A Brief History of Radio: From Sparks to Streams
A Brief History of Radio: From Sparks to Streams
Radio is one of the few technologies that keeps reinventing itself. It survived television, portable music, and the app era — and it’s still a daily habit for hundreds of millions of people.

1) Before broadcasting: wireless experiments
In the late 19th century, radio began as physics and engineering: experiments with electromagnetic waves and wireless telegraphy. Early systems weren’t “radio shows” — they were point‑to‑point signals.
2) AM broadcasting and the “radio age”
As transmitters and receivers improved, radio shifted from messages to mass media. AM broadcasting (amplitude modulation) made it possible to deliver news, sports, drama, and music to homes at scale. National networks and commercial stations turned radio into an industry.
3) FM: better sound, new formats
FM (frequency modulation) brought major improvements in audio fidelity and noise resistance. That helped music radio explode: pop, rock, jazz, classical, and local culture found stable formats. In many countries, FM also accelerated local and regional broadcasting.
4) Satellites, digital, and the internet
Radio didn’t stop at towers:
- Satellite radio expanded national coverage and niche programming.
- Digital radio (DAB/DAB+) improved spectrum efficiency in markets that adopted it.
- Internet radio removed geography as a limitation. Once a station has a stream, it can be listened to worldwide — which is why directories and aggregators matter.
That’s the modern era: a listener in Berlin can instantly tune into a station in São Paulo, Tokyo, or Kyiv.
If you want to explore, start with the Radio directory or browse stations by country.