Podcasting

This is from a podcasting discussion led by Jen Reeves from the J-School and Peter Main from IATS in Clyde Bentley’s Online Journalism class.

Notes about podcasting from the industry side:

  • If you don’t advertise it, nobody will know about it.
  • The trick with keeping people interested in podcasts is keeping content flowing, especially with news.
  • Because audio can be made into such small files, you can convey lots of information.
  • With major news organizations, there has to be a lot of buy in by the management, but you need storage capacity.
  • Once you offer a podcast, you don’t want to change it. If you don’t keep it up, people will unsubscribe.

Are podcasts economically viable?

1. If you look at the Apple site, some people are using sponsors on their sites.
2. You can do a sponsorship within the show.
3. Some podcasters embed content into their podcast. The image is embedded into the file that can be part of the presentation.
4. Others are selling subscriptions to a particular show (like ABC’s “Lost”).

By the end of the year, there will be 100,000 podcasts.

Time shifting allows you to get the content when you want it, similar to TiVo or the newspaper.
On demand (media on demand) examples including a library, jukebox or TiVo.

Using FeedForAll

File>Feed Wizard
Feed Link: www.missouri.edu/~pawprint
Add an item:
Give it a description
Give it a link
Enclosure
URL: link to the website
Lenght: size of the file
Type: audio file

An affair with EndNote

EndNote is one of those pieces of software that, after using it, you can’t figure out how you ever did without. I downloaded a 30-day trial at the EndNote Web site and fell in love after about a week. Mine and EndNote’s romance was quick — shifting from the puppy love phase to total dependency very quickly. Now, EndNote and I visit almost every day, and I am completely fulfilled.
If you are:

      a grad student or someone who loves to research (or both),
      tired of those silly works cited and source rules,
      someone who is terrible with names but good with keywords,
      detail-oriented and/or
      obsessed with arranging things

EndNote might work for you like it has for me. The trial is free and requires no credit card. One caution: if you download it, you’ll love it, so be prepared to spend $89 (a steal if you purchase it online). This piece of software will save you countless hours of pulling your hair out, making sure the periods and commas are in the right place in your theses, projects or papers. As a past thesis writer, I wish I would’ve known about this product last year. Here’s a brief overview:
When you open endnote, all you have to do is create a new library and start adding your sources. [image] All are arranged in a sorted list. [image]
For each source, you can type in all the information available. You can also assign keywords for later searching. I like to link the reference to a PDF or Web version of the publication, so I can quickly refer to it when I need a quote. [image]
Finally, the best feature of EndNote is its ability to instantly reformat a citation depending on which style you choose. There are almost 1,400 styles from which to choose, so I doubt you’ll have a problem finding yours.
Another great feature is EndNote’s integration with Microsoft Word. Once you download EndNote, Word adds a toolbar in the Tools menu. The EndNote toolbar lets you reference your sources directly from the EndNote program.
For a lasting affair with a piece of software in graduate school, turn to EndNote.

Solutions for photos killing my inbox

Because I’m in charge of the Fall Photos contest for MyMissourian.com, I get a lot of e-mail photo submissions. Most of the time, people are having trouble with the “Share a Photo” form on the site because their photos are too big. Our system has trouble publishing photos larger than around 800 x 600 pixels. This presents a problem because most cameras, by default, are set to larger image resolutions. Resizing the image takes a little bit of work, but sites such as Resize2Mail.com give a three-step process to resize images. Programs including Adobe Photoshop and even Windows Paint will resize the photos as well.
The problem with sending such large images to anyone’s inbox lies in space constraints. At MU, we are only allowed 20 MB of space. Some photos are more than 1 MB alone. Multiply that by 20 photos and add the amount of e-mail we receive for other classes and projects, and it’s easy to see why my inbox has lost its oomph.
If you are a student and want to publish a large photo online — one that isn’t resized and maintains its original quality — use your Bengal space. The following post tells you how to set it up. If you aren’t an MU student, look into creating a Flickr Gallery. The Web site is incredibly user-friendly, and it’s free.

Publishing a podcast to Bengal space

This tutorial is for Mac users. Most J-School students use Apple computers, so this will be written from the Mac side of things.

Part One: Getting onto your Bengal space

First, let’s figure out how to log in to your Bengal space. Every MU student is allotted Web hosting space and has access to free software to upload files. The free software MacSFTP can be downloaded for free from the IAT Services Software Distribution site.

      Log in using your pawprint and password.
      Click on the green link for Software at the top of the page.
      Pull the first dropdown menu to select MacSFTP OSX, and click Go.
      Click the orange Get It! button to download the software.
      Once your download is complete, and you’ve installed the program, open the program. Choose File>New Connection…
      The hostname will be bengal.missouri.edu, and your username and password are just your pawprint and password. It should look like this:
      example
      Click Connect. After you do, there may be an error message, but just click OK.
      A new window should open up with some files called .bashrc and others. Double-click on the www folder. This is where you can upload your podcast. The easiest way to upload any file is to simply drag it from your documents folder or desktop directly into this window.
      To find the exact Web address of the file you uploaded, go to http://www.missouri.edu/~pawprint/ (substituting your pawprint in for the word “pawprint”). A rudimentary list of directories will pop up. This is where you find the exact address of the file you uploaded.

Part Two: Making a podcast

I’m not exactly sure the easiest way to do this, but I think I would use GarageBand, the software that comes with the Mac. Apple has a tutorial about how to format the podcast on its site [GarageBand - Recording Your Podcast]. I will follow those steps when creating my first podcast. Clyde’s idea to record it in Microsoft Word using the Word Notebook feature would work too. But I would personally like to try out GarageBand because it seems pretty neat.
I’ll update this post with more information about exactly how to do the podcast when I get around to putting mine up. Until then, you know how to publish files to your Bengal space.