The Walt Disney Company has been in the podcasting space for a while.
They have had podcasts on iTunes since that software started official support of podcasts directly in the software.
They contacted Michael Geoghegan in the summer of 2005 to do a series of podcasts on the start of the 50th Anniversary
Celebration of Disneyland in California. These turned into the Official Disneyland podcast which is released monthly
and still produced and hosted by Michael Geoghegan. Walt Disney World followed with a weekly podcast started in late
December 2005.
Now the Disney Cruise Line is getting in on the action, sort of. The podcast feed is at the DCLNews.com site, which is designed for use by news media outlets and
professional journalists. There are only two items in the podcast feed so far, which are an audio segment and a video
segment on the press conference announcing the 2007 Disney Cruise Line Mediterranean cruises. These were produced
by David Brady who is producer and host of the Walt Disney World Resort: Plugged In podcast, which is the official
podcast for Walt Disney World. He does a good job with the Walt Disney World resort podcasts, and did another good
job with these two segments. I personally hope for more podcasts from the Disney Cruise Line and The Walt Disney Company
in general as they could do some really imaginative things.
EXPO
magazine has released their 2006 Best New Shows Awards, and the Podcast and Portable Media Expo was the winner in the
"Trade and Consumer Show" Category. In the first year of the Podcast and Portable Media Expo had over 2,000
attendees and 60 exhibiting companies converge on the Ontario Convention Center in Ontario California.
The 2005 Expo was in November, but this year it is being moved up to September. The registration is open for this years conference as reported previously. And if you are
interested in going to this year's show you are in for even more. In an email from Tim Bourquin, he said there will be
about 80 companies exhibiting this year which is a third more than last year's show. And to accommodate the additional
companies at the show, as well as the over 2500 attendees they are expecting, they have moved to a bigger hall to
accommodate everything and everyone, myself included as I will be there covering the event for Droxy.
The Virtual
Podcasting Expo we reported was happening
is now open. If you follow the "Read" link at the bottom of this post you can get into the
virtual lobby. From there you can view the schedule and take some orientation tours of how the virtual conference
system works.
From the schedule they seem to have some interesting topics being covered, like the "What Makes (Or Breaks) A
Podcast - Podcast Listeners Speak" by Leesa Barnes, the "Podcasting Networks - The Best Way to Market Your
Podcast" being offered up by Todd Cochrane, as well as several sessions on Feedburner uses with podcasting. But
there are also some that are a little confusing on how they relate, like the "Top 10 Tips for Running a Political
Campaign" session, I am sure one (or more) of those is to have a podcast on your campaign site to build community
with your potential voters.
If you check it out, please leave a comment on what you think about it.
Back a while
ago we covered the advertising impact from a
research study, and fellow Weblogs Inc Network (WIN) blog The Unofficial Apple
Weblog (TUAW) reported on the audience size aspect
of the report. Now we have a blog post from the Geek
News Central blog that their numbers for the current podcasting audience size is way off. Geek News Central is getting
their counts from being involved with TechPodcasts.com network of podcasts
and Podcasternews.com as well as also several other sites that are using the
RawVoice Generator.
The post over there shows that if the Forrester Research report was correct that the numbers they have
verified stats for would be a large percentage of the whole audience that the report says there is currently existing.
Of course they know there are lot more other podcasts out there than they have the stats for, so they reach the
conclusion the numbers from the report are way off.
If you can't
make it to the Portable Media Expo, which is taking registrations as
reported here, or just don't want
to wait until September, you can check out "The International Podcasting Expo" which is being held April 21 -
23, 2006. The unique thing is that this expo is being held around the clock, and online. The expo will be a non stop 48
hour event using a virtual expo system. There will be a cross platform audio conference room which will be recorded.
Listeners can participate in live podcasts which will be available shortly after they are recorded on a special expo
feed. You can go sign up for the expo at their site.
Are any of our readers planning on signing up for this virtual expo?
It seems the
registration for the 2006 Podcast and Portable Media Expo is open. This conference is going into its second year and
from all accounts I have heard it was great fun had by all who attended the expo. It is at the Ontario Conference
Center in Ontario California again, although it is moving from November to September. It is still two days of vendor
exhibit hall, keynote presentations and conference sessions.
This conference is mostly aimed at those in podcasting, although I know a lot of podcast listeners went last year
for the exhibit hall, and to mingle with, meet and see their favorite podcasters. It is also a way to get
advertisers and podcasters together to facilitate sponsorship deals.
The conference has five conference tracks this year which are listed after the break.
