podcasts - ReadWriteWeb http://www.readwriteweb.com/feeds/tag/podcasts en Copyright 2012 Richard MacManus readwriteweb@gmail.com Tue, 14 Feb 2012 16:29:00 -0800 http://www.sixapart.com/movabletype/?v=4.35-en http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss How to Find Great Podcasts: Video Tour of HuffDuffer Is your podcast listening experience less than fabulous? If it is, you should check out HuffDuffer, a social discovery and organization service for podcast files.

The service was expertly built by UK designer Jeremy Keith and you'll know you're in for a remarkable experience when you go through the sign-up process. HuffDuffer will make you smarter and it's fun to use. Check out our 5 minute video tour of this remarkable service below.

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Come be my friend and let's share great podcasts at http://huffduffer.com/marshallkirkpatrick.

Don't Miss: The Favorite Podcasts of the ReadWriteWeb Community.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/how_to_find_great_podcasts_video_tour_of_huffduffe.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/how_to_find_great_podcasts_video_tour_of_huffduffe.php Podcasts Fri, 08 Jan 2010 12:19:49 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick
iTunes U Proves Better than Going to Class Skip the lecture, download the podcast. That's probably not what university professors tell their students, but perhaps they should. New psychological research conducted by Dani McKinney, a psychologist at the State University of New York in Fredonia, shows that students who only listened to podcasts of lectures achieved substantially higher exam results than those who attended class in person.

]]> To find out how much students can learn from a podcast, McKinney's team created one for a lecture from an introductory psychology course. The podcast contained both audio and video of the slides used in class.

Half the students (32 of 64) skipped the class and listened to the podcast only. The other half attended in person, where they also received a printed handout. A week later, the students were tested on the material.

Podcast Listeners Did Better

The students who downloaded the podcast alone averaged a C (71 out of 100) but those who attended class averaged a D. And those who listened to the podcast and took notes did even better - their average was 77.

Before university classrooms empty out, it's important to note that this is only preliminary research. McKinney's study involved only a single lecture. Also, motivation may have come into play as well. Her experiment didn't count for class credit, so students were encouraged to participate with iTunes gift cards. The high scorer from each group was awarded a $15 gift certificate for use in the online store.

McKinney now plans to further study podcasts in the classroom over the course of an entire semester, instead of just one class. She wonders if students might find podcasts more useful early on in a class, when the material is still new. Still, McKinney is a big believer in the power of technology and its impact on education. "I do think it's a tool," she says. "I think that these kids are programmed differently than kids 20 years ago."

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/itunes_u_proves_better_than_class.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/itunes_u_proves_better_than_class.php E-Learning Wed, 25 Feb 2009 07:01:39 -0800 Sarah Perez
RssPlayer: A Better Podcast Client for Your iPhone rssplayer_logo_jan09.pngManaging your podcast subscriptions on the iPhone and iPod touch while on the go and without having access to your computer is not exactly an enjoyable experience. Last year, Apple rejected Alex Sokirynsky's Podcaster from the App Store because it duplicated "the functionality of the Podcast section of iTunes." Now, however, Podcaster has returned to the App Store as RssPlayer (iTunes link), which brings back most of Podcaster's features, though with some frustrating concessions to Apple's iPhone SDK.

]]> Apple's own implementation of over-the-air podcast downloads on the iPhone and iPod touch is haphazard at best. Not only do you have to switch between the iPod and iTunes applications, but the iPhone also doesn't allow you to download files over 10mb, which is a serious limitation given that most podcasts are far bigger than that. The iPod app also can't go out and download new shows for you without having to go to the iTunes app first.

RssPlayer is a step in the right direction, and we are happy that Apple has finally allowed it into the App Store. The app does a lot of things right, but it also has to abide by Apple's stringent restrictions.

The Good

rssplayer_sshot_jan09.jpgCompared to Apple's own podcast implementation, RssPlayer is a major step forward. You can check for new episodes right from the app, stream audio to the device without having to first download the show, and you can even download password-protected feeds. The app also displays show notes and has some other basic functions like marking episodes as played or deleting a download.

The Bad

The app still has its limitations, however. There is no way to search for feeds, for example. You have to enter the URL of the podcast feed by hand (including the 'http://'). You can also point the app to an OPML file with your podcast subscriptions. Starting with the next version, RssPlayer will also allow you to simply click on a podcast feed in Safari and automatically subscribe to it in the app.

rssplayer_sshot2.jpgFar more damaging, however, is the complete lack of playback controls. We don't know if Alex decided to leave these out as a concession to Apple, but we can't believe that the developers of an audio playback application would deliberately leave this basic functionality out. According to the developers, this feature will return the next version of RssPlayer.

