Online Communities: From BBSes to Blogs and Beyond

Andy Carvin is offering a mix of blog posts and podcasts from the Scottish Learning festival, including talks by Marc Prensky and Robin Blake. I have thought of podcasting others' talks, in addition to my own, but issues of permission, quality and hosting have deterred me. How long before the conference podcast becomes standard and before people routinely start posting the audio of their talks on their own websites? How long after this before transcripts become standard as well? Andy Carvin, Andy Carvin's Waste of Bandwidth, September 22, 2005. [Link] [Tags: , , , , , ] [Previous][Next]

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Re: Online Communities: From BBSes to Blogs and Beyond

The podcasting and transcripting of current affairs, informational and educational programs on the Australian National Broadcaster's 'Radio National' website, is a leader in this field. They have the resources... http://www.abc.net.au/rn Adam Taylor Sydney [Comment] [Permalink] [Previous][Next]

Re: Online Communities: From BBSes to Blogs and Beyond

Sorry - left off my email... adam at adam dot taylor dot name [Comment] [Permalink] [Previous][Next]

Re: Online Communities: From BBSes to Blogs and Beyond

Hi Steve, Permissions is a good point; generally, I won't podcast from events that are closed, invite-only or commercial events without the speakers' permission. In the case of SETT, the sessions were being archived as podcasts anyway, but there was a time delay of several days. I figured I'd record the sessions and get something online so my blog visitors wouldn't have to wait. [Comment] [Permalink] [Previous][Next]

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