Difference between pages "Student Radio Awards" and "Website History"

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The Student Radio Awards is an annual event hosted by the [[Student Radio Association]]. Every year, URY enters itself for several different awards, sometimes winning.
+
Here's a potted '''history''' of the URY '''website''', courtesy of the Wayback Machine.
  
== Trivia ==
+
== c.1999-Oct 2003 ==
* URY's very own [[Coco Cole]] was one of the Voices of the Awards in 2012.  A small amount of gratification was to be had when she eventually had to read out URY's Best Technical Achievement submission name.
 
* In 2013, URY was joint first in Most Nominations with Fly FM, and Most Awarded with Fly FM and URN.
 
* Harry Whittaker was the first person in living Student Radio Association history that has received 3 nominations in a single year.
 
  
== Award History ==
+
[[File:ws1.png]]
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
The earliest version of the website available on the Web Archive was definitely a product of its time, with the bright orange branding of that era prominent throughout and a very 90s GIF-based sidebar on the left.
|+[[2018 SRAs|2018]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Technical Achievement  (URspy)
 
| '''URY: URspy (Gold)''', Insanity Radio: Insanity Goes Visual: Project Falcon (Silver), Leeds Student Radio: LSR’s best technical achievement entry (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Entertainment Programme (URY:PM - Roku Radio)
 
| URN: The Specials (Gold), Smoke Radio: Thursday Breakfast with Gabriel and Joe (Silver), URN: Campaign Relief (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Multiplatform (URspy)
 
| '''URY: URSpy (Gold)''', URN: The Lightning Draft (Silver), Xpress Radio: International Women’s Day on Xpress Radio (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Multiplatform (URY Music)
 
| URY: URSpy (Gold), URN: The Lightning Draft (Silver), Xpress Radio: International Women’s Day on Xpress Radio (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Station Branding
 
| RAW1251am (Gold), Smoke Radio (Silver), Leeds Student Radio (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Newcomer (Alex West)
 
| URB: Mitch Thorngate (Gold), Xpress Radio: Sam McGregor (Silver), KCL Radio: Heidi Hamilton (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Female (Hannah Sackville-Bryant)
 
| URN: Nikki Osborne (Gold), Smoke Radio: Sofia Loporcaro (Silver), URN: Ella W (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Male (Joel Mitchell)
 
| RAW1251am: Adam English (Gold), '''URY: Joel Mitchell (Silver)''', Livewire: Harry Benjamin (Bronze)
 
|-
 
|Kevin Greening Award
 
|Stuart Russell (Individual): Poetical (Gold), '''URY: URSpy (Silver)''', URN: The Lightning Draft (Bronze)
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
It even had a guestbook, with some rather ''interesting'' contents.
|+[[2017 SRAs|2017]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Technical Achievement  (URY Visualisation)
 
| Insanity Radio: Nerve and the New Music Library (Gold), URB:  Radio Catchup (Silver), '''URY: URY Visualisation (Bronze)'''
 
|-
 
| Best Entertainment Programme (URY:PM - with K-Spence)
 
| '''URY: URY:PM - with K-Spence (Gold)''', Smoke Radio: Thursday Breakfast with Gabriel and Joe (Silver), URN: Spoil the Ballot (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Newcomer (Will Batchelor)
 
| '''URY: Will Batchelor (Gold)''', URY: Matt Stratford (Silver), Purple Radio: Matthew Calvert (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Newcomer (Matt Stratford)
 
| URY: Will Batchelor (Gold), '''URY: Matt Stratford (Silver)''', Purple Radio: Matthew Calvert (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Male (Joshua Kerr)
 
| Fly FM: Matt Lynch (Gold), Spark: Tom Glenwright (Silver), Radio Lab 97.1: Luke Gregory (Bronze)
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
At one point in 2000, [[Gavin Atkinson]] updated the site.
|+[[2016 SRAs|2016]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Live Event or Outside Broadcast (101 Hour Outside Broadcast)
 
| Fly FM: Varsity Series (Gold), Leeds Student Radio: The Leadership Race (Silver), Xpression: 3 Campuses, 2 Counties, 1 Broadcast (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Technical Achievement (Beat the Buzz)
 
| '''URY: Beat the Buzz (Gold)''', Dragon Radio: Dragon Site Redesign (Silver), URN: The URN App (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Speech Programming (After The Tone)
 
| URN: The Nineteen Percent (Gold), Spark Sunderland: Somewhere On A Blue Horizon (Silver), CSRfm: Chance Encounter (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Entertainment Programme (URY:PM - with K-Spence)
 