Because Apple insists that the apps only function within their own sandbox environment, your subscriptions won't appear in the iPod application and the audio will stop when you exit the application (though playback automatically resumes when you re-open RssPlayer).

Verdict

In most respects, RssPlayer is a major upgrade over Apple's built-in podcast player, but the downsides of having no playback controls and no podcast directory make it a bit hard to recommend the app just yet. If you are already frustrated by Apple's podcast support, however, the $1.99 for the application is money well spent, especially once the Apple approves the new versions that iron out most of the bugs we mentioned above.

Of course, if you want to take the risk, you could also jailbreak your iPhone and install the latest version of Podcaster on your phone.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rssplayer_podcast_client_for_the_iphone.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rssplayer_podcast_client_for_the_iphone.php Product Reviews Wed, 28 Jan 2009 09:05:05 -0800 Frederic Lardinois
NPR Now Lets You Roll Your Own Podcast Feed NPRLogo125.jpgNational Public Radio (NPR) here in the US has some great audio content and the offering got even better today with the release of a new "mix your own" podcast option. Users enter a list of categories and keywords and the NPR site dynamically generates an RSS feed you can subscribe to in iTunes or elsewhere. It's just the latest innovation built on top of the new NPR API.

The user experience is great and we think it makes NPR podcast content immediately more compelling. You get an instant preview of what will be in your feed and it's really easy to use.

]]> NPR Podcast Directory.jpgWe wish that there was an option to do keyword search as something other than a full-text search, right now any mention of your word in an article gets it included on your feed, but that's our only complaint so far.

There's some rights issues with a couple of the big NPR shows but that's not the end of the world. It's pretty great that this new custom configuration is now the default setting for the Podcasts page.

We would also love to see these custom podcasts made accessible through the great year-old NPR mobile site.

We hope the innovation over at NPR will continue fast and furious, especially now that there's a new CEO in town. Former head of NYTimes.com Vivian Schiller was just named the new CEO of NPR last month.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/npr_now_lets_you_roll_your_own_podcasts.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/npr_now_lets_you_roll_your_own_podcasts.php Podcasts Thu, 18 Dec 2008 16:46:11 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick
Favorite Podcasts of the ReadWriteWeb Community Podcasting has had its challenges over the past couple of years and we even once questioned whether it would survive! But at heart we at ReadWriteWeb love listening to podcasts, nearly as much as we love reading blogs. So we decided to find out the favorite podcasts of our readers and writers. We put the call out on Twitter and got a great response. The results are below, together with the favorites of the ReadWriteWeb authors.

We'd like to continue the discussion in the comments - and also tell us how you listen to podcasts these days. I usually listen to them while walking the dog. But everyone is different, so tell us your preferred podcast listening method.

]]> Also @drnormal from Strange Love Live wanted to know: which do you prefer, audio or video podcasts? Let us know in the comments.

Richard MacManus

Marshall Kirkpatrick (walking the dog while listening to podcasts is a common theme here at RWW)

Sarah Perez

Frederic Lardinois

Lidija Davis doesn't listen to podcasts, but she participates in one - The Drilldown.

10 Favorite Podcasts From the RWW Community

We got a great response from our friends on Twitter (follow @rww on Twitter if you want to participate in future polls). A number of podcasts were mentioned multiple times. Here are 10 of those that randomly caught our eye:

Below is the full unstructured list from friends of RWW! Sorry there are no links, but generally you can copy and paste an item into Google to find out more...

Kate LaFrance: Stephen Pierce's blog dtalpha.com.

Roger Harris: Nature magazine, Scientific American, NPR

Terri Ellman: This American Life and Wait! Wait! Don't Tell Me.

Kenny Hyder: the maccast & atomfilms

Mike Billeter: Marvel's own Mighty Marvel Podcast and The B.S. Report with Bill Simmons (ESPN).

Rob Inskeep: Killer Innovations - http://bit.ly/killer and, on a lighter note The Instance - http://bit.ly/Instance

Mike Keliher: You Look Nice Today, On the Media, Shill, Inside PR, For Immediate Release

eco2oh: Cool Hunting Video (brilliant art/culture/design snack) Tiki Bar TV, Eban's Lounge Podcast Selection, Dishy Mix

Joseph Miller: This American Life, TWiT, Stanford Entrepreneurship.

