SynonymsBot
Synonyms for audioblogging or Related words with audioblogging
thevibe
biratchowk
estrepublicain
kmdo
cyberstudio
dittotv
ispsystem
inbiz
squeakland
orientada
dwfx
eurominuty
nevedomsky
andbookmark
engnwcleaghist
mcneven
myriador
elorgnewwave
idiomag
gopalswami
innologica
efourum
dubstepforum
acbenzyl
wimbiz
essentiallysubtypes
nswrugby
nythespirit
videocosmos
amrtv
raymears
potomacstages
erbuilc
quetzatl
negativereference
corrientelatina
thelistchat
niatdva
macjournal
spielend
wiezak
millyant
collsch
oddpost
gototraining
cefem
gaedertz
nawl
vdklaaale
bostonbookfest
Examples of "audioblogging"
On the first, paid day of Bloggercon I, four panels discussed the interaction of blogging with journalism, education, marketing, and presidential politics. The second day's panels included various technical and infrastructure issues such as RSS, news aggregators, and what was then called "
audioblogging
". The first BloggerCon brought together
audioblogging
pioneers with developers, whose collective efforts led to the phenomenon that spread six months later under the name podcasting.
October 2003, Winer and friends organized the first Bloggercon weblogger conference at Berkman Center. CDs of Lydon's interviews were distributed as an example of the high-quality MP3 content enclosures could deliver; Bob Doyle demonstrated the portable studio he helped Lydon develop; Harold Gilchrist presented a history of
audioblogging
, including Curry's early role, and Kevin Marks demonstrated a script to download RSS enclosures and pass them to iTunes for transfer to an iPod. Curry and Marks discussed collaborating.
Podcasting, first known as "
audioblogging
", has its roots dating back to the 1980s. With the advent of broadband internet and portable digital audio playback devices such as the iPod, podcasting began to catch hold in late 2004. Today there are more than 115,000 English-language podcasts available on the internet, and dozens of websites available for distribution at little or no cost to the producer or listener.
In October 2000, the concept of using enclosures in RSS feeds was proposed in a draft by Tristan Louis, The idea was implemented (in a somewhat different form) by Dave Winer, a software developer and an author of the RSS format. Winer had received other customer requests for "
audioblogging
" features and had discussed the enclosure concept (also in October 2000), with Adam Curry, a user of Userland's Manila and Radio blogging and RSS aggregator software.
Winer has been given "credit for the invention of the podcasting model." Having received user requests for
audioblogging
features since October 2000, especially from Adam Curry, Winer decided to include new functionality in RSS 0.92 by defining a new element called "enclosure," which would pass the address of a media file to the RSS aggregator. He demonstrated the RSS enclosure feature on January 11, 2001 by enclosing a Grateful Dead song in his "Scripting News" weblog.
For its first two years, the enclosure element had relatively few users and many developers simply avoided using it. Winer's company incorporated both RSS-enclosure and feed-aggregator features in its weblogging product, Radio Userland, the program favored by Curry, audioblogger Harold Gilchrist and others. Since Radio Userland had a built-in aggregator, it provided both the "send" and "receive" components of what was then called "
audioblogging
". All that was needed for "podcasting" was a way to automatically move audio files from Radio Userland's download folder to an audio player (either software or hardware) -- along with enough compelling audio to make such automation worth the trouble.
Winer's weblogging product, Radio Userland, the program favored by Curry, had a built-in aggregator and thus provided both the "send" and "receive" components of what was then called
audioblogging
. In July 2003 Winer challenged other aggregator developers to provide support for enclosures. In October 2003, Kevin Marks demonstrated a script to download RSS enclosures and pass them to iTunes for transfer to an iPod. Curry then offered an RSS-to-iPod script that moved MP3 files from Radio UserLand to iTunes. The term "podcasting" was suggested by Ben Hammersley in February 2004.