Some people expressed interest in joining the ds106radio DJ roster, so we can maintain our status as the only station with more DJs than listeners. One common question that comes up is When to broadcast? The only regular broadcast that I know of currently is on Friday evenings from 7 to 8 or so, so almost anytime is free. If you go to https://listen.ds106rad.io/ and see that it’s broadcasting WFMU, that means the stream is free. It’s a good idea to check the #ds106radio hashtag on Mastodon to see if someone is planning to broadcast, and a good protocol to announce your set there as well.
I’ve used a few different setups for ds106radio over the years. I started with
Ladiocast, a free Mac program. I believe I used Soundflower in conjunction. Soundflower functions as a virtual audio device, so in my system settings I would make Soundflower the output device and in Ladiocast I would set it as the input. Ladiocast has a section where you can put in metadata. ds106radio automatically pushes that out to Mastodon with the #ds106radio hashtag and URL.
There is a free cross-platform program called Mixxx that I also use sometimes. It has more of a learning curve, and a ton of options that I’ve yet to explore, but once you get the settings right it’s easy. It eliminates the need for a virtual device like Soundflower as well.
All the cool kids use Audio Hijack these days. It’s also a Mac program, and it’s not free, but it makes a lot of things easier. There’s a slight learning curve with setting up blocks and connecting them, but you only have to set it up once.
There is also an iPhone app called PocketStreamer that can be set up to broadcast using the same settings as above.
Those are the bare basics of streaming to ds106radio. With Ladiocast and Audio Hijack you can set up multiple input sources so you can do a call-in show while playing audio.