Simon Young: http://forimmediaterelease.biz, http://jaffejuice.com/, http://twistimage.com/blog, and of course http://ijump.tv :)

ipevo: Inside Mac Radio

itamarw: The Bugle (Times Online), BOL

Mike Robinson: BBC Friday night comedy http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/... TED Talks, always interesting... http://www.ted.com/index.ph...

kitalooclef: More Hip than Hippie, You Look Nice Today, Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, Real Time with Bill Mahr, The World's Tech podcast

Paul Laroquod: ill doctrine; Cult of UHF; Quirks & Quarks; Art & Story; Sessler's Soapbox.

Andrew Korf: Ian Masters on KPFK.org: http://www.ianmasters.org/

Rob Cottingham: For Immediate Release, Lullabot, Six Pixels of Separation, CBCRadio Comedy Factory, Manager Tools

Kevin Marks: RadioLab; In Our Time; This American Life; BBC Friday night Comedy; On The Media more at my last.fm account kevinmarks

Daniel Howe: The Father Bob Show - He's a disgruntled elderly priest from Melbourne who likes to speak his mind http://is.gd/bQ92

Iben Rodriguez: WNYC-RadioLab, VODcars, PBCC-Sunday-Sermons, ScienceFriday, and Berkeley-Groks.

chase squires: Marketplace ( http://marketplace.publicra... ) and the Stuck in the 80s podcast ( http://blogs.tampabay.com/80s/ )

Adam Ritchie: sound opinions from american public media, nyt popcast, npr all songs considered, boston globe page one, rocketboom

Erin | Books in 140: This American Life, CBC's Writers & Company, New York Times Book Review, New Yorker podcasts

Steve O'Hear: TWiT, phonesshow (prev smartphoneshow), mobile with the guru

Charles: "The Lew Rockwell Show" http://lewrockwell.com/podc...

Kim Gaskins: Savage Love http://is.gd/2rG0

Ethan Watrall: iFanboy, Quirks & Quarks, Wormwood, Leviathan Chronicles, OnBoardGames

Kevin Pedraja: This American Life, Fresh Air, NPR Morning News Summary, KEXP Song of the Day, Beautiful Places in HD

Kiran Max Weber: Future Tense, Core Intuition, gdgt, StackOverflow and TWiT. Gillmor Gang would have made it but think it died.

Andrew Korf: http://ecorner.stanford.edu...

Mike Maney: "Open Sources" podcast from @mjasay and @daveofdoom at http://www.opensources.com/

mike dunn: http://www.podiobooks.com, http://www.somethingtobedes, http://www.thebitterestpill, http://www.evilgeniuschronicles, http://www.deltaparkproject.

Hanna Wiszniewska: Changesurfer Radio http://bit.ly/OF7d, Pop!Casts http://bit.ly/liEk, TEDtalks http://bit.ly/vUTq

Tony Bain: venture-voice

alexislyon: Coffee Break Spanish!

McMatt: Sci. Am's "60 Second..." series. Informative, leads to other info and very chipper. http://tinyurl.com/5vgr79

Shaun Trennery: Twit, No Agenda, ZA Tech Show, Tech 5

Sarah Wood: Diggnation, Totally Rad Show, The Stealth Mac, We Need Girlfriends, KEXP song of the day

aussiesasha: social blend @ mixxingbowl.com :)

Sea-Fever Consulting: For Immediate Release, Six Pixels of Separation, No Agenda, You Look Nice Today, Just One More Book

Will King: TEDTalks, FastCompany.TV, MacCast, NPR Planet Money, KRCW LeShow

Sherif Mansour: 1) The Scoop (Aussie) http://tinyurl.com/594dwx 2) Instantiate Podcast (Aussie) http://instantiate.platform... , 3)TWiT (US)

arikhanson: For Immediate Release; Marketing Over Coffee

Chris from Germany: http://www.podcast.de/podcast/8995/Sci_xpert_-_Leschs_Universum
it's in German, a Munich university professor, over 30 parts, 15mins each

