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Experience FM offers broadcast audio software for Raspberry Pi, positioned as a low-cost IP audio solution for users ranging from hobbyists to prosumers. The page mainly promotes Receiveit! and Streamit!: the former receives internet audio streams and plays them from a Raspberry Pi, while the latter captures audio from a USB audio interface and streams it to the internet. The official pitch emphasizes “flash, plug in, streaming,” with no Linux, SSH, or command-line experience required.
In terms of features, all listed products support a web-based control interface, Raspberry Pi compatibility, and operation without using the command line. Receiveit! can receive network streams, automatically recover after disconnections or power loss, output audio through the Pi’s headphone jack, and is designed for 24/7 operation. Streamit! supports USB audio input, uses Icecast2 for audio streaming, allows stream name, audio format, bitrate, and other settings to be changed in the UI, and supports MP3, Ogg Vorbis, AAC, FLAC, and Opus. The hardware ecosystem mainly revolves around Raspberry Pi, USB Audio, and DACs; no API, SDK, or third-party platform integration is described.
Pricing is very straightforward: Receiveit! costs $15, and Streamit! costs $20. The page indicates that card payment is available. Receiveit!Pro is expected in December 2025, while the timeline for Receiveit!Broadcaster is still TBD, and pricing has not been disclosed. Deployment runs on the user’s own Raspberry Pi, giving it a locally self-managed character. However, the main text does not state whether it is open source, whether it can be installed on other Linux devices, or whether it depends on any external cloud services.
The advantages are its low barrier to entry, controllable hardware cost, suitability for remote sites and unattended scenarios, plus a Web UI and automatic reconnection that are practical for broadcast operations. The downside is limited disclosure: open-source status, licensing, detailed installation documentation, network security configuration, compatible models, support options, and API capabilities are not clearly stated in the main text. Some versions in the product line have also not yet been released.
It is suitable for community radio stations, holiday light shows, remote transmitter-site audio links, DJ internet streaming, and other users who do not want to maintain a complex Linux audio stack. Access from China cannot be determined from the main text. Payment appears to be card-only, with no mention of Alipay or WeChat Pay. If access or purchasing is restricted, alternatives include Icecast2, BUTT, Liquidsoap, AzuraCast, or a self-hosted Raspberry Pi setup using DarkIce/Icecast.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on experiencefm.com official site.
experiencefm.com is an Unknown Hardware & IoT provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach experiencefm.com directly.