Hello PIAF folks.
I have a strange but perhaps interesting question. I am a big fan of Nebraska Football, but I happen to live in Big 10 country. Getting video & audio of the games can occasionally be a challenge, but fortunately the radio feed of all games is broadcast over the Internet (www.huskers.com).
I am not always near an Internet computer, and I would like to hear the games from anywhere. The "easy" answer would be to obtain a satellite radio (Sirius/XM), but I have a less expensive & creative idea.
I would like to bridge the radio feed with a Meetme bridge and then call into that bridge. The cost of this solution is minimal, as my cell carrier offers unlimited calling on weekends, and I can use a FreeDigits or other DID.
However, bridging the audio confuses me a bit. The "low tech" method I have tried is to use a single workstation, play the stream, and use a softphone to dial into the bridge. I then use a 3.5 mm cable to bridge the mic and headphone jacks (and adjust audio levels to a reasonable setting). From my cell phone, I simply dial into the same bridge and listen via bluetooth earpiece. Not great, but it works.
Is there a better or more elegant way to do this? Maybe a better way to connect the audio to the conference bridge, or maybe a different approach altogether? For reference, the audio stream appears to be a Windows media stream.
I have a strange but perhaps interesting question. I am a big fan of Nebraska Football, but I happen to live in Big 10 country. Getting video & audio of the games can occasionally be a challenge, but fortunately the radio feed of all games is broadcast over the Internet (www.huskers.com).
I am not always near an Internet computer, and I would like to hear the games from anywhere. The "easy" answer would be to obtain a satellite radio (Sirius/XM), but I have a less expensive & creative idea.
I would like to bridge the radio feed with a Meetme bridge and then call into that bridge. The cost of this solution is minimal, as my cell carrier offers unlimited calling on weekends, and I can use a FreeDigits or other DID.
However, bridging the audio confuses me a bit. The "low tech" method I have tried is to use a single workstation, play the stream, and use a softphone to dial into the bridge. I then use a 3.5 mm cable to bridge the mic and headphone jacks (and adjust audio levels to a reasonable setting). From my cell phone, I simply dial into the same bridge and listen via bluetooth earpiece. Not great, but it works.

Is there a better or more elegant way to do this? Maybe a better way to connect the audio to the conference bridge, or maybe a different approach altogether? For reference, the audio stream appears to be a Windows media stream.