RadioLab Podcast
Tuesday November 13th 2007, 8:27 pm
Filed under: Web, Technology, Podcasts

My friend Rich introduced me to an excellent podcast series called Radio Lab.

The production quality on this podcast is just amazing. It comes highly recommended. In particular I found the show about Musical Language to be especially interesting.

It has completed three five show seasons, and my only complaint, thus far is that I am quickly running out of episodes to listen to. Great for anybody that is sick of the mediocrity of traditional radio during your commute or exercise time.



$46,350/year of education for zilch
Saturday October 06th 2007, 4:21 pm
Filed under: Development, Web, Technology

It costs $46,350 per year for an undergrad at the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Nine months’ tuition for 2006–2007 is $33,400; a Student Activity Fee of $200 increases the total to $33,600. In addition, undergraduate room and board is approximately $9,950, with actual costs dependent on the student’s housing and dining arrangements. Books and personal expenses (including clothes, laundry, and recreation, but excluding travel) are about $2,800

from MIT Tuition site

For those, like myself, that have been out of the college scene for a few years and look back fondly on the collegiate atmosphere for more than just the libations. I wanted to turn you on to MIT OpenCourseWare.

I am trying to go through some of the copious materials on the site to see how my education, compares to what they have to offer. In particular I am focusing on the Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences courses as that is where my interests lie.

I wonder what would happen if instead of football games I devoted 3 hours every Sunday to this. But then again I am notorious for feeling guilty about my periods of unproductivity.



Pubcon turns me into SEO genius
Friday November 17th 2006, 5:40 pm
Filed under: Web, Technology

…not really. I did learn quite a bit while at the conference and it was a great experience to listen to and talk with some movers and shakers in the industry to hear what things they are excited about. By the way, PubCon was a convention held in Las Vegas that dealt with varying topics important to webmasters including intelligent website design for crawlability, e-commerce optimization, podcasting, viral marketing and all sorts of other wonderful ways to better position your website in your market of choice.

The best speaker of the conference bar none was Guy Kawasaki, he was everything that you want in a keynote speaker: engaging, intelligent, and humorous. He gave a call to action to the crowd asking for links to his blog to improve his all important Technorati ranking which I will happily agree to do.

After being inspired by some of the SEO topics I have decided that I might as well do some simple things to improve this very website. One of the most obvious things to do is to improve the URL structure of the permalinks of wordpress. There is a nice explanation about adjusting your permalink settings in WordPress.

I also found a nice post describing some other techniques you can do to improve your WordPress Structure for SEO.



Make: Project Drawbot
Saturday October 28th 2006, 10:16 am
Filed under: Technology




Swami says…
Thursday September 21st 2006, 5:21 pm
Filed under: PHP, Web, Technology

(RSS Feeds will probably be broken with this post)

For those who have come to my site, was I right?

A cookie for the first person that figures out how it was done.



I love podcasting.
Tuesday September 19th 2006, 9:34 am
Filed under: Web, Technology

To be honest, at first I didn’t buy into the hype. First of all I had to get over the name. I dislike the term “podcast” as it distorts what the breakthrough idea of the technology actually is. First things first. Podcasts have nothing to do with iPod’s. To think of the balls of the person that called it podcasting really gets my panties in a bunch. What if MP3’s were originally named Podsongs?

I was first exposed to the technology as I spent some time with the boys at Engine Studio. I had, of course, heard of podcasts / podcasting before that time but I had pretty much ignored it until early Summer ‘06. Needless to say I think that the boys at Engine are pretty much self admitted Mac fanboy’s and may occasionally fall under that sweet RDF spell that Steve Jobs is so good at casting. So I wasn’t surprised that they were excited about podcasting. I don’t know why I never investigated podcasting prior to this point other than the fact that it seemed so instantly popular, and my own work had kept me pretty distant from it. As a side note, I have long thought that accepting a technology just because it is popular ( jumping on the bandwagon ) is a horrible trait, but I also think that dismissing a technology just because it is popular ( something I am more akin to do ) is similarly despicable.

One of the employees at Engine, Tim Stotz, has his own self coined VODcast ( video podcast ). He exposed me to it and I was intrigued…

I have since delved deeper into podcasts and I have found my own little niche of programs that I REALLY enjoy listening to, these include most products of the TWIT.tv network, which I like to think of as the phoenix like rebirth of the now defunct TechTV, as well as some great material from BrainFood, MathGradPodcast, JavaPosse, etc…

After finding these great programs, I sat down and tried to think about exactly what the big deal about podcasting is? Isn’t podcasting simply personal radio broadcasting, with some syndication goodness bundled in? What’s the big deal about that? Well here is what I am thinking:

Why podcasting is the cats pajama’s?

Massive distribution potential
Marconi opened up the airwaves for communication, however I would argue that until very recently you could not conceivably create a radio broadcast, transmit it yourself and hope to get any sort of wide listener base. That is, until podcasting.

Users have the power
Users listen to what they want. They have broken free of the tyranny of the radio producer. Users can now find podcasts for all sorts of diverse and specialized topics. They also determine when they want to listen to it. Whether it is in their 45 minute commute into the city, or while they are walking the dog… Users are their own Radio producers deciding which shows are the best and when they are convenient to listen to. Also it is so refreshing to hear radio broadcasts that aren’t completely overrun by advertisements, traffic reports, or the same 5 news headlines repeated over and over, ad nauseum. Podcasting has really refreshed the medium.

Affordable Marketing and organization
How would an individual that has a great idea for a radio show ever have gotten his idea off the ground? Sure he could have created some tapes and mailed them to some radio producer hoping that his unique voice and manner would have enough mass market appeal to get him a show somewhere in Nome, Alaska. ( Have you ever noticed that when your market is too big you really have to dumb everything down to a 3rd grade level? Howard Stern, anyone?) Now with podcasting you have some automatic marketing available with the iTunes music store, in which anyone can create their own podcast, submit it to iTunes and people will come along and listen. Then, if you have a great show, you can create momentum for it by asking for reviews on iTunes, votes on podcastalley etc…

Automation
The subscription nature of podcasting makes it really easy to distribute your latest programs, and almost always in an automated fashion. This has been a perpetual problem for marketers in the past… Ok so now that you have a customer, consumer, what have you… How do you keep them informed of your latest and greatest works? With podcasting, it is built-in. At this point the subscription model of podcasting is much more effective than any alternative method. How would you feel about a mass email with a huge audio file in it? I think that most people would think of this as SPAM, but when you subscribe to a podcast it feels like you are pulling this program down, instead of them pushing it out to you. They have really come up with a satisfying way to live in the Push or Pull nature of distribution, it exists as a hybrid model where the end user either remains subscribed and is pushed the latest and greatest, or can at will decide to unsubscribe or pick and choose which episodes they want to keep.

Essentially podcasting has put the mass communication power of Radio, combined it with an extremely low startup and production cost, embedded the greatness of TIVO/DVR user based control, and some good marketing / organizational tools ( iTunes Podcast directory, etc… ). This environment has really created something wonderful and all sorts of great things are coming out of it that would never make it onto more traditional broadcasting outlets. What a great time we live in.

Discuss this in the Forum



How to find your MAC address
Wednesday September 06th 2006, 4:19 pm
Filed under: Technology

I found a great cross OS list of how to find your MAC address. Passing it along…