TalkRadioTalkRadio.com Show #1 - Podcasting with Charlie Bass and Jim Wilson

edit vegasbuzzradio 2005-11-10 23:00 UTC add comment  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·

JIM WILSON CO-HOSTS TALK RADIO SHOW WITH CHARLIE BASS

LVICC FOUNDER AND VEGAS PODCAST PIONEER LAUNCH WEB TALK RADIO SHOWS AND PODCASTS ABOUT TALK RADIO

Show #1 – Podcasting

In this inaugural series of “Talk Radio About Talk Radio,” Las Vegas entrepreneur and founder of the Las Vegas Internet Chamber of Commerce (www.lvicc.com) Charlie Bass, and indie news/radio/podcast pioneer Jim Wilson combine forces to discuss the esoteric world of Podcasting.

Podcasting, a sexy little word that just about everybody knows but knows little about, is all the rage on the ‘Net.

Initially ignored and downplayed, much like the web, particularly by ‘Big Media,” blogging and podcasting are turning conventional media on its ear.

Unlike the radio most of us grew up with, podcasting has become a social phenomenon and is driving some really big things, such as Apple’s stock upward. 10 million podcast subscribers and 500,000,000 iTunes downloaders can’t be wrong.

In the bigger scheme of things, podcasting has its place along with blogging or “citizen journalism,” in the inexorable and long-over-due democratization of the media. Blogging, podcasting and RSS feeds are the Dynamic Trio that’s got a whole lot of folks worried, Big Media and Talk Radio show hosts in particular. All are scrambling to catch-up with the ‘first movers.’

Most importantly, downloadable radio to go (podcasts), have not only introduced a vast richness of new content on every conceivable subject, it has freed web media from the PC. Like the TiVo did for video, podcasts enable listeners to free themselves of time constraints, and take both their radio shows and music with them everywhere they go. Podcasting takes the once-upon-a-time WalkMan phenomenon to such lofty levels WalkMan’s™ maker SONY® still struggles to make a dent in the market it created in the 80’s.

The iPod is not only a cultural icon, it’s a breathtaking example of Yankee Ingenuity of which we can all be proud.

“Talk Radio Talk Radio” is a series of shows aimed at helping listeners – including current Radio Talk Show Hosts – on or off the ‘Net – understand the powerful forces represented by podcasting, blogging and RSS newsfeeds.

More importantly the show aims to teach listeners how to get their podcasts found in podcast catching software such as iPodder, and the Holy Grail of Podcasts, Apple iTunes’ Podcast Directory.

In this show, Jim and Charlie share insights into what a podcast really is.

(Hint: “It’s not just an archived .mp3 file.”)

Many believe an audio file on a website is a ‘podcast,’ but nothing could be further from the truth. In reality, a ‘podcast’ is a subscribable radio program located by means of podcast receiving software with one or more references to the actual audio file containing the podcast, usually an .mp3.

However, here’s the rub: “An .mp3 alone doth not a podcast make.”

In essence, podcast receiving software enables a user to find and subscribe to podcasts from as many as a hundred or more different sources. The programs are discovered by means of specially-coded XML newsfeeds commonly known as RSS, or “Real Simple Syndication.” To subscribe to a newsfeed, one merely enters the URL of the newsfeed into a newsfeed reader such as Pluck (available at www.pluck.com) which integrates a full-featured newsfeed reader into Internet Explorer. Newsfeed readers like Pluck are generally capable of subscribing to newsfeeds containing .mp3 files or ‘podcasts.’ In essence, the XML newsfeed is a ‘carrier’ or ‘container’ for the links to .mp3 or other audio – and lately video files – much like a suitcase for a set of clothes.

Since most websites are coded in HTML, the basic programming language for websites, .mp3 files located on these sites, although called ‘podcasts’ are never found (without visiting the exact website where they reside), and can’t be subscribed to. Neither can they be read by newsfeed readers. There is no distribution.

This is why millions of audio programs on websites are never found. They aren’t podcasts, pure and simple. They’re just plain old .mp3 files.

To be incorporated into a podcast directory or the iTunes Directory, a podcast must conform to specific criteria beyond the scope of this article. This is why out of 80,000 plus podcasts out there now, only 15,000 are in the Apple iTunes Directory. A rarefied atmosphere, indeed.

Wilson – concurrently programming a 24-hour streaming web radio site and producing 15 podcasts weekly – knows whereof he speaks with six podcasts currently in iTunes.

“Anyone can get their podcast into iTunes if they follow the proper procedures and methodology,” Wilson says.

The potential rewards are great: Greater and more effective personal and corporate branding, and higher visibility on the Internet, without the high costs of traditional Internet advertising: banner ads, paid links, paid search engine inclusion, and the treacherous and often costly world of Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising on the major search engines.

