Adam Curry was listening to The Gillmor Gang live from Gnomedex while in the UK. He recorded it and was hoping to be the first to post an excerpt on his Daily Source Code. But he was beat out by Pete at RasterWeb! Audio. Check out the clip from RasterWeb! and Adam’s commentary in this edition of the Daily Source Code. It’s at about 11:00 minutes in.
The History of MP3
Adam Curry has posted a very good audio history of MP3 including an interview with one of the inventors. It’s from 27:37 to 36:41.
DIY Radio with PODcasting
Doc Searls has done a great job of pulling together many topics related to radio, iPods, audioblogs, RSS, the NAB and Ogg Vorbis.
PODcasting will shift much of our time away from an old medium where we wait for what we might want to hear to a new medium where we choose what we want to hear, when we want to hear it, and how we want to give everybody else the option to listen to it as well.
Update: Dave Slusher is trying to set the record straight and make sure we’re using the terminology correctly. I think he’s got it right. It ain’t a PodCast (or even a PODcast) if it doesn’t flow automatically (automagically) from source to MP3 player.
The Audience is Listening
Dave Slusher has discovered the power of the audience. Make a mistake and you’ll immediately be corrected. I learned this early on from Dave Winer and even more so from Dan Gillmor. Dan has long pointed out that his readers know more than he does, and that’s true for all of us. It’s like writing a book and having hundreds of pre-publication reviewers. The only problem is that in this case the reviews are post-publication. The answer is humility. Be prepared to be corrected, and if you’re bold enough to correct someone, be prepared to re re-corrected.
So Many Bloggers, So Little Time
The problem with audioblogs is real-time playback. It’s not too bad…yet. I can listen to all of Adam’s shows, and Dave’s posts, but at 45-90 minutes a day, it already ain’t easy. There are audio blogs I want to listen to on a regular basis, but I just don’t have the time. (As it is, to produce IT Conversations I’ve got the headphones on for many hours a day.)
So what happens when we hit critical blog-mass? Are we already there? Like Scoble, I can use RSS to scan a whole lotta text blogs in a short period of time, but there’s no way (yet) to do that with audio. What’s the solution? Is it meta-blogging (bloggers who help us find the best-of other blogs)? Will excerpts help? I dunno.
IT Conversations at Gnomedex
Yahoo!, in association with Lockergnome.com, presents Gnomedex 4: Geeks Gone Wild! this week September 30th through October 2nd 2004, and IT Conversations will be there. Speaking this year will be Steve Wozniak (Woz), Robert Scoble, Chris DiBona, Jim Louderback, and Dan and Steve Gillmor. We will be streaming the audio all day Friday and Saturday including a special live edition of The Gillmor Gang. And for those who can’t be there or listen to the live broadcast, IT Conversations will PodCast all of the sessions beginning next week, so have your iPods linked to our RSS feeds. So head for www.itconversations.com and look for links to Gnomedex 4. And thanks for listening.
(The IT Conversations coverage of Gnomedex 4 is sponsored by Yahoo!, Limelight Networks, Magnatune Music and DecisionCast.)
If RSS Ain’t Broke…
Steve Gillmor answers the critics who have been writing that RSS isnt’ scalable. [Source: ZDNet]
Live Streaming Election Coverage by Mobloggers
What’s more powerful than all the broadcast and cable networks combined? Hundreds of moblogger/pollwatchers reporting live and on-the-scene from the polling places of America on Election Day, November 2, 2004. Interested in participating or have a suggestion? Check out the MoPollWatch wiki page.
The iPod Economy
According to this article in Business 2.0, there are nearly four million iPods out there and Apple has 54% of the MP3 player market. The rest of the article is about aftermarket hardware products.
Web Conferencing Survey
Alex Williams of DecisionCast, who will be part of the IT Conversations broadcast from Gnomedex next week, would like your help. He’s conducting an online survey with Wainhouse Research. It only takes 10-15 minutes and there’s a chance you’ll win an Amazon.com gift certificate or an iPod.