Monday
Feb282005

You Say Bug, I Say Feature

Al Nye thinks Podcasting Needs Advertising. I told Al I disagreed, and here's why. It's not that I don't want and won't listen to 'casts that are commercially supported, and thus presumably have higher production values and less, shall we say, unfocused material. I want that stuff. But I want the amateur stuff as well, and I probably want it more than I want slick, produced efforts. The simplicity of "producing" a quickie, relatively low-tech podcast means an exponential increase in access to and distribution of specialized information. I feel exactly the same way about weblogs. Just getting the material out there is extraordinarily powerful. I don't need to have the Becker-Posner blog, for example, bear a stronger resemblance to something that is commercially supported; in fact, it's much better as far as I'm conerned if it does not. I'd feel the same way about any podcast its authors might choose to put out. Easy, cheap tools = low barrier to entry, huge numbers can do it at some baseline level of quality. This is a Good Thing, as is finding the occasional respite from the advertising that saturates our existence. (I mean, c'mon: building elevators?)

Related: Steve Gillmor on the (sponsor-supported, and I like it, I listen) Chris Pirillo Show, talking about attention.xml and attention as a coin of the realm. I bring it up because I sense at least a couple of digital divides in this context: 1) those can afford not to share their attention metadata vs. those who can't, and 2) the time and/or money strapped "amateurs" vs. the "professionals."

Also related, via Genie Tyburski, RSS, Not Just Text Anymore: "[A] new practice, called appcasting, enables the RSS-like distribution of applications. 'RSS enclosures would make it really easy for teachers to distribute files to their students. A teacher could post lecture notes, multimedia content, or any other kind of electronic document.'" My point: Few-to-Few is every bit as valuable as Many-to-Many.

Monday
Feb282005

Today's New Blawgs

Evan Brown writes InternetCases.Com and does a podcast: "This week's podcast discusses the recent case of Dix v. ICT Group, discussed on this site, in which the forum selection clause in AOL's terms of service was held unenforceable." Love the podcasting lawyers. More on that in a separate post in a bit. Also, I'm far from alone in being excited about more coverage of law and the Internet.

Law professor Rick Duncan co-writes the Red State Lawblog, and has no trouble discerning who makes the rules in blogland.

Lawrence Taylor (no; yes) writes the DUI Blog, and predicts the "New Prohibition" is gaining momentum but will not prevail. Very thought provoking stuff.

Sunday
Feb272005

More Of The OC For Sale

Another iSold It update: no sign yet of Marissa auctioning her birth control of choice, now that she's changed teams for awhile (after that last episode I have to ask: are they hinting at a Julie/Kirsten liason?? it is Fox after all). But I do have a slick flat panel display on the block (made redundant and unnecessary by the Macs that have moved in and bred), and this thing looks like it could find a good home with a podcaster. Sweeter still: one of my neighbors is dishing out ice cream.

Sunday
Feb272005

Ten-Hut

Steve Gillmor explains attention.xml on the Chris Pirillo Show. Attention-grabbing discussion.

Friday
Feb252005

Thought Of The Day