Hardata Hdx Radio -
Always use the "Clock" view for your log. It shows you exactly how much time is remaining until the top of the hour, allowing you to manually stretch or shrink breaks to hit the time spot perfectly.
A: Yes, but for professional use (PFL/Cue), you need a multi-output card (like an ASIO interface or a 4-output USB mixer). The HDX expects 2 separate stereo pairs: "Program Out" (On Air) and "Headphone/Cue" (Preview).
If you are a community station, a church broadcaster, or a small commercial station looking for 99.999% uptime without paying for a massive server cluster, the HARdata HDX is your answer.
The HDX has a built-in "Secondary" mode. Run two PCs. If the main dies, the secondary takes over seamlessly. Do not skip this if you run 24/7. Final Verdict Is the HARdata HDX the prettiest software on the market? No. It has a utilitarian, database-driven interface that looks like it was built in the early 2000s (because it was). But does it work? Absolutely.
It’s not fancy. It’s just bulletproof. 🔨🎧
You can use this as a LinkedIn article, a blog post, a forum FAQ, or a social media caption. In the world of radio broadcasting, downtime is the enemy. When you're live on air or running a fully automated station, you need a system that is rock-solid, intuitive, and flexible enough to handle last-minute changes. Enter the HARdata HDX .
A: Pricing varies by region (Brazil/Portugal/Europe heavy market), but generally, the software license is under $1,000 USD, making it one of the most affordable pro automation systems available.