At this stage, the bottom line for me is this: Blogs are machine searchable, podcasts are not.
Podscope is def very cool – thanks for the link Peter!
However, its not just about machine searchable/readable….. there some access issues to deal with as well…..
Bill’s post got me thinking about accessibility for people with a disability – specifically those with a hearing impairment. (Web accessibility isn’t just about blindness and screenreader software!!!)
The Internet, mobile phones and other text-based technologies have had a massive impact on quality of life for people with hearing disabilities and their ability to communicate with others.
Sooo, whilst we’re busily podcasting all our latest and greatest info, we should probably factor in some thinking on how we can preserve accessibility for all. (And lets face it, with all the Baby Boomers getting older and deafer, and all the kids out there killing their ears with IPODs, this is a growing market! ;P)
Creating transcripts the old-school way aint the answer (sooo time consuming and sucky for the transcriber), but all the reasonably priced voice to text software I’ve seen probly wouldn’t cut it for podcasts with several speakers contributing (which is most of em).
Hmmmmm…….
So I did a bit of searching and found a whole bunch of pay for service tools (http://castingwords.com/, http://www.productiontranscripts.com/, http://www.enablr.com/) but nothing free or do it yourself.
I did find http://www.podtranscript.com/ - which is offering 10 free minutes of transcription – but it looks like that’s only while they are in beta, and they will start charging soon. Anyone else seen anything?
Anyway, have a good week! ;-)
Jo
________________
-- Sean FitzGerald Tel: +61 (0)2 9360 3291 Mob: +61 (0)404 130 342 Skype: seamusy Email: se...@tig.com.au Website: http://seanfitz.wikispaces.com/ Blog: http://elgg.net/seanfitz/weblog/ The most important thing we can do is to hear inside ourselves the sounds of the Earth crying. -- Thich Naht Hahn
Your blog post raises some interesting questions around podcasting,
blogs, etc for education. But I don't think that your bottom line
should be the crux of the issue. Pedagogical issues and having good
examples of educational podcasts are for me more pressing than search
and discovery. Are images searcheable on Flickr? pretty much. There
must be some largish repositories of tagged podcasts out there because
it is seems the perfect medium for tagging/folksonomies, microformats,
etc. As the medium matures slightly i'm sure that the features of RSS
and Atom combined with folksonomies will enable rich searches across
digital or audio sources of information. I'd watch spaces like
Technorati closer for this than the Googles or brute search approaches.
brent.
work: http://blog.cfdl.auckland.ac.nz/brent/
play: http://cowboyangel.co.nz/
have a good one
botts
Bill Kerr wrote:
> hi Brent,
>
> as i said I'm not yet a podcaster, am just raising questions /
> thinking aloud to try to get my head around it
>
> what has surprised me a little is that I haven't so found much
> reflection / critical reflection out there about podcasting and the
> educational issues that it raises
>
> it seems quite different from blogging to me - who is theorising it?
>
> good theory or reflection can be a positive driver towards adoption -
> I'm not so much looking for cut and dried definitive answers, but just
> that teachers are grappling and thinking about the issues beyond the
> technical side
>
> am I missing it? or is it just too early yet?
> - B
> --
> Bill Kerr
> http://billkerr.blogspot.com/
> http://users.tpg.com.au/billkerr/index.htm
> <http://users.tpg.com.au/billkerr/index.htm>
> skype: billkerr2006
>
> On 4/10/06, *brent* <pumic...@gmail.com
a few inter-related questions/comments1. Is the term 'podcasting' reasonable? by this, i am wondering whether we are concerned that the term derives from an Apple product/brand, ipod, and that the phenomenon being referred to is broader than the ipod product? I read that podcasting was the voted the most important new word, etc. and added to major dictionaries, etc. last year (can't remember specifics), so maybe I've missed the boat and perhaps society has accepted the terminology. I guess I'm yet to be convinced, but open.
The editors of the New Oxford American Dictionary declared "podcasting" the 2005 word of the year, defining the term as "a digital recording of a radio broadcast or similar program, made available on the Internet for downloading to a personal audio player".[2]
From the beginning various writers suggested other names or alternative interpretations of the letters "P-O-D." Technology writer Doc Searls had proposed "Personal Option Digital" in September, 2004. [3] The "Personal On Demand" interpretation was in international circulation as early as October 2004The editors of the New Oxford American Dictionary declared "podcasting" the 2005 word of the year,
I'm a beginning teacher from Brisbane (Year 6/7) and am only new to this
list, but am finding out heaps of valuable info - cheers!
I am trying to find some (free + not copyrighted) jingles for my
students to use in a podcasting project I am hoping to run this term.
Can anyone here recommend anywhere online? I'm having trouble finding
anywhere!
Cheers,
Michael Cridland
> -----~--~---
>
CCmixter is pretty amazing too - http://ccmixter.org/
Jo
__________
http://jstuffed.blogspot.com
Thanks,
Kylie
ph: 4978 4016
"its just freaking mp3 player".
http://www.educationau.edu.au/jahia/Jahia/pid/202
have a great day
botts
-- Sean FitzGerald Tel: +61 (0)2 9360 3291 Mob: +61 (0)404 130 342 Skype: seamusy Email: se...@tig.com.au Website: http://seanfitz.wikispaces.com/ Blog: http://elgg.net/seanfitz/weblog/
Hard things are put in our way, not to stop us, but to call out our courage and strength. -- Anonymous
dunno if its been posted previously but here's a link to some casts from
prensky's visit to adelaide
http://www.educationau.edu.au/jahia/Jahia/pid/202