Master your Spanish speaking skills in 10 ultimate steps [Infographic]

Learn or improve your Spanish skills with Radio! And check out these other fun ways too!

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 Master your Spanish speaking skills in 10 ultimate steps

1) Register in duolingo.com and download the app
2) Level Up in Duolingo!
3) Watch TV/Movies in Spanish with Subtitles on Netflix or Mexican TV with Streema.com
4) Install the Dictionary.com app, available for Android and iOS. Learn a new word every day
5) Join a MeetUp in your city and have live conversations spanish.meetup.com
Try Japaños!
6) Learn slang listening to radio with Streema.com/radios/genre/Spanish
Have a Taco!
7) Learn about “Lucha Libre”
8) Practice video calling real people with Verbling.com
9) Travel to Mexico
Have a Tequila shot
10) Date a Spanish-speaking person 😉

Stay tuned!

The Streema Team

The 7 Ways to Connect with God using your Smartphone [Infographic]

Hello Streema friends!

On this opportunity we would like to share some tips for our fellow Christian radio station listeners.

More tips and fun is coming for our wide spectrum of communities listening to online radio every day!

Stay tuned!

The Streema Team

If you like it, share it with your friends!

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The 7 Ways to Connect with God using your Smartphone

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Text Version

The 7 ways to connect with God using your Smartphone

7 – The Holy Bible app

The app simply called “Bible” is a fantastic free and popular app by YouVersion. Offline reading & multi platform available. Check it out at www.bible.com

6 – Christian Music

Listen to your favorite Christian music with apps such as Spotify, Pandora, iTunes or even YouTube. You may like bands such as:

Hillsong United and Rosa de Saron

5 – Christian Radio on the go

Listen to live mass and prayers on your phone for free with these radio stations that have a wide variety of content

Rádio Evangelizar

Hope FM

K-Love

4 – Follow Pope Francis on Twitter

Read his updates, news and wise words from your phone. Follow @Pontifex And join his more than 10 million followers

3 – Social Media for a Good Cause

Connect with God by helping others. Use the social tools to engage, inspire or give real aid to real people in your community or an NGO: Food for the hungry and Caritas

2 – Take care of Friends and Family

With a simple WhatsApp message you can make someone happier and show them you care. Spread God’s love and be instantly connected

1 – Turn your phone off*

Connect with God by turning your phone off for a little while and try praying or meditating without any distractions. Now try talking to Him from your heart

He will listen and He may even answer!

*for a little while if you can!

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We hope you enjoyed these tips. Thanks for sharing them!

Brought to you by Streema

Listen to your favorite Christian radio stations at Streema.com

Trying New Things at The Streema Blog

Hello Streema Friends!

Labor Day is coming up this Monday in the US and here at Streema we were just reflecting on the labor related to this blog, so we wanted to share some thoughts with you. 🙂

First of all, we can honestly say we’ve enjoyed taking the time to let you know about what we’re up to at Streema on this blog, whether it’s telling you about new features that we launch or about a methodology we are using. We’ve also enjoyed commenting on popular events going on around the globe, like the Glastonbury Festival or the World Cup 2014.

Speaking of the World Cup, regular blog readers may have noticed that we got really excited about it – and as a result we published more blog posts in that month than we did in the first half of the year. We even published two infographics! This is something we had never done at our blog before and got us thinking that we should do more of it.

So, over the next few months we’re going to be more active on this blog, sharing more with you, as well as adding different types of content that are related to the world of radio.

Stay tuned!

The Streema Team

One Week Later – Inside the World Cup at Streema: Challenges, Surprises, and Results of our first Event Experiment

The World Cup 2014 finished roughly a week ago and we can see how people are feeling the withdrawal syndrome of having no national football team – or soccer 😉 – to watch on a daily basis!

Here at Streema, we have many football fans that were very enthusiastic about the World Cup. Also, since this was a huge global event that was going to be broadcasted on radio as well as television, many of us thought it would be a good opportunity to experiment with a live event – the following were the challenges, surprises and results.

Experiment

The goal was to research how many people we could reach if we designed and implemented custom pages for each Match for an event such as the World Cup. To do so, we developed new assets to make sure people were able to watch and listen to the games as well as notifications on our site to make sure people were aware of the games, specially when they were live.