| Surge: The Lowdown with Tom Cross (Gold), URN: The Rustlers (Silver), Livewire: The Tom v Tom Show (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Multiplatform Initiative (URY Music)
 
| Leeds Student Radio: Spice UK (Gold), Smoke Radio: National Student Pride 2016 (Silver), URN: Varsity 2016 (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Station Branding
 
| Fly FM (Gold), URN (Silver), '''URY (Bronze)'''
 
|-
 
| Best Female (Kat Spencer)
 
| Fly FM: Jen Thomas (Gold), Leeds Student Radio: Jaguar Bingham (Silver), Leeds Student Radio: Kerry Maule(Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Kevin Greening Award
 
| Leeds Student Radio: Yeezy Taught Me (Gold), East London Radio: Andrew Hodges (Silver), '''URY: Biscuit News (Bronze)'''
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
This design was created by [[Leo Warner]], and doesn't really work too well in 1080p.
|+[[2015 SRAs|2015]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Live Event or Outside Broadcast
 
| Xpress Radio: The Welsh Varsity 2015 (Gold), '''URY: Elections Results Night (Silver)''', Shock Radio: Three Peaks Challenge (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Technical Achievement
 
| University Radio Bath: Visualisation Rebuild and URB Digital (Gold), '''URY: Roses mini OB Kits (Silver)''', URN: OB1 – Universal Outside Broadcaster (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Sport Programming (URY Sports Hour)
 
| URN: URN Sport (Gold), URN: Varsity Basketball 2015 (Silver), Xpression FM: Boxing Varsity ’14 (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Entertainment Programme
 
| '''URY: Harry Whittaker Show (Gold)''', Forge Radio: Ben Bason (Silver), Shock Radio: The Paul Jones Show (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Newcomer
 
| '''URY: Rebecca Saw (Gold)''', Leeds Student Radio: Louisa Fox (Silver), Leeds Student Radio: Bethany Bartley-Jeacock (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Male Presenter
 
| Leeds Student Radio: Sammy Jones (Gold), Fly FM: James Lewer (Silver), '''URY: Harry Whittaker (Bronze)'''
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
=== Webcasting ===
|+[[2014 SRAs|2014]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Journalistic Programming
 
| SCRATCH RADIO (Gold), '''URY: River Safety: York’s Rising Problem (Silver)''', URN (Bronze)
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
At the start of Web Archive captures of the URY website, URY were still broadcasting only on 999kHz and did not yet simulcast on the Internet; however, by 2003, URY had leapt forward into the Internet Age by hosting a worldwide live stream... using ''RealPlayer''.  Oh well...
|+[[2013 SRAs|2013]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| Best Technical Achievement (Talkback)
 
| URYB: 1449AM URYB's UK Radioplayer Console & Unified Station Management Application (Gold), URY: Show Planner (Silver), Shock Radio: New Broadcast Architecture (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| [[Best Technical Achievement (Show Planner)]]
 
| 1449AM URYB's UK Radioplayer Console & Unified Station Management Application (Gold), '''URY: Show Planner (Silver)''', Shock Radio: New Broadcast Architecture (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Specialist Music Programming (Bos Tones)
 
| Will Metcalf (Gold), Monster FM: Roya's Celtic Show (Silver), Fly FM: The Urban Swift with Temi Jonah (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Specialist Music Programming (Ellie Wright's World Music)
 
| Will Metcalf (Gold), Monster FM: Roya's Celtic Show (Silver), Fly FM: The Urban Swift with Temi Jonah (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Entertainment Show (The Harry Whittaker Show)
 
| The Morning Show with Giles Gear (Gold), Wake and Bake with Laurence and Gareth (Silver), '''The Harry Whittaker Show - ((URY)) (Bronze)'''
 
|-
 
| Best Male (Harry Whittaker)
 
| Pure FM: Glen Scott (Gold), Radio LaB: Danny Fullbrook (Silver), Spark FM: Jonny Chambers (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Newcomer (Harry Whittaker)
 
| Ben Sheppard (Gold), '''Harry Whittaker - ((URY)) (Silver)''', Dom Stirling (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| [[Best Speech Programming (The New World Order: Part 2: 1651)]]
 
| '''URY: The New World Order: Part 2: 1651 (Gold)''', URY: Trimble (Silver), A Seaside Town (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| [[Best Speech Programming (Trimble)]]
 
