Podcasting from Gnomedex
James Prudente, the developer of MixCast Live and BigFeeder.com, has made available his first podcast of several from the Gnomedex 5.0 conference that begins today in Seattle and runs through the 25th.
James Prudente, the developer of MixCast Live and BigFeeder.com, has made available his first podcast of several from the Gnomedex 5.0 conference that begins today in Seattle and runs through the 25th.
Things are progressing nicely with MixCast Live and its associated podcast hosting service, BigFeeder.com. James recently produced a demo that illustrates how the program and the service work together. Click HERE to view it.
This story from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution sports page recounts the story of the Atlanta Braves' father-son broadcasting team of Chip and Skip Carey. It's worth a read (and even enduring the requirement to register for free at the site) if you have any interest in the Atlanta Braves, in baseball or in the relationship between fathers and sons.
NPR's Morning Edition had a nice, heart-warming segment this morning featuring a father and son, John Heins and his son David, discussing their thoughts about being fathers that I think is well worth your time to listen to. You can find it at this link. The audio should be up later today or tomorrow, if it isn't yet available when you check the link.
BigFeeder.com is James Prudente's hosting site that works in conjunction with MixCast Live, his podcast creation tool that makes creating podcasts and uploading them to the hosting site simple and easy. I'm sure I'll be saying more about this in coming days, but check it out. If you click on the M3U link beside any of the podcasts you see listed there, it will create a play list that will begin playing in the program you currently have configured to play *.mp3 files. In other words, one click and you can listen to a podcast. Experiment with it a bit; I think you'll like it.
In this entry, Scoble reports that Microsoft has now made hundreds of RSS feeds for Microsoft's knowledge base available. Here's the link to them. His link was first published on 5/26/05, but I'm just now getting caught up on his blog.
He says:
This is really huge. Now someone who is really passionate about one of our products and wants to keep up to date on all the problems and fixes for that product, can subscribe and instantly be warned when a new knowledge base article comes out.
This post is an experiment with a new blogging tool called w.bloggar. One reason I am attracted to it is that it works with FeedDemon in a way that permits me to post items I read in FeedDemon more or less directly to my blog, and up until now I haven't been able to do that. Acquiring this ability, enables me to point to other bloggers' posts more easily, which is something that I'd very much like to do. Also it may simplify the process of blogging something and therefore increase the likelihood that I'll be able to post more frequently.
Hey Google, Map This!
Inventive web developers are taking Google's online map service to a new level, layering in house sales and apartment rentals, real-time traffic stats and Flickr photo tags. By Daniel Terdiman.
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