‘Vlogger’ Cyber-Culls The News

August 20th, 2005

It seems like a few minutes ago, you had to be a huge multi-national corporation to afford to broadcast audio and video. But vlogging is suddenly putting that power in the hands of, well, just about anyone who wants it. Now, vloggers around the world are signing up as Rocketboom.com correspondants. Zadi Diaz was a Rocketboom viewer, and is now a correspondent in Los Angeles. Diaz thinks younger people are more comfortable in front of a camera – even without training. “I think that the camera isn’t as intrusive to our generation,” Diaz says. “We kind of see cameras all over the place.” For vloggers, it’s all happening faster than they can click

‘Vlogger’ Cyber-Culls The News (CBS News)

Poetic, Political & Personal

August 15th, 2005

Known as video blogs, the short clips feature subjects ranging from the personal to the political: a dad filming himself making pesto and talking to his kids, who now live in Germany after he and his wife separated; a protest over the G-8 summit; the performance of a band at San Francisco Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi’s victory party. “I have no credential as a major reporter, no organization that gives me validity, but the image itself gives me authenticity,” Wolf said. The viewer “can see what happened. You can’t argue with what happened.”

Poetic, Political & Personal (San Francisco Chronicle)

The Paradox of Podcasting

August 11th, 2005

Podcasting has done what no new technology that I’m aware of has ever accomplished: It’s gone mainstream and underground at the same time. I don’t know any other word to use besides “mainstream” when I hear from the White House that President Bush’s radio addresses will be offered via podcast. And I have no other word at my fingertips than “underground” when I read a recent Los Angeles Times opinion piece that suggests that podcasting is the biggest tech craze that most of us have never heard of.

The Paradox of Podcasting (Washington Post)

Hot, steamy and now downloadable

August 11th, 2005

Also known as “podnography,” sexcasts are audio clips that anyone can record by using a computer… Along with shows on music and politics, you can now hear porn reviews, kinky storytelling sessions and interviews with porn writers… A recent Google search for the phrase “adult podcast” showed 6,850 results. Compare that to the category “rock podcast,” which had only 3,890. In one sexcast — available at www.podcastdirectory.com — a San Francisco man describes a lurid rendezvous with a “gorgeous” woman he meets on Craigslist.

Hot, steamy and now downloadable (San Francisco Chronicle)

VCs Invest in Podcasting

August 11th, 2005

Two podcasting startups have won venture capital funding, a sign that both the promise and the hype is building for a grassroots broadcasting phenomenon that started just about a year ago. Podshow, led by former MTV host Adam Curry, who helped invent podcasting in July 2004, received $8.85 million in funding from Kleiner Perkins and Sequoia Capital, Private Equity Week reported Wednesday… The second company to announce funding Wednesday was San Francisco-based Odeo, led by repeat entrepreneur Evan Williams, who created the Blogger service which is now owned by Google. Charles River Ventures led the round; the sum was not disclosed. The round also included Amicus Ventures, and individuals including Mitch Kapor, Joe Kraus, Tim O’Reilly, Ron Conway, and HotorNot’s James Hong.

VCs Invest in Podcasting (Red Herring)

Citizens do media for themselves

August 10th, 2005

Since its inception in March 2005, not-for-profit Ourmedia has attracted more than 31,000 international members, and now plays host to 22,000 separate pieces of media, from travelogs to tastes of family life. More than half is video, with video blogs - or vlogs - proving highly popular. Some of it is of “breathtakingly creative”, says JD [Lasica, co-founder of Ourmedia.org].

Citizens do media for themselves (BBC News)

Podcasting: the beginning of the end for guidebooks?

August 7th, 2005

Packing list for your next city break: clothes, cards, passport, camera… guidebook? No, leave it at home. Just remember your MP3 player — and make sure you’ve loaded the latest podcasts, of course… Because podcasting is shaping up to be the next big travel trend… While they could never be as comprehensive as a guidebook, [podcasts] a lot lighter, easier to use, more personal — and they don’t cost anything. You can wander the streets with your earphones in, and when you want some local knowledge on, say, choosing a restaurant, or interpreting the public sculptures, you scroll to the relevant podcast, just like choosing a song on your MP3, and listen in.

Podcasting: the beginning of the end for guidebooks? (The London Times)

A New Internet Diary Frontier: Vlogging

August 6th, 2005

As a blogger on the Internet, it’s possible to post entries for all the world to read about the biggest, or littlest, happenings in one’s life. Now video bloggers, or “vloggers,” are adding a twist to the genre, documenting their lives in mini-movies. Laura Sydell reports on the growing community of people who are turning their lives into grassroots reality TV. Though it has been possible to put video on the Web for a long time, widespread adoption of broadband access has made it easier for amateurs to do. In addition, the advent of RSS feeds allows users to automatically receive updates from vlogs they like.

A New Internet Diary Frontier: Vlogging (National Public Radio)

What Is Vlogging (and How to Get Started)

July 27th, 2005

Vlogging is short for video blogging, also known as vodcasting. When Apple enabled iTunes to subscribe to Podcasts, they opened the door to “syndicated” feeds. Almost all blogs provide syndicated feeds–through RSS, Atom, and the like–and some feeds provide “enclosures.” It is within the enclosures that the audio portion of any given podcast is provided. But enclosures aren’t limited to audio. They can contain video, too. Vlogging is the practice of attaching video to RSS and Atom enclosures.

What Is Vlogging and How to Get Started (O’Reilly Digital Media)

Watch Me Do This and That Online

July 25th, 2005

After blogging came photo blogging and then, suddenly last year, video blogging. Video bloggers, also known as vloggers, are people who regularly post videos on the Internet, creating primitive shows for anyone who cares to watch. Some vlogs are cooking shows, some are minidocumentaries, some are mock news programs and some are almost art films… Right now it seems that video bloggers can’t agree what vlogs are exactly, and some of them want to keep it that way. “What’s the rush to define it now?” Mr. Verdi asks in his video manifesto.

Watch Me Do This and That Online (New York Times)