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This isn't really any different from the streaming player on npr.org. It's got a slightly fancier subscription mechanism. At the end of the day, it's not that useful because I can't rely on my phone's 4G to remain connected without buffering while listening to an hour long news program on a trip.

What would be worth charging money for is an app that could cache a configurable number of hours of new curated content when connected to wifi. Even so, that's not really any different from podcasts.

I feel like the world is still very much in a transitional state with regards to how we think about apps. NPR offers its stuff over the air for free, but you write some code to do the same thing with a computer, and suddenly people are saying it should cost money.



New York's public radio station, WNYC, recently revamped its app to incorporate this feature, which I agree is very useful:

http://www.wnyc.org/mobile/

A lot of the available content categories aren't specific to New York, so it might be worth checking out regardless of where you live.




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