Podcasting Hacks

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Author: Jack Herrington

ISBN-10: 0596100663

ISBN-13: 9780596100667

Category: Blogging

Podcasting does for Internet audio listeners what TiVo does for television viewers—it puts you in charge of when you enjoy a program. Podcasting is a web-based broadcast medium that sends audio content (most commonly in the MP3 format) directly to an iPod or other digital audio player. You subscribe to audio feeds, receive new files automatically, and listen to them at your convenience.\ As you can imagine, podcasting is taking the "blogsphere" by storm. A podcast is a professional-quality...

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This guide explains how to listen to a podcast on the web or a PDA, and how to set up the basic hardware and software to produce a personal podcast. The 75 tips offer advice on selecting the right audio hardware, interviewing people, editing audio, posting the podcast to the internet, marketing the podcast, and taking the show on the road. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Ch. 1Tuning into podcasts1Ch. 2Starting out48Ch. 3Quality sound61Ch. 4Formats121Ch. 5Interviewing193Ch. 6Blogging222Ch. 7Publicity255Ch. 8Basic editing272Ch. 9Advanced audio320Ch. 10On the go363Ch. 11Videoblogging379

\ From Barnes & NobleThe Barnes & Noble Review\ Podcasting can be even easier, even more useful, and even more fun. Want to know how? Read Podcasting Hacks. \ Jack Herrington offers tips for building great podcasts in nearly any genre: news, politics, music, sports, tech, and beyond. You’ll learn how to record professional-quality interviews with anyone, anywhere -- and keep it cheap, with Skype. Here’s how to podcast from your car, even do a great “beercast” from your local pub (giving a worldwide audience to conversations you might not even remember the next day).\ Here’s how to syndicate your podcast and -- thankfully -- how to avoid monster bandwidth bills. Here’s how to fix common audio problems “on the cheap.” Doing a videocast? Here’s code here for a quick-and-dirty teleprompter. What more could a podcaster want? Not much. Bill Camarda, from the November 2005 Read Only\ \ \