Satellite Radio Gets Out Of The Car

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Satellite Radio Gets Out Of The Car (NAPSA)—Despite the surging popularity of satellite radio, many consumersonly think of it as entertainment for the car—not as music they can enjoy at homeor on the go. Fortunately, there are a number of receivers out there that let you listen to your satellite radio virtually anywhere you go. Here, a leading provider of SIRIUS Satellite Radio, RadioShack, offers tips on how to bring your satellite radio with you from the car to the homeorthe openair: On The Road Traveling in the car is hard to avoid. However, there are a num- ber of satellite radio options out there that go hand in hand with the open road. The SIRIUS Sportster Replay is a plug-and-play receiver that lets listeners pause live radio and listen to complete coverage of the NFL, NHL, NBA and college sports. It even provides one-touch tuning to traffic and weatherreports. A second option is the SIRIUS Starmate Replay. It comes standard with virtually everything you need to make your music mobile—including a remote that controls all functions so you can keep your eyes on the road. Both devices let you record up to 44 minutes of content for later playback. Also, both come with alert features that notify you when any of your favorite songs or games come ontheradio. At Home Homeaccessory kits and boomboxes from providers like SIRIUS let you take satellite radio programming into your home. Oneoption is the Starmate Replay HomeKit, which includes a docking cradle, an indoor/outdoor windowsill antenna, an AC power adapter and audio cables for easy connection to your home entertainment system. An- Sky’s The Limit—Portable wireless devices let people listen to satellite radio virtually anywhere they go. other option is the Sportster Boombox. It not only lets you bring satellite programming into the home— but it also lets you take it to the beach, parkortailgate party. On The Go The latest innovation in satellite radio is completely portable. The S50 Receiver from SIRIUSis a portable, wearable receiver that lets you listen to your favorite satellite programming whenever and wherever you want. You can install it in your car, take it indoors for homeplay, or store up to 50 hoursof programming to take with you anywhere. You can even store MP3/WMA music files for later playback. You may also want to consider listening to satellite radio through your mobile phone. SIRIUS and Sprint have teamed up to offer 20 original, commercialfree music channels, plus a channel devoted to artist interviews and guest performances that can be streamed directly to Sprint multimedia handsets. For more information, visit www.RadioShack.com.