Latest News
MultiTrack App Turns Your iPhone Into 16-Track Digital Recorder
Dec 31st, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, Podcasting SoftwareHarmonicdoc has released MultiTrack 1.1 (App Store link), a $14.99 application that turns your iPhone into a 16-track digital audio recorder.
Features:
- Stereo Recording – up to 16 stereo or mono tracks
- Fader, pan, mute and solo for each track
- Metronome – never miss that beat again
- Time Signatures – various musical time signatures
- Ruler – shows where you are in the song
- Snap – snaps the timebar to ruler lines
- Punch in/out – automatically starts and stops recording
- Auto Input – allows monitoring the track underneath until punch points
- Select left, right, or both channels of a stereo input for recording
- Speaker/receiver output selection switch (for iPhone)
- Input and Output faders
- 24 bit internal pathways
- Multi-touch pinch/zoom support
- VU meters for each track
- Extremely low latency recording
- Selectable input monitoring
- Recording perfectly synced to other tracks
- Crossfading uses cubic interpolation
- Animated popup controls
Paired with a decent external microphone, this could be a powerful portable studio.
If you’ve used Harmonicdog MultiTrack, leave a comment with your thoughts!
Corporate Social Media Use Up 14% In 2009
Dec 30th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, Corporate Podcasts, General, Podcasting Services, Podcasting StatisticsCorporate social media use grew 14% in 2009, according to The Center for Marketing Research at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.
Their latest study compares adoption of social media over three years (2007, 2008 and 2009) by the Inc. 500.
Highlights of the report:
- Social networking continues to lead the way. The technology that continues to be the most familiar to the Inc. 500 is social networking with 75% of respondents in 2009 claiming to be “very familiar with it” (compared to 57% in 2008).
- Twitter has achieved amazing “share of mind” with sixty-two percent of executives reported being familiar with the new microblogging and social networking platform.
- The adoption curves for different social media technologies are not all the same. While social networking and blogging have enjoyed growth in actual adoption, the use of message boards, online video, wikis and podcasting has leveled off or declined. The addition of Twitter (considered by respondents to be both a microblogging site and a social networking site) in the latest study shows that an amazing 52% of the Inc. 500 companies are already using this tool for their business.
- Social media matters and is here to stay. Forty-three percent of the 2009 Inc. 500 reported social media was “very important” to their business/marketing strategy.
- 91% of the Inc. 500 is using at least one social media tool in 2009 (up from 77% in 2008).
- The Inc. 500 companies are also seeking to protect themselves legally, with 36% having implemented a formal policy concerning blogging by their employees.
The research demonstrates that, at least among fast-growing corporations, new media and social media are being rapidly adopted, but attention is turning to the platforms that have the widest adoption.
Image: Matt Hamm
Podcasting – One Of The Decade’s Most Important Radio Trends
Dec 30th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, PodcastingRadio industry news blog Radio Survivor is calling podcasting one of the most important radio trends of the last ten years:
It’s fair to say that the emergence of podcasting revitalized online radio, and even audio programs in general
In the same way that TiVo and PVRs breathed new life into television, podcasting suddenly gave listeners the ability to mold their intake of audio programming to their own schedule. At the same time, RSS podcasts feeds made it much easier to index podcasts and create easily searchable online directories organized by genre and keyword.
It’s that innovation which stimulated an onslaught of podcast production.
While Radio Survivor positions podcasting as a major radio trend, for at least some of us, podcasts have pushed radio to the sidelines.
Thanks to podcasting, it’s hard to stomach the commercials and lowest-common denominator programming that most radio stations pump out these days.
What do you think? Is podcasting an important trend in radio – or is it making radio irrelevant?
iPods Don’t Make You Deaf, Rules Federal Judge
Dec 30th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: iPods & Portable Media PlayersThe Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has rejected claims that iPods pose an unreasonable risk of noise-induced hearing loss.
According to a Reuters report:
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco affirmed a 2008 district court ruling that the plaintiffs failed to show that use of the iPod poses an unreasonable risk of noise-induced hearing loss.
“The plaintiffs do not allege the iPods failed to do anything they were designed to do nor do they allege that they, or any others, have suffered or are substantially certain to suffer inevitable hearing loss or other injury from iPod use,” Senior Judge David Thompson wrote.”At most, the plaintiffs plead a potential risk of hearing loss not to themselves, but to other unidentified iPod users,” he wrote.
While the court rejected the claim that iPods make you deaf, they aren’t saying that iPods don’t post a risk – just that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that they do pose a risk.
Why The iTablet Won’t Become “Another Footnote In The Sad, Miserable History Of Tablet Computing”
Dec 29th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Apple iPad, General, Internet TV, iPods & Portable Media Players, Streaming VideoInfoworld has published an article arguing that Apple’s rumored iPad will fail big time.
According to Infoworld, “to believe that Apple can somehow succeed where all others have failed is to ignore some fundamental realities of tablet computing.”
Infoworld sums up the prospects for the rumored iTablet, saying “Unless Apple pulls something truly revolutionary out of its hat, the iTablet will become yet another footnote in the sad, miserable history of tablet computing.”
That’s a pretty strong statement, especially considering the fact that Apple’s been on a roll with the “truly revolutionary” products lately.
