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8.8: Ready for Podcasting

  • Page ID
    305824
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    Podcasting is the distribution of audio files over the Internet using RSS subscription. The files can be downloaded to mobile devices such as MP3 players or played on personal computers. The term podcast, (Playable On Demand + broadcast) can mean both the content and the method of delivery. Podcasters' Web sites also may offer direct download of their files, but the subscription feed of automatically delivered new content is what distinguishes a podcast from a simple download. Usually, the podcast features one type of “show” with new episodes available either sporadically or at planned intervals such as daily or weekly.

    Podcasting with video files is often referred to as vodcasting (video + podcasting). It works the same, but includes video. If you download a vodcast on an MP3 player that doesn’t have a video screen, you will still be able to hear the audio.

    In format, podcasts are similar to conventional radio programming with a host or hosts interviewing a subject, playing music or introducing pre-recorded audio stories. So it’s no surprise that National Public Radio produces some of the most popular podcasts online.

    Newspaper podcasts: Dozens of newspapers are podcasting, including The New York Times and The Washington Post.

    The Naples Daily News produces daily podcasts and vodcasts complete with hired voice talent to deliver lead-ins, sponsorship messages, quick weather forecasts, brief headlines, reporter interviews about a big story, sports headlines, selected letters to the editor, calendar picks and teasers to other items on the Web site (https://www.naplesnews.com/search/?q=podcasts).

    The San Francisco Chronicle was producing two dozen podcasts as of January 2007 on topics as diverse as the San Francisco 49ers football team, wine and movies.

    clipboard_e2d5ba3931c440bd105da41484e37daf6.png

    The podcasts homepage on the San Francisco Chronicle’s Web site (http://www.sfgate.com/ cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/indexn?blogid=5).

    Listening to podcasts in iTunes: If you have iTunes, finding and listening to podcasts is simple. Just click the Podcasts link in the left menu, then click Podcasts directory on the bottom of the screen. Search by category or most popular. Click Subscribe if you’d like to add a podcast to your collection and it will automatically update any time there is new content.

    clipboard_e923b182d2cd6decb0fb95eca4ac8ed1f.png

    The podcasts menu on iTunes.

    Setting up a podcast: If you know you will have regular audio files on a specific topic to offer to readers, setting up a podcast will make organizing and publishing the audio convenient for you and your readers. A good example is a sports beat writer who records interviews with coaches and players and wants to offer them to readers. Setting up a podcast will allow a reader to subscribe and automatically receive new files as they become available.

    Creating a podcast that others can subscribe to is easy and free — if you have an RSS feed set up. (See Chapter 2 for how to set up an RSS feed.) Go to iTunes and click on the Submit a podcast logo or use another service like Podcast Alley.

    If you don’t have an RSS feed set up for your audio files, talk to your Web staff (if available) or visit http://www.podcast411.com/howto_1.html.


    This page titled 8.8: Ready for Podcasting is shared under a CC BY-ND 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mark Briggs via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.