Following on the heels of the
news of HBO signing to sponsor
podcasts we reported the other day, we noticed an article on the growth expected in podcast audience s and
advertising, which our fellow Weblogs Inc Network Blog TUAW (The Unofficial Apple Weblog) report on as well.
The research firm not
only predicts the future size of podcast
audiences, but they also predict the large growth in advertising dollars spent on podcasts. According to eMarketer,
the advertising dollars spent on podcasts this year will be $80 million, growing to $150 million in 2008, and doubling
to $300 million in 2010.
TV Squad is reporting that the popular podcast
from Ricky Gervais, creator of the original version of The Office, will become available only to those willing to pony
up a subscription fee. The first "season" of the podcast, which features Gervais and his Office co-creator
Stephen Marchant, was available through the British newspaper The Guardian and was free because of that corporate
sponsorship. This new season is going straight through Audible (but will still be available via iTunes) and
therefore is requiring a $7 payment for four episodes of the show.
iTunes U will really do wonders for kids that
want to cut their college classes. Apple is providing the new
service free for universities and colleges (yes, there is a difference since one can grant
Ph.D.'s and one can't) so that schools can host educational content such as boring lectures, and those not-so-popular
interviews that happen from time to time. Actually, we're being a little facetious because we heard some cool stuff in
our college days; freshman year was the best three years of our lives! Apple indicated this is a hosted service, which
makes us wonder if they're trying to be the Google of the academic world. After all, hosting the collective knowledge
of the United States higher educational system isn't a bad business strategy, now is it?
Isn't podcasting supposed to be the final nail in the radio industry's coffin? Corey Dietz doesn't
exactly think so and he's going where no podcast has gone: a podcast devoted to radio. "The Radio Radio Show" was the best best
he could come up with, but we're thinking the "The Radio Podcast" was just too too confusing. Dietz will
focus on all aspects of radio, and not just the traditional kind. Dietz's first guest is Steve Karr, who works for
HitzRadio.com; an Internet Radio station.
Droxy reader, hez, is looking for some help. hez writes: "Question! Help!: I am interested in this unit primarily so I can listen to Stern. I commute via my car or on train and from what I understand the unit only recieves a "live" signal while docked. How will I be able to listen to Stern each day if I have the unit with me on the train in the hours the show is on? Originally I thought that I could record Monday's show and listen to it the following day, but then I wouldn't be able to record the next days show because I will have the unit with me. I guess this is assuming that the Stern show will still be at its terrestrial radio time, right?"
It all sounds like a perfect plan: record your radio programming on the Sirius S50 while on the go. Get our thoughts after the jump!
Museums really seem to be going head first into the podcast foray. The Eiteljorg Museum is no exception, having kicked off podcasting with it's "Into the Fray: The Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art" exhibition. The Eiteljorg Museum podcast, like several other museum based podcasts, is hosted by their curators and includes interviews with artists featured in the show. The discussions on American Indian and mainstream art may spark the imaginations of many listeners though.
You can tune into the Eiteljorg Museum podcast through iTunes or through their website.
One of Harvard's Computer Science classes, "Understanding Computers and the Internet," has seen a massive fanfare from putting class lectures up as podcasts. Since making the lectures available as both audio and video podcasts via iTunes, "Understanding Computers and the Internet" Podcast has made the jump to the top 100 podcasts and the "New-and-Notable" list on iTunes. And damnit, there's bragging rights in that!
Somehow I can't see this as being a good tool for a "Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming" but for a low(er) level class like this, it's perfect. Just do a search for it on iTunes.
A special collaborative effort between the Special Educational Assistive Technology, McLean County Unit District Number 5 and Infinitec has gone underway to create a podcast for helping children with disabilities. Specifically it's geared toward using technology with students with disabilities in a classroom setting. Entitled the BEST Podcast, short for the Building Educational Success Through Technology podcast, it provides teachers, parents, administrators and students an additional resource for learning about assistive technology. Awesome
Feauting reviews, success stories, and other great resources, this is a podcast with a higher cause. Show notes are available here.
Palegroove Studios, claiming to be the first podcast production studio, has just released their popular Croncast Podcast on DVD. The DVD includes the entire first-year's worth of podcasting, including other things you'd expect on DVDs such as never heard before extras and a 'best of' bit.
The Croncast is a popular suburban husband-wife podcast, featuring Kris and Betsy Smith, though they say they're not your typical husband and wife show. Not really sure what that means, and having never listened to it myself I'm hesitant to pass judgement. But I have to wonder how many people would actually pay $30 for a DVD containing a full year's worth of podcasts. And who has the time to listen to it all? It's 96 hours man!