Podcasting = Verbal Incontinence
Sorry folks, PodCasting = Verbal Incontinence. I'm just not feeling it. You can't speak as fast as I read. I don't like it when you read your PowerPoints to me, and I REALLY don't like it when you ramble on. My commute isn't nearly long enough to slog through your PodCasts to find a nugget of goodness. If you blog, I can ignore it, or read it in any order. I can skip forward by, gasp, moving my eyes.
PodCasting, clever, yes. Interesting, yes. A new kind of media? Maybe. You could just post the MP3s and I'll download them whenever. Useful? Not to me.
P.S. After all this nonsense around RSS taking up too much bandwidth, you all have the stones to suggest we following links to 40meg MP3s?
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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Sorry, that's not what I meant. I always listent to .NET Rocks in the car. I meant that most of the other podcasts I have tried to listen to were pretty...ummm...dull. I would love to hear about some interesting ones. The only one that even entered my memory was one where Adam Curry goes on a hash run on his way home from Amsterdam. For some reason, I just fail to derive any entertainment value. Maybe I'm weird.
If everybody starts podcasting whenever they feel like or if the shows come up too often, it tends to get dull, a true "verborrhea".
I only listen to shows where I'm not looking for specific or important information. If important information is found, great, but I don't count on that. It is basically (at least it should be) entertaining background noise.
On the other hand, podcasting (and later DV-casting or whatever name they give to the video version) is just a natural extension to simplified content publishing. Think how nespapers, radio shows, and tv channels coexist. They are published differently so they have different ways to lay out the information or entertainment. The same will be happening to podcasting. Don't just expect somebody to start recording all their random thoughts and publishing for download, that would be boring and embarassing.
Time will show the great podcasters, just like we know some great bloggers. I also listen to .Net Rocks and it is in some ways enduring the pioneer's path through this new field, especially for tech-oriented content.
Is waking up with new MP3s on your iPod really that groundbreaking?
Make a personalized voice-activated audio/video feed that streams down to a monitor in my bathroom so I can catch up on whatever I am interested in while I shave and maybe I'll listen.
Podcasting = overhyped File | Send To iPod
Lawrence Pina
I even mentioned the concept of having your aggregator downloading the audio file for you. This is just a crazy idea to me, and so easy to do, yet everyone is raving about it. I just don't see it. I think only certain shows like .NET rocks would ever make me do this.
http://www.podstar.com
I know I'm missing out on a lot, but until podcasts can be broken up, searchable, and as easily categorized as plain text can be then I'll second Scott and say "Next!"
I think as it evolves though people will build better tools to transcribe the content automatically, build indexes and search terms, and make for a way where you can skip ahead to relevant information. Right now it's just too much of a pain to bother with if you're using it for important information. Filler for your commute is one thing, using it to learn something is another.
After looking at it more and more I still don't get it. And I'm not even a luddite :O) As it stands podcasts seem like a waste of time to me. Who knows, maybe that will change someday in the future but I'll stick to listening to music on my iPod thanks.
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After an initial euphoria, thinking I would get .NET Rocks for every day of the week, I found myself bored silly. My commute _is_ long enough, but my tolerance for boredom is not. I can have more fun listening to my engine idle.