| URY: The New World Order: Part 2: 1651 (Gold), '''URY: Trimble (Silver)''', A Seaside Town (Bronze)
 
|-
 
|}
 
  
{| class="wikitable"
+
== Oct 2003-Summer? 2006 ==
|+[[2012 SRAs|2012]]
 
|-
 
! Nominations
 
! Winner
 
|-
 
| [http://www.studentradioawards.co.uk/content/Awards/2012/Winners/pdf_w3s1i1.pdf Best Station]
 
| URN (Gold), '''URY (Silver)''', 107 Spark FM (Bronze)
 
|-
 
| Best Specialist Music Programming
 
| ???: Dance Revolution (Gold), LSRFM: Mim Shaikh Presents The Shaikh World Show (Silver), '''URY: Coco Electro (Bronze)'''
 
|}
 
  
[[Category: Awards]] [[Category: History]]
+
[[File:ws2.png]]
 +
 
 +
A radically new website design was launched in time for Autumn term 2003, featuring for the first time what seemed to be sensible web design (for it was a new millennium and the days of gaudy sidebars and orange on grey were far behind the URY computing team, in all their wisdom).
 +
 
 +
The guestbook and RealPlayer streams were still there, though.
 +
 
 +
This website ''does'' work quite well in 1080p, considering.
 +
 
 +
The then Head of Production, Simon Taghioff, was instrumental in this overhaul.
 +
 
 +
== 2006-2010 ==
 +
 
 +
[[File:ws3.png]]
 +
 
 +
A minor update of the previous website, with even more orange... and no guestbook in sight!  RealPlayer by now had been joined by MP3 and Ogg Vorbis streams as URY's streaming technology marched on.
 +
 
 +
What the ''hell'' is that font on the advertising banner?
 +
 
 +
This design was jiggled around a bit over its four years of service, but remained mostly the same.
 +
 
 +
== 2010-2011 ==
 +
 
 +
[[File:URYsite09.png]]
 +
 
 +
In what was probably the most short-lived (and expensive!) of website designs, URY got [http://www.freelancegraphicdesigner.co.uk/ury-web-design.html a professional graphics designer] in to completely redesign the website in conjunction with URY's comprehensive rebranding.
 +
 
 +
The result was a lovely set of graphics (lovely being subjective on whether or not you like Impact as a font), but the code for the website wasn't as lovely.  According to legend, the site was programmed in under a week to meet harsh deadlines and was therefore effectively hacked together.  Despite all this, it worked for a year and as of writing the code is still there in heavily modified form.
 +
 
 +
Sources indicate that a DaveX was responsible for the coding.
 +
 
 +
== 2011-2012 ==
 +
 
 +
[[File:ws2011.png]]
 +
 
 +
The current website was largely the result of a rehashing of the design from last year by the combined efforts of [[Darren Webb]] and [[Rob Stonehouse]] on design and [[Matt Windsor]] on programming (which mainly involved tidying up the previous round of code and implementing the design changes in HTML5 and CSS).
 +
 
 +
This website won a YUM award in 2011.
 +
 
 +
There's still no guestbook.
 +
 
 +
== 2012-2013 ==
 +
[[File:ws2012.png]]
 +
 
 +
In October 2012, the website was completely replaced with a shinier, newer, completely re-written site based on Django (a Python web framework). Despite the shiny new design, we immediately regretted this decision. The site was put live before it was ready - features were missing and never were fully implemented on this generation, and large amounts of it relied on a completely new database schema, so all of the Members' Internal website tools broke with the replacement. It suffered in service for less than a year before it was retired on August 2013.
 +
 
 +
== 2013-2018 ==
 +
 
 +
Sticking with the Python, Matt Windsor again went on an endeavour for a better website. With an entirely new codebase in Pyramid (another Python web framework) and SQLAlchemy, and a few shinifications to the actual design itself, this site went into production in August 2013, at the same time as our upgrade to Apache 2.4 and the replacement of Members' Internal with MyURY. Over the remainder of the Summer Holidays, MyURY was expanded to ensure it had capabilities to actually maintain this website, and so shiny Banner and Podcast systems were available and the site once again looked pretty.
 +
 
 +
There's still no guest book, but there is a sign up form on the Get Involved page.
 +
 
 +
== 2018-Present ==
 +
 
 +
''For a picture, load up [http://ury.org.uk ury.org.uk]!''
 +
 
 +
[[File:2016-site.png|1280px]]
 +
 
 +
The current version of the site, amusingly enough codenamed 2016-site, for it was started in 2016 but only released in 2018 (arguably still not finished...), was designed by Brooke Hatton and coded up by himself alongside (at various times) Matthew Stratford, Chris Taylor, Matt Windsor, Natalie Harris, Danny Roberts, and many others. Out went Python, and in came the modern programming language ''du jour'', Go. In between, MyURY was replaced by (read: renamed to) MyRadio, which feeds it everything - scheduling, podcasts, team info, you name it.
 +
 
 +
There's still no guest book.

