7 posts tagged “podcast”
Sorry for the lack of posts. I've been busy lately... if you have a question for Patrick Norton of dl.tv and TWiT or Cali Lewis of Call For Help, just post it here for the interviews. We'll answer the questions on the show. Thanks!
Which gaming console are you getting for the holidays (Wii, PS3, or 360) and with which games? Discuss.
For those who read this blog, what podcasts do you listen/ subscribe to?
From the Shadows, OpenAlpha, NYT: David Pogue, Diggnation, Systm, TheBroken, LabRats, East Meets West, Radio Free Burrito, InDigital, Ctrl+Alt+Chicken, Daily GizWiz, This Week In Tech, Inside the Net, Security Now, MacBreak, 43 Folders, FLOSS Weekly, Buzz Out Loud, Buzz Report, Real Deal, X-Play, President's Weekly Radio Address, The Traveling Morans, dl.tv, CrankyGeeks, iLife Zone
You can listen Jamie Diamond's interview with Tommy Tallarico of Reviews on the Run and Electric Playground.
He reports from National Youth Leadership Forum on Technology 2006. This is day two of three on the coverage from NYLF.
Ctrl+Alt+Chicken is a new video podcast where the chefs, Alex Albrecht and Heather Stewart don't know how to cook-- a recipe for disaster! Revision3 has posted a clip show for a preview of how their recipes, everything from Chicken Cordon Bleu to Beef Wellington fails spectacularly. Speaking of delectable delights, you couldn't say any of my cooking is edible, so most of the time for meals I end up either going to a restaurant or just ordering food.
This pleasant Sunday morning I'm going to the Apple Store in 5th
Ave. and the Nintendo World Store in Rockefeller Center. I'm purchasing
Legend of Zelda garb, and the new Super Mario DS.
It's usually surreal because you picture them differently than you
would imagine. I'm meeting up with a podcaster on Sunday morning at a nearby restaurant for lunch
with a friend. It'll cost me an arm and a leg.
Howard Stern is an American radio personality, a shock jock known for his highly controversial remarks. The FCC takes each complaint seriously-- all it takes is one complaint for a fine to be issued. The FCC fined Clear Channel Communications $475,000 in early November for Stern's indecency. Clear Channel dropped Stern from its six stations.
Howard Stern should remain on Sirius Satellite Radio because his show shouldn't be broadcasted on public airwaves. Someone's going to say, "If you don't like whay Howard Stern has to say, just change the channel." We would be able to self-censor ourselves if radio broadcasters were angels. It's impossible for no one to take offense to something. Restraint is necessary if it's public domain.
People listening to public radio have declined by 1.4% for the period of spring 2003 to spring 2005. Since traditional radio broadcasts on public airwaves, it should be subject to governmental censorship to a resonable extent. However, obscenity is very hard to define. The FCC's indecency rules define indecent speech as "language that, in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards for the broadcast medium, sexual orexcretory activities or organs." However obscenity evolves with the times because today's society is more open-minded and permissible. Former Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart once said he couldn't define obsceinty but said, "I know it when I see it."
Satellite radio is a subscription-based service-- you get what you pay for. Stern's move to satellite radio is the beginning of the end for traditional radio. Listeners are able to download or subscribe to his radio broadcasts for free on the Internet. Traditional radio will be replaced by satellite radio and podcasting (automatic syndication distributing audio programs over the Internet). On October 25, Stern announced that his last show on terrestrial radio would be on December 16, 2005. Even satellite radio has its restrictions. Stern would love podcasting because he would have no regulatory board on what can be said.
Many thanks to J. Dakar for upgrading my account to standard. His standard Vox invite saved the world and made my life worth living again!
I'm too much of a goof to maintain a blog but I do produce audio podcasts on a regular basis. But I'm a journalist-- I write, or rather, wrote for my high school newspaper, the Verdict. Who knows? This blog might unleash the creative beast within me and share any personal thoughts that I might have daily.