We focused a lot of our energy on the Match Page, which contained the main TV and radio stations that were broadcasting each match. In order to stimulate some discussion – or banter between opposing team fans 😉 – we also added the possibility to interact with other users with a Facebook comment box.

matchpage.watching.V2.fw

Additionally, we developed a Notification Bar that appeared 1 hour before each match, and stayed open during the 2 hours informing the game that was being played.

matchpage.watching.blogV1

As for general communication, we wrote 10 blog posts (including this one) that were posted through Hootsuite, which means it was replicated in our Twitter, Facebook, Google+ and Linkedin accounts.

As this was the first live event we’ve worked on, we divided the work in 3 stages: from June 12-15 for the first 11 matches, from June 16-22 for the next 21 matches, and from June 23-July 13 for the remaining 32. In each stage we made a revision and introduced some minor changes.

Here were some of the questions we had at the beginning:

– How many people can we reach?

– How could it affect our monetization?

– Would our tech infrastructure be ready?

– How many TV and/or Radio stations will we find for each match?

– How many bugs, updates and additional work will this represent?

We made sure to check all of the questions in each stage – if the results we’re good, we would decide to discontinue the experiment. Fortunately enought though, this wasn’t the case. 🙂

Challenges

The first challenge was finding the TV and radio stations that would broadcast each the first 32 matches of the Cup (or in other words, the two first stages of our plan). This was a whole lot of work since we never did this before and since most of the stations did not have a timetable with all their programming, so it was really difficult to know which station would broadcast each match. Actually, this would be one of the main reasons people refer to Streema to find particular live show and it is a yet unresolved problem on the web.

Another challenge was that many stations were not prepared to handle such traffic spikes, so in many cases, when a station reached a certain threshold in number of viewers, it would stop working for any new users and we’d have to scramble looking for alternative channels.

And the final challenge, the toughest one, was that most of the stations had a license to broadcast in a particular country, so more often than not, when people from outside the country tried to tune in those people wouldn’t be able to listen to or watch anything. :/

Surprises

For the kickoff match of the cup, between Brazil and Croatia, we had to add new webservers because we clearly couldn’t handle the traffic with our current setup. In particular, we made a deploy in the middle of the match and the servers were not able to handle the load while it got redistributed.

Another surprise was that the social interactions in a live event tend to be more frequent and intense than during a regular broadcast.  Even though we didn’t put the comment box front and center (it was actually below the fold) we found more usage of that feature than is usually seen on our site.  We found this to be very interesting and in line with our origins as a social network for radio listeners.

And finally, the sheer amount of work and attention to detail required to cover a live event with all the right content and timing.  This was a first for us, so we take many learnings from this experience!

Results

Roughly a quarter million people watched and listened to the 64 Matches over the 25 days of the World Cup through our Match Pages, while an equal amount watched through the actual radio and TV profile pages.

Also, which would you think was the most viewed/listen to match of the World Cup through Streema? You would have never guessed that it was: Germany vs Portugal in the Group Phase; then the opening game, Brazil vs Croatia; and in the third place of our rankings, the Final between Germany vs Argentina .

On the social media front, the Infographic we developed for the Group Phase called “The Best (and Worst) Predictions of the World Cup’s Group Phase” became our most popular post to date. We hope the same happens with our last one: “The Best (and Worst) Predictions of the FIFA World Cup 2014 in Brazil [Infographic]”. 🙂

To wrap up, we can truthfully say it was an exciting experience to finally work on a live event and we’re glad it was useful to so many of our users!

Stay tuned!

The Streema Team

The Best (and Worst) Predictions of the World Cup’s Group Phase [Infographic]

Hi Streema Soccer Fans!

What does a sports network like ESPN, an accounting firm like PwC, and a banking powerhouse like Goldman Sachs have in common? Not much, other than they all made predictions for this World Cup. 🙂

Just for fun, we looked at how these predictions faired in the Group Phase that recently wrapped up. We analyzed each of the predictions from these three organizations as well as for Bloomberg, The Economist, and Yahoo. Specifically in ESPN’s case they had both a crowdsourced prediction through the ESPN Bracket Predictor feature as well as a more editorial prediction through FiveThirtyEight a recently launched ESPN-owned website, so we included both. In our analysis, we found some surprising results and you would never guess which organization made the best Group Phase predictions. You can see that and more in the infographic below. 🙂

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2014 WORLD CUP PREDICTIONS GROUPSTAGE

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Brought to you by your favorite radio and television station directory. 🙂

Stay tuned!

The Streema Team