Infoworld’s offers three reasons for thinking that an Apple iPad will be a failure. Here’s why they don’t matter:
Read more »
There’s Porn On Roku. Meh.
Dec 28th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Digital Video Recorder, General, Internet TV, Streaming Video, VideoNewTeeVee reports that there’s now porn on the Roku Internet video system:
A new channel popped up on Roku yesterday called EroticVision.TV that makes adult content available on the broadband set-top box for the first time. But the new “adult entertainment” channel hasn’t actually been approved by Roku, and it operates in a kind of limbo where the app is publicly available but not publicly listed.
For the time being, Roku seems content to let EVTV and other adult content sites operate private channels, so long as they’re not broadcasting child porn or other illegal content.
If having a “back door” to porn leads to more set-top sales, Roku can’t exactly complain.
Ever since adult videos were a driver for the adoption of VCRs, people have made the assumption that adult content would drive adoption of other technologies. Five years ago, for example, Adam Curry was predicting a podcast porn explosion that would drive adoption of podcasting.
While there are plenty of adult podcasts, adult content hasn’t done much to drive podcast adoption, or Twitter adoption, or adoption of any new media/social media technology in recent years.
Maybe it’s because people are tired of dealing with porn spammers on social media sites. Maybe it’s because adult content is already ubiquitous on the Internet.
Whatever the reason, we don’t need a “back door” to porn. We need Internet media devices that are easy to use, solve real problems and aren’t massively handicapped by outmoded media business models.
Podcasting Is The New Punk
Dec 28th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, Citizen MediaBarney Jameson at DV247 thinks that podcasting is the new punk:
The sad truth is that these days if someone snatched my iPhone from my fingers to see what I was listening to they would be less likely to find a demo by a new breaking band than an episode of Movies You Should See. Or Super Happy Fun Time. Or Here Goes Nothing. Or Answer Me This.
I like to think that part of the reason is my ingrained love of low-fi production values and DIY spirit. Anyone can record a podcast, it takes very little equipment and even less expertise.
Far more important than the money spent on setting up is the quality of what the podcaster has to say. It’s the message that matters, not the sheen put over it. Crucially, podcasters are also highly unlikely to make any money out of their efforts, meaning they broadcast simply to be heard. If that’s not punk then I don’t know what is.
Podcasting is the new punk.
It’s the new ‘zines, too.
What makes podcasting exciting is not that CNN and ABC and NPR have podcasts – but that you can have one, I can have one – anyone can have one.
For a long time, many tech analysts were distracted by the question of whether or not podcasts could make money. Now that this has been demonstrated over and over, maybe more will reconsider the aspect of podcasting that’s really interesting – that podcasting is the new punk.
Punk Bloke: Zoria
Got A New iPod Or iPhone? Here’s How To Get Started With Podcasts!
Dec 26th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, Video PodcastsGet a new iPod or iPhone for Christmas?
If so, you’ll want to start checking out the world of audio and video podcasts.
Podcasting offers you a range of audio and video shows that you can listen to online or download and listen to whenever you like on your iPod (or other portable media player). And, because producing and distributing podcasts is relatively inexpensive, you’ll find tens of thousands of podcasts on just about any subject. This includes mainstream podcast from broadcasters like NPR, CNN and ABC, and indie podcasts of all sorts.
Podcasts are free (with few exceptions), Podcasts are convenient and podcasts put you in control of what you hear.
Here’s how to get started with podcasts using iTunes 9:
First, click on the iTunes Store icon.
Read more »
PowerPress WordPress Podcast Plugin Updated
Dec 24th, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: Audio Podcasting, Podcasting SoftwareBlubrry has announced an update to its free PowerPress WordPress podcast plugin.
This latest version has been updated for compatibility with WordPress 2.9 and has these new features:
- Support for Plugin ‘Podcasting’ – PowerPress now includes support for episodes created in Podcasting.
- Find and Replace for Episode URLs – Blubrry PowerPress now includes a tool found under the PowerPress menu “Tools” page titled “Find and Replace Episode URLs.” This lets you quickly find and replace portions of your episode media URLs. The feature for users moving their media hosting to a new web site or service.
PowerPress 1.0.4 also now includes an import plugin Podcasting settings option found under the Tools page. This option will import the key settings from plugin Podcasting to PowerPress.
Apple Tablet Coming In January – But Can It Top This?
Dec 23rd, 2009 | By James Lewin | Category: General, iPods & Portable Media PlayersSilicon Valley Insider is reporting that Apple plans to demo the rumored Apple iPad in January:
Apple is preparing to show off a new, larger mobile device with a higher resolution display in January — probably a version of the Apple tablet we’ve been hearing about for months — according to a plugged-in source in the mobile industry.
Apple has been telling some app makers to prepare apps for a demo next month, according to this source.
“They’ve told select developers that as long as they build their apps to support full screen resolution — rather than a fixed 320×480 — their apps should run just fine,” our source says.
Rumors about the Apple Tablet have been flying around so long that it’s going to be hard for Apple to wow people, especially since other companies have demonstrated similar concepts.
Here are a few examples:
Sports Illustrated’s Tablet Demo
Time put together this concept video as a concept of what Sports Illustrated could be like on a future tablet computer.
This is just a concept, but it’s clearly influenced by the iPhone’s industrial design and user interface design, and offers a vivid picture of why people are excited about the idea of an Apple Tablet.
Read more »