a front runner for much of the campaign and benefited from Mr Lula's widespread popularity and the country's booming economy.
Many analysts believe a scandal involving her directly would be the only scenario under which she could loose a runoff.
Boost "This is an electoral climate that favours the incumbent party," political analyst Luiz Piva told the Reuters news agency. "Brazilians are generally very happy with their government."
Centre-left candidate Jose Serra, the Social Democratic former governor of Sao Paulo state, had seen a boost in his support after corruption allegations surfaced involving a former aide of Ms Rousseff.
But Ms Silva seems to also have benefited. The third-place candidate's 19% share of the ballots was far higher than the 14% forecast for her.
"We defended a victorious idea and Brazil heard our cry," Ms Silva said in reaction to the result.
Brazil, one of the world's most populous democracies, was also choosing local and national representatives.
Voting is compulsory in Brazil, with results coming quickly, thanks to Brazil's electronic voting system.
Ms Rousseff, 62, served as Mr Lula's chief of staff from 2005 until this year, and is a career civil servant. Her tilt at the presidency is her first attempt at elected office.
During the 1960s and 1970s she was involved in the armed struggle against Brazil's military rulers, and was jailed for three years.
The 68-year-old Mr Serra is hugely experienced, having served as Sao Paulo mayor, Sao Paulo state governor and health minister under President Fernando Henrique Cardoso Mr Lula's predecessor. He lost the presidential election in a run-off to Mr Lula in 2002

Two Israeli troops guilty of using human shield in Gaza


An Israeli military court has convicted two Israeli soldiers for using a Palestinian child as a human shield during an offensive in Gaza in 2009.
The soldiers were found guilty of reckless endangerment and conduct unbecoming for forcing the nine-year-old boy to check suspected booby-traps.
It is reportedly the first such conviction in Israel - where the use of civilians as human shields is banned.
The sentencing will be decided at a later date, the court said.
No protection On Sunday, the southern command military court found the two Israeli soldiers guilty of "exceeding their authority to the point of endangering life" and conduct unbecoming in the incident in Gaza City's suburb of Tel al-Hawa on 15 January 2009.
A summary of the verdict said that - when rounding up residents of Tel al-Hawa - the soldiers came across bags in a home and ordered the Palestinian boy to search for suspected booby-traps.
"The boy, who feared for his fate and was under the stress of the situation, wet his pants," the three-judge panel wrote in the summary of the verdict.
"The court has noted that, unlike the soldiers, the child was, naturally, bereft of any form of protection."
However, the court acknowledged that at the time the soldiers - whose names have not been released - had been under "difficult and dangerous conditions".
The bags that the boy - identified only as Majd R - had checked did not have any hidden explosives and the child was later returned to his family unharmed.
Israel launched its Gaza offensive in December 2008, saying it was aimed at halting Palestinian rocket attacks from the territory controlled by militant Hamas movement.
Some 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed during the 22-day fighting.
Last year's report by UN investigator Richard Goldstone accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes during the fighting.

Nigerian police names suspects in Abuja car bombings

Nigerian police have named two men suspected of organising car bombings which killed at least 12 people in Abuja on Friday.
The police said Chima Orlu and Ben Jessy were Nigerian but gave no further details about the men.
President Goodluck Jonathan had earlier blamed "a small terrorist group that resides outside Nigeria" for the blast.
His comments cast doubts on an earlier claim of responsibility by the militant group Mend.
A statement, claiming to speak for the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend), had claimed responsibility for the bombings during celebrations in the capital on the 50th anniversary of independence.
The group apparently sent a warning shortly before the blasts, saying "several explosive devices have been successfully planted in and around the venue by our operatives working inside the government security services".
A former leader of the militant group, Henry Okah, has been arrested in South Africa in connection with the bombings.
Mr Okah told the BBC on Friday that his group, which says it is fighting for a fairer distribution of Nigeria's oil wealth, was not responsible.
Mr Okah is expected to be appear in court in Johannesburg on Monday.
However, on Sunday President Jonathan said in a statement that investigations had shown that members of Mend said "they know nothing" about claiming responsibility for the attacks.
Senior commanders in the group, who are abiding by a ceasefire with the government, have told the BBC they condemn the bombs.
In the ceasefire agreement signed last year, former fighters were offered an amnesty and small amounts of cash in return for handing in their weapons.
The BBC's Caroline Duffield in Lagos says that Mr Okah is believed to lead a tiny faction of Mend that is opposed to the amnesty.
Some Mend commanders are infuriated that what they see as a tiny, violent faction apparently claims to speak for the whole group, our correspondent says.

Germany marks 20 years as reunified nation

Germany has been celebrating the 20th anniversary of its reunification.
Chancellor Angela Merkel led the official celebrations, hosted by the northern city of Bremen and attended by tens of thousands of people.
Capitalist West and communist East Germany merged on 3 October 1990, nearly a year after the fall of the Berlin Wall which divided them.
Sunday is also the day Germany makes the last payment on debt stemming from reparations imposed after World War I.
'Solidarity tax'
Mrs Merkel was joined by many leading German and international figures in Bremen to mark one of the 20th Century's historical turning points.We have been able to rebuild so quickly and make Germany a country that is respected in the world”
End Quote Angela Merkel
German President Christian Wulff told the assembled dignitaries: "We remember the momentous day that a people experience only rarely. I bow before everyone who fought for freedom... your courage moved the world."
He called for a "new solidarity" that encompassed Christianity, Judaism and Islam.
"We must not allow the cementing of prejudice and exclusion," he said.
On the eve of the anniversary, US President Barack Obama passed on his congratulations and said Germany was "one of our closest allies and greatest friends".
He said the US honoured "the courage and conviction of the German people that brought down the Berlin Wall, ending decades of painful and artificial separation".
Mrs Merkel, who was brought up in the East, praised former East Germans for fighting for their freedom.
She added: "At the same time, there was a huge wave of solidarity from the people in West Germany. It is thanks to these joint efforts that we have been able to rebuild so quickly and make Germany a country that is respected in the world.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...