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QuickStudy: Podcasting

Find out what all the buzz is about

Russell Kay
 

October 3, 2005 (Computerworld)

When Apple Computer Inc. introduced its handheld music player, the iPod, in 2001, few anticipated that it would spawn -- and even give its name to -- a new public medium for information dissemination. But in little more than a year since it first hit national consciousness in the fall of 2004, podcasting has become a significant channel for distributing audio materials.

Podcasting marks both the expansion of radio/audio publishing (with video likely to join them soon) into a populist, subscriber-based medium and the freeing of such programming from the strictures of real-time listening.


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Podcasts started out as short bits from individual bloggers. Today, podcasts are available from many commercial broadcast and publishing concerns, including newspapers, television networks, National Public Radio, the BBC, magazines and various other informational Web sites.

The term itself, made by combining "iPod" and "broadcasting," encompasses three distinct elements:

  1. Programming: Podcasters create audio programs, usually in the form of MP3 files, which they upload to Web sites. Anyone with a computer and a microphone can now create audio programming.

    Podcasts range in format from crude, bloglike individual diaries featuring personal rants and ramblings to slick, professionally produced interviews and discussions and redistributed programming from commercial and public broadcasting organizations. The subjects of podcasts cover the gamut of human interest and experience.

  2. Publication and subscription: This takes place via Web sites that index and facilitate the finding of and subscription to podcasts according to subject matter, source, creator, metadata tags and other criteria. Podcasting differs from other types of online media distribution in that it's largely organized on a subscription model, using automatic feeding mechanisms (such as RSS or Atom) to deliver files to audiences.

    In addition, a number of Web sites now catalog thousands of available podcasts, which the user can download or subscribe to with a simple click.

  3. Playback: A user simply downloads a podcast to his computer and subsequently transfers it (often automatically) to an iPod or other music player for listening to at his convenience and not the broadcaster's schedule. VCRs and then TiVo liberated television viewers from having to adhere to broadcasters' schedules. Now, podcasting has extended such capability to mobile players for audio and radio programming.

    Access is simplified by subscription and by the automatic transfer of downloaded podcasts from a computer to a portable music player when the player is docked.

Origins

Blogging software and the automatic feed mechanism RSS first came together in 2001, when Adam Curry, Tristan Louis and Dave Winer added the ability to enclose elements to Winer's Radio Userland weblog aggregator.

In 2003, Stephen Downes began aggregating and distributing audio files in his Ed Radio site (www.downes.ca/ed_radio.htm), and talk-show host/journalist Christopher Lydon started publishing online audio interviews (http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/lydon).

In August 2004, Curry, a former MTV video jockey, began distributing a daily MP3 audio blog, "The Daily Source Code." Curry now offers a number of podcast-related resources online and on-air, including "Adam Curry's PodShow" on Sirius Satellite Radio and the iTunes PodFinder guide to podcasts.

Curry also created iPodder (http://ipodder.sourceforge.net), which was the first podcasting aggregator.

The term podcasting evidently first appeared in a February 2004 article by Ben Hammersley in the British newspaper The Guardian. By October 2004, detailed how-to podcast articles had begun to appear online.

Podcasting has taken off faster than many other phenomena. In 2004, blogger and technology writer Doc Searls (http://doc.weblogs.com) started tracking the number of references to podcasts found by Google Inc. On Sept. 28, 2004, there were 24 hits. Five days later, that number was up to 2,750, and it was over 100,000 in three weeks. As this paragraph is being written in September 2005, Google returns 56,900,000 hits.

In June 2005, Apple announced support for podcasts in its iTunes software, with distribution through its iTunes Music Store. Within two days, customers had subscribed to over 1 million podcasts from Apple's then-available 3,000 selections.

At this writing, iTunes offers 8,828 distinct podcast sources, while www.podcast.net lists 11,552 choices.

Kay is a Computerworld contributing writer in Worcester, Mass. You can contact him at russkay@charter.net.

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