close encounters of the third kind
Satellite radio requires a special receiver to receive the signal from the satellite. If you do not already have a satellite radio you may be able to install one with your installed radio if you have a open auxiliary jack, otherwise you will likely need to replace your radio.
An FM receiver for an ipod will get the stations any regular radio would get. It depends on where you live but most major cities get country, talk, rock, rap, as well as just about any kind of music you can think of. http://guides.macrumors.com/iPod_FM_Receiver
the best kind of exercise for the brain is doing puzzles like optical illusions and to read. I hope this helps!
The Luftwaffe equipped all their fighters with FuG(Funkgerät; Literally meaning radio equipment in German) receiver/transmittor devices.
Radio telescopes use parabolic dishes to collect and focus radio waves from space. The dish reflects the radio waves to a receiver, which then converts the waves into electronic signals that can be processed and analyzed.
Best thing is an EVP
A radio wave is a kind of electromagnetic wave.
Any kind of communication technology uses a receiver, for example a mobile phone uses a radio receiver to pick up signals from the cell tower, and in the same way the cell tower requires a receiver to take signals back from the phone. Broadcast technology most often uses receivers on their own, for example a terrestrial television receiver is build into most TVs and satellite receivers in Sky TV boxes. FM, DAB and all other kinds of radios also use receivers.
An adjustable monkey wrench is ideal for this kind of job.
If I understand the question correctly, you're basically asking if you can use an infrared remote instead of a radio remote to control a radio controlled device.Let me say that again: radio controlled device.No, you cannot. If you're an electronics engineer, you could probably substitute some kind of IR receiver for the radio circuitry, and then you'd be able to control it with your infrared remote. But at that point, it would no longer be a radio controlled device.
It was certainly the first kind of radio receiver to become popular with the average person during radio's formative years, although whether it is what all the inventors used is doubtful. We do know that in the first several years of commercial broadcasting (1920-22), if you wanted a radio receiver, you generally had to build your own. The crystal detector was the easiest set to build, and it received a signal fairly well. Crystal sets became very popular in that era before tubes, and before there were a lot of stations on the air. Crystal sets were not sophisticated, but they got the job done until something better came along.