Problem: I want to learn more about the places I'm driving through in real time?
Hi Everyone,
This is something I'm think about a lot, but can't find any way of listening to radio programs that allows me to do this.
For example, I was looking through the window while driving through Yosemite the other day, and was hoping to hear stories about the park and its nature environment but didn't know where to look to find out more about it.
Has anyone else had a similar experience, or could let me know of anything that exists to solve this problem.
Many thanks,
Sam
Sources other than the radio.
Hi, and Welcome to the Great American RoadTrip Forum.
Occasionally one comes to places where on the AM band local information is available. This is becoming less and less the case. However, when it comes to National Parks, there is quite a volume of information handed out at the entrance gate. It pays to find a place to pull over and park, maybe make a cuppa and read through it all. Of course the rangers are always willing to share whatever they know to satisfy your desire for information.
I have also found the occasional place where they hand out tapes or CDs to play as you drive alone. But they are rare indeed.
Besides that research prior to the trip would be your best source.
Lifey
Roadster II is part of the solution -- it's what we use on the road
I had planned to create an audio guide to I-15 between Devore and Las Vegas for exactly this reason. There is a tremendous amount of local history and lore than only a handful of people know located within 5-15 minutes of this highway -- and most people would never actually get off the highway to see if -- even if they knew about it -- but I bet lots of people would like to "know" about it.
There are some audio guides that have been produced for the Revolutionary War and Civil War battlegrounds and a handful of similar products for other parks around the country. The problem is.... it is technologically challenging to create such a product that will run on the scores of mobile devices that people have.
Audio books that play through car speakers comes the closest. Here is the device we use in our road trip car for this purpose. (Obviously in National Parks -- you can't rely on radio transmissions, or wireless connections -- so you have to have a product that you can download to your device and then play it through a speaker system -- like your car radio.
Once you have this device -- then you have to look for the those audio books or audio files that will deliver the content you want.
Mark
Real Time is REALLY fraught with challenges!
The Real Time -- aspect is much more challenging. Again, I had figured out a way to use repeaters coordinated with vehicle GPS devices to load the appropriate audio clips at the right spot --- But, this is incredibly expensive to provide. I could never make the economics work in our favor.
No doubt some enterprising business owner will eventually figure this out -- but it makes something as relatively complicated like the RTA Maps program (back-end processing) look like child's play.
There are probably a dozen or so serious programmers who have worked on creating such a system for use in national parks over the last 5-6 years -- but the economics and the scalability and keeping everything updated in a timely fashion prices the equipment outside any rationale discussion.
Mark
Much more than I thought!