TalkRadioTalkRadio.com will present progressively detailed information on podcasting news, podcasting trends, and nitty-gritty details on converting existing radio talk shows to the proper formats for distribution as podcasts, how listeners can become guests on Talk Radio shows on and off the ‘Net, and much more. Stay tuned, and be sure to subscribe to the listener newsletter at the TalkRadioTalkRadio.com site.


(C) 2005 TalkRadioTalkRadio.com / Vegas Buzz Radio Network / VegasBuzzRadio.com

Buzz Words: Podcasting,podcast,blogging,podcasting technology,talk radio about talk radio,podcasting for talk radio,getting podcasts on iTunes,XML schemas for podcasting,RSS newsfeeds,all about podcasting,podcasting essentials,podcasting 101,podcast about talk radio and podcasting,vegas,vegas talk radio,vegas podcasts,vegas podcasting,podcasting trends,how to be a guest on radio and podcasts,streaming radio

Five Hundy by Midnight #15

edit vegasbuzzradio 2005-10-17 22:02 UTC add comment  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·

Vegas Buzz Radio Podcasts
http://www.vegasbuzzradio.com

Five Hundy by Midnight #15 – Vegas, Podcasts

April 10, 2005

Tim Dressen’s Original Las Vegas Podcast!

(C) 2005 Vegas Buzz Radio Network

Yahoo Seizes Podcast Initiative

edit vegasbuzzradio 2005-10-12 01:32 UTC add comment  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·  ·

Yahoo Seizes Podcast Initiative

By Mike Musgrove
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 11, 2005; Page D01

Yahoo Inc. introduced a test site yesterday devoted exclusively to downloadable audio programs known as podcasts, a move that some say puts the search engine on the forefront of a cutting edge technology and puts it ahead—at least in this arena—of its biggest competitor, Google.

The site, at http://www.podcasts.yahoo.com/ , offers not only a search feature for podcast fans but also a lineup of podcasts that are new, noteworthy or just popular.

Yahoo’s site connects Internet users to everything from shows broadcast over National Public Radio to discussions by movie critics Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper about the latest films.

But those sort of podcasts are more the exception of what’s available. By far, most of the programming is produced by amateur Web users armed with a microphone, an Internet connection and a desire to share some opinions or expertise—the audio equivalent of Web logs or “blogs.”

Analysts said that Yahoo’s move could give the Web portal a critical chance to catch up with rivals such as Google as the Internet moves beyond text and into multimedia programs containing audio and video content.

For users of podcast technology, the appeal is obvious—rather than having to tune in at a particular time to hear a radio show, they can log on and listen to podcasts anytime. With an iPod or some other MP3 player, consumers can also download an audio file and listen on-the-go.

For now, only a small number of people are searching for podcasts, but there’s widespread belief that the popularity will only continue to grow.

According to a study by research firm Ipsos Insight, about 28 percent of Web users know what a podcast is but only about 2 percent of that group has actually listened to one.

That doesn’t offer much hope for companies such as Yahoo to make any money immediately from a podcast search feature, but it puts them in a good position for the future, said Phil Leigh, president of market research firm Inside Digital Media Inc.

Podcasts serve as another tool to not only drive Web traffic to the Yahoo site but also keep Web surfers from venturing off to other sites.

Apple Computer Inc., which sells music through an online store, recently added a podcast search page to its iTunes software so owners of the iPod music player can directly download such recordings to their players. Like Yahoo, Apple also does not charge for podcast downloads.

The entry by Yahoo was “clearly something they’ve got to do,” Leigh said, noting that content providers and distributors such as Yahoo don’t want to ignore a technology that might be the next big thing in the same way that the music industry ignored Napster and other peer-to-peer software that changed its way of doing business.

“There’s not a shadow of a doubt that the future of the Internet is about multimedia,” he said. “It’s about audio now and next it’ll be about video.”

Leigh said that Yahoo “lost its way” as Google surpassed it as the most-used search tool on the Web and that Yahoo’s move could give the Web portal a chance to catch up.

Joe Hayashi, Yahoo’s podcast project director, said he realizes that and admits that podcasts don’t have much of an audience yet but argues that that will soon change.

“We feel like we can bring a big audience to podcasting,” he said.

Once an audience is in place, advertising will soon follow, he predicted.

Users of Yahoo’s podcast service don’t have to download any software to listen to podcasts, unless they choose to subscribe to a particular show and automatically receive new episodes. Hayashi said that Yahoo’s directory makes “tens of thousands” of podcasts available to its users, and is only expected to grow.

(Vegas Buzz News Network)

Vegas Buzz Radio CEO Interview: Curtis Myles, Las Vegas Monorail

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Vegas Buzz Radio CEO Interview: Curtis Myles, Las Vegas Monorail

Curtis Myles, the dynamic new CEO of the Las Vegas Monorail, shares his vision in this exclusive interview.

(C) 2005 Vegas Buzz Radio Network