By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A new Internet radio network is up and running, and
offers programming from Mississippi State University
specialists on a wide variety of topics. RadioSource.net
is a portal website posting audio programming that can be
downloaded for rebroadcast or streamed for consumer use. It
is provided through the cooperation of MSU and 11 other
participating institutions. Topics
available in audio form include gardening, health and
nutrition, environmental news, agribusiness, agronomy,
animal science, plant pathology, microbiology, human
ecology, rural sociology and veterinary medicine. This
information is available online at www.radiosource.net. Tyson
Gair, senior editor-broadcast with MSU's Office of
Agricultural Communications, is coordinating the project for
MSU. Since last October, he has posted "Southern Gardening"
and "Better Farming," two MSU Extension Service radio
programs, online. "Mississippi
State was the first to provide audio programming to this
site, but since its inception, other land-grant universities
have recognized the value of this project and have joined
the effort," Gair said. For over
a year, MSU has worked in partnership with four southern
states and with funding from Agricultural Distance Education
Consortium to develop web-based radio. Today, it is
partially funded by a grant from the Agricultural
Telecommunications Program within the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. RadioSource
is a partnership between MSU, the University of Arkansas,
the University of Florida, the University of Georgia, Kansas
State University, the University of Kentucky, Louisiana
State University, Texas A&M, Virginia Tech, the University
of Illinois, South Dakota State University and the
University of Tennessee. "We're
happy to be part of this virtual radio network that shares
Mississippi State's resources with a broader audience," Gair
said. Kathy
Sohar, RadioSource project director, works with the
Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Communication
Services at the University of Florida. "Projects
such as RadioSource.net represent a new way of communicating
with the public, and help us to serve audiences that have
traditionally been marginalized in the educational system,"
Sohar said. She said
that making Extension and research programming available
online is an effective way to get information to the public.
It also supports the land-grant mission by helping to
improve the quality of life for families and
communities. "RadioSource.net
connects the knowledge base of land-grant universities
directly with the public," Sohar said. "Site users can
choose the information they want to hear and can search for
topics relevant to their needs and interests." Released:
Sept. 25, 2000
Community
News
RadioSource.net
Now Available To Listeners
Contact: Tyson Gair, (662) 325-1725
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:14
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/commnews/cn00/000925tg.htm
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