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The concept is simple; a radio that uses a WiFi connection to tune in to more than 5,000 Internet radio stations from all over the world. No computer required.

A small number of manufacturers have been producing WiFi radios for a couple of years, but $300 was more than most people were willing to pay. Now, new offerings like the Freecom MusicPal, $140 and the Logik IR 100, $50 from Currys, have broken the price barrier. It just might be time to tune in to Jazz from Venezuela or news from France.  

A whole lot more about WiFi radios can be found at WiFiRadioReview.com.

RaimaRadio has released an awesome Internet radio tool that moves it up. Here are the bullets:

  • Record Internet radio, and where available, have the songs saved individually and labeled with title, artist and album information.
  • Record and/or listen to multipe radio stations at once.
  • Record on a schedule. Just set the date and time.

RaimaRadio offers many other useful featues. The entire review can be found at gHacks.net. I have to agree with them that this is probably the best Internet radio tool out there.