06-27-2021, 02:17 AM
@levon
Sorry, I don't have any experience with managing podcasts.
A premium Spotify account is required in order to use the Spotify renderer in moOde. If you have only a free account an alternative would be to use a Spotify app or Spotify Web Player on a phone, tablet, or computer, and direct the output to moOde via Airplay or Bluetooth.
Interestingly,"Mr. Tornado," Ted Fujita, who created the Fujita scale (F1, F2, etc) for rating tornado intensity, worked within walking distance of the research institute I was in at the University of Chicago. He got frustrated that tornadoes were so hard to find and study in the wild, so he invented a tornado simulator in his laboratory. Very cool idea.
I don't remember any tornadoes within the city limits in our time there, but out to the southwest at Argonne National Laboratory, where I last worked before we left the Chicago area, there were three different alarms in each building---fire, tornado, and radiation (and a special phone extension you could dial to hear each one). I had just started at ANL in 1976 when an F4 tornado struck the Lemont-Argonne area (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aapzSaLW...l=vortexva).
Regards,
Kent
Sorry, I don't have any experience with managing podcasts.
A premium Spotify account is required in order to use the Spotify renderer in moOde. If you have only a free account an alternative would be to use a Spotify app or Spotify Web Player on a phone, tablet, or computer, and direct the output to moOde via Airplay or Bluetooth.
Interestingly,"Mr. Tornado," Ted Fujita, who created the Fujita scale (F1, F2, etc) for rating tornado intensity, worked within walking distance of the research institute I was in at the University of Chicago. He got frustrated that tornadoes were so hard to find and study in the wild, so he invented a tornado simulator in his laboratory. Very cool idea.
I don't remember any tornadoes within the city limits in our time there, but out to the southwest at Argonne National Laboratory, where I last worked before we left the Chicago area, there were three different alarms in each building---fire, tornado, and radiation (and a special phone extension you could dial to hear each one). I had just started at ANL in 1976 when an F4 tornado struck the Lemont-Argonne area (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aapzSaLW...l=vortexva).
Regards,
Kent