Latest revision as of 12:56, 26 August 2020

Here's a potted history of the URY website, courtesy of the Wayback Machine.

c.1999-Oct 2003

Ws1.png

The earliest version of the website available on the Web Archive was definitely a product of its time, with the bright orange branding of that era prominent throughout and a very 90s GIF-based sidebar on the left.

It even had a guestbook, with some rather interesting contents.

At one point in 2000, Gavin Atkinson updated the site.

This design was created by Leo Warner, and doesn't really work too well in 1080p.

Webcasting

At the start of Web Archive captures of the URY website, URY were still broadcasting only on 999kHz and did not yet simulcast on the Internet; however, by 2003, URY had leapt forward into the Internet Age by hosting a worldwide live stream... using RealPlayer. Oh well...

Oct 2003-Summer? 2006

Ws2.png

A radically new website design was launched in time for Autumn term 2003, featuring for the first time what seemed to be sensible web design (for it was a new millennium and the days of gaudy sidebars and orange on grey were far behind the URY computing team, in all their wisdom).

The guestbook and RealPlayer streams were still there, though.

This website does work quite well in 1080p, considering.

The then Head of Production, Simon Taghioff, was instrumental in this overhaul.

2006-2010

Ws3.png

A minor update of the previous website, with even more orange... and no guestbook in sight! RealPlayer by now had been joined by MP3 and Ogg Vorbis streams as URY's streaming technology marched on.

What the hell is that font on the advertising banner?

This design was jiggled around a bit over its four years of service, but remained mostly the same.

2010-2011

URYsite09.png

In what was probably the most short-lived (and expensive!) of website designs, URY got a professional graphics designer in to completely redesign the website in conjunction with URY's comprehensive rebranding.

The result was a lovely set of graphics (lovely being subjective on whether or not you like Impact as a font), but the code for the website wasn't as lovely. According to legend, the site was programmed in under a week to meet harsh deadlines and was therefore effectively hacked together. Despite all this, it worked for a year and as of writing the code is still there in heavily modified form.

Sources indicate that a DaveX was responsible for the coding.

2011-2012

Ws2011.png

The current website was largely the result of a rehashing of the design from last year by the combined efforts of Darren Webb and Rob Stonehouse on design and Matt Windsor on programming (which mainly involved tidying up the previous round of code and implementing the design changes in HTML5 and CSS).

This website won a YUM award in 2011.

There's still no guestbook.

2012-2013

Ws2012.png

In October 2012, the website was completely replaced with a shinier, newer, completely re-written site based on Django (a Python web framework). Despite the shiny new design, we immediately regretted this decision. The site was put live before it was ready - features were missing and never were fully implemented on this generation, and large amounts of it relied on a completely new database schema, so all of the Members' Internal website tools broke with the replacement. It suffered in service for less than a year before it was retired on August 2013.

2013-2018

Sticking with the Python, Matt Windsor again went on an endeavour for a better website. With an entirely new codebase in Pyramid (another Python web framework) and SQLAlchemy, and a few shinifications to the actual design itself, this site went into production in August 2013, at the same time as our upgrade to Apache 2.4 and the replacement of Members' Internal with MyURY. Over the remainder of the Summer Holidays, MyURY was expanded to ensure it had capabilities to actually maintain this website, and so shiny Banner and Podcast systems were available and the site once again looked pretty.

There's still no guest book, but there is a sign up form on the Get Involved page.

2018-Present

For a picture, load up ury.org.uk!

2016-site.png

The current version of the site, amusingly enough codenamed 2016-site, for it was started in 2016 but only released in 2018 (arguably still not finished...), was designed by Brooke Hatton and coded up by himself alongside (at various times) Matthew Stratford, Chris Taylor, Matt Windsor, Natalie Harris, Danny Roberts, and many others. Out went Python, and in came the modern programming language du jour, Go. In between, MyURY was replaced by (read: renamed to) MyRadio, which feeds it everything - scheduling, podcasts, team info, you name it.

There's still no guest book.