Steve Spalding: You Look Nice Today - Merlin Mann's podcast, Buzz Outloud, TWiT

Aaron Hockley: TWIP, TackSharp, Hanselminutes, .NET Rocks

Bram Pitoyo: strangelovelive

Chris O'Rourke: StrangeloveLive, Webb Alert, The Microsoft IT Manager Podcast

Chris Judson: FOSS Weekly, Reduced Shakespeare Co, YouLookNiceToday, Speaking of Faith, Wait, wait...don't tell me (last two are NPR types)

Michele: The Moth, Splendid Table, This American Life

dieselboi: Strangelovelive is a fun, insightful and sexy podcast

Brett Roberts: TED, Ask a Ninja

dekkerd: GDGT weekly, TwiT, loaded, Buzz out loud, geekbrief.tv

Shelley O'Connor: www.polyweekly.com

Jon Burg: FIR, Six Pixels of Separation, Cranky Geeks, NBC News, Naaleh

Finally, if you're wondering who is the guy who got a podcasting RSS tattoo, it is Drew Olanoff!

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/favorite_podcasts_of_readwriteweb.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/favorite_podcasts_of_readwriteweb.php Podcasts Mon, 15 Dec 2008 21:25:05 -0800 Richard MacManus
RWW on Strange Love Live, 10pm PST Tonight Every now and again some of us at ReadWriteWeb pop up in video or podcast recordings. Our VP Content Dev Marshall Kirkpatrick moreso than me, as he is based in the US. And Marshall is appearing on an interesting live video show tonight, called Strange Love Live. It will be broadcast live on Ustream at 10pm PST tonight (Friday). Hosted by Cami Kaos and Dr. Normal, Strange Love Live focuses on the latest happenings in online tech - calling on techies around the Portland, Oregon area to provide insight into their areas of expertise. Interesting without being dull, recent topics have ranged from OpenID to WordPress to iPhone apps. We're looking forward to seeing Marshall live tonight! Tune in at 10pm PST.

]]> Update: We've got the Ustream show embedded below, while it streams live:

Live Broadcasting by Ustream

Recent RWW Appearances on The Interwebs

Yours truly (RWW editor Richard MacManus) was interviewed at Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco by Alison McNeill of bub.blicio.us:

Marshall Kirkpatrick was recently on the popular TWiT.tv show net@night with Amber and Leo. The hosts Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte had a lot of fun trying to pronounce our name - hence the episode title of WeadWiteWeb!

Also check out Marshall's podcast with The Recruiters Lounge, talking about our new product Jobwire, and Jason Cormier's interview with Marshall on Capture The Conversation.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rww_on_strange_love_live.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rww_on_strange_love_live.php Podcasts Fri, 21 Nov 2008 15:20:22 -0800 Richard MacManus
Mozilla's New CEO Talks DataPortability and the Future of Firefox Sean Ammirati posted a 20 minute podcast interview and transcript with new Mozilla CEO John Lilly tonight and Lilly has some interesting things to share about the future of the organization. Data Portability, the forthcoming version of Firefox (Firefox 3, available in beta now), mobile Firefox and the Mozilla Weave "cloud computing for the browser" project are among the topics the two discuss.

]]> A couple of excerpts are below but check out the full audio and transcript at ReadWriteTalk. Sean has an amazing knack for scoring interviews with some of the most interesting people in the industry, the show is definitely worth a subscription.

On the next version of Firefox

John Lilly: Firefox 3 is the killer browser. And I think I’ve been using the Beta since Beta 1 and Beta 2 is even better. Even in the Beta, we’ve surpassed the quality of Firefox 2. So I already encouraged my mom and my grandmother to update their Firefox 3 Beta 2. I thinks it’s a killer product. It holds up in a lot of new areas.

On Data Portability

Sean Ammirati: The Weave project is interesting. And it’s something that we’ve covered a lot at Read/Write Web or a couple of times at least. How does that relate in your mind to the DataPortability.org stuff?

John Lilly: Oh yes, that’s a good question. Yes we’ve talked about that this week. So I suspect that we’ll start to participate in DataPortability.org.They’ve got to start doing something sooner or later. So like doing the actual work there is going to be the key. Of course OAUTH and that kind of stuff we’ve starting to experiments with. That stuff will be very important for Weave. So I suspect we will start to participate in dataportability.org, but we haven’t yet.

Listen to their conversation, read the transcript and find relevant links at tonight's installation of ReadWriteTalk.

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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/mozillas_new_ceo_talks.php http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/mozillas_new_ceo_talks.php Product Reviews Mon, 14 Jan 2008 19:46:26 -0800 Marshall Kirkpatrick