A Flurry of Podcasts
Hey all,
Labels: new clients, news, Podcasting
Thoughts on Business, Podcasting, Digital Content, and More.
Hey all,
Labels: new clients, news, Podcasting
I got an interesting email from a friend, which has echoed a situation that many are starting to share - and we need to be aware of it as a media creation community.
Labels: forums, news, opinion, Podcasting
Admittedly, as a content creator for the iPod and iPhone I have skins in the game, but this is possibly Apple, yet again, setting the pace.
Labels: news, opinion, Podcasting
Since there are only song by EMI in iTunes Plus, I haven't happened to hit a song that is iTunes Plus in the last few weeks when I've been shopping around.
Here is is...
Labels: news, opinion, Podcasting
Some quick hits...
This is huge news - the first instance of DRM (Digital Rights Management) being used to de-activate people's content on their computers.
Hello,
As a valued Google user, we're contacting you with some important information about the videos you've purchased or rented from Google Video. In an effort to improve all Google services, we will no longer offer the ability to buy or rent videos for download from Google Video, ending the DTO/DTR (download-to-own/rent) program. This change will be effective August 15, 2007.
To fully account for the video purchases you made before July 18, 2007, we are providing you with a Google Checkout bonus for $5.00. Your bonus expires in 60 days, and you can use it at the stores listed here: http://www.google.com/checkout/signupwelcome.html. The minimum purchase amount must be equal to or greater than your bonus amount, before shipping and tax.
After August 15, 2007, you will no longer be able to view your purchased or rented videos.
If you have further questions or requests, please do not hesitate to contact us. Thank you for your continued support.
Sincerely,
The Google Video Team
Google Inc.
1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
Mountain View, CA 94043
Interesting little bit I found in Xology today - about how men and women use the internet differently and some food for thought on your Saturday (I always try to keep it light on the weekends).
This article is great - it relates to me my monthly or weekly occurance - the anorexic writing of websites.
We just sent this release today, and thought I would share it with you all:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (July 10, 2007):
HOW CAN A PODCAST HELP SAVE THE WORLD?

3,200 pounds of CO2 emissions at a time. That’s the estimated carbon footprint of reaching just 2,000 people in one place, and that’s if no one has flown to the meeting or conference.
Podcasting almost completely eliminates this imprint, by making content accessible in a high-quality form, online, anytime, and on the go. And since podcasting regularly reaches ten to one-hundred times the original audience, your message in front of 200 can reach 2,000... 20,000... or more.
To help reinforce this environmental commitment, the Royal Oak - based interactive agency Portage Media Solutions is now purchasing 250 pounds of carbon offsets for every person who contacts them about professional podcasting for their business or organization.
Beyond being a green enhancement to your corporate communications or marketing efforts, podcasting can save up to 98% on your media distribution costs vs. teleconferences and direct mailing.
To learn more about carbon offsets, visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_offset
To learn more about podcasting, visit http://www.portagemedia.com/what-is-a-podcast.pdf or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcast
To learn more about Portage Media Solutions, visit http://www.portagemedia.com
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I was rumaging about this weekend, and realizing how much one needs to embrace cold calling. This of course will not replace my networking, my meetings - however, the good 'ol cold call is an effective way to drum up new business. Problem is, that although there are sales skills within me, my "mirror" view always seems to be that of entrepreneur or visionary - not salesperson (more on that in my "Business Lessons" series very soon).
Labels: business, news, Podcasting
**Warning - a mini-rant is enclosed in this post**
**Begin Mini-Rant**
I had talked to Verizon about offers in competition - but they started to slam Apple engineering. Completely wrong answer to an Apple person who knows their engineering skills - even more hilarious when you know the small fact I flat out stated the reason I want an iPhone is the seamless integration with my mac and can Verizon match it.
That, and cellphone sales reps crawl my skin. I've never been told the truth by them, and always do all the research myself.
**End Mini-Rant**
For anyone dealing in, with or near technology, email is a saviour and a pariah.
Only doing email twice a day will make you far more productive for the rest of the day. The problem with email is that getting an email triggers that same endorphin hit I mentioned above -- the one that a mouse gets when he bonks on the button in the cage and gets a food pellet.
Responding to an email triggers that same hit. The pleasure chemical hits your neocortex and you go "ahhh" inside and feel like you've done something.
So you sit and work with your mail client open and you interrupt your work every time an email comes in and you answer it and you send another email and you feel great in the moment. But what you're really doing is fracturing your time, interrupting your flow, and killing your ability to focus on anything long enough to get real high-quality work done.
This one is far easier to say than do. And it won't be feasible during projects where lots of updates during the day really are important -- raising money, for example, or closing a big deal.
ARS TECHNICA and Buzz Out Loud is reporting about the story of a man, Sam Peterson, who was surfing the net on an open wifi network outside a cafe - without buying anything.
Great piece of information wound up in my inbox today from Mediapost (free login required) - some key snippets...
But the real problem is not with content, as marketing clips should (and must) be every bit as creative as popular clips on YouTube; instead, it lies in the delivery of this content. Only a handful are approaching video with the same care as one would any other medium.
Webcasts can be sent to an email list or delivered on-demand from a link on the company home page. Podcasts can be pushed through an RSS feed or available for download off a brand's site. Either way, a company needs to link itself directly with the content and keep viewers coming back for more. Otherwise, there's a good chance that an entertaining clip on YouTube will do more to promote YouTube than it will to sell your product.
Labels: business, news, Podcasting
A friend sent me this very interesting article about how people use technology, breaking them into four groups: Ominivore, Connector, Productivity Enhancer, and Lackluster Veteran.
IHT is covering this interesting story -
EBay was hired to build the exchange last year by a group of large marketers, including Hewlett-Packard, Home Depot and Intel. The group, which had pledged $50 million to test the project, has said that it thought placing ads in many types of media could be done more efficiently using an Internet auction rather than human negotiation.
Ad executives not involved with the eBay project expressed similar concerns.
"By going to this online bidding system that eBay was sharing with us, we'd be taking a step backwards," said John Muszynski, chief executive of Starcom USA, an agency in the Publicis Groupe that buys ads.
"Years ago, you basically bought for the tonnage, you bought slots and you bought for the price," he said. "We have now integrated the buying process into the marketing process. We're doing product integrations. We're doing significant added-value. We're doing promotions."
We're proud to announce the launch of the new website for Iterotext, a multilingual document translation company in Troy, Michigan.
So I heard a very interesting item from Leo Laporte's TWiT Network and Buzz Out Loud - that the RIAA is going to increase the rate per listener for streaming radio by as much as three fold.
Another hit for downtown Detroit - Comerica moving it's corporate HQ.
Interesting piece I heard this morning on Morning Edition - about podcasting, and who makes money doing podcasting.
Labels: business, news, Podcasting
I've been watching this for awhile, and now it's officially released: