Here I am, on a lovely and sunny Sunday morning about to commit to another day of good old digging in my back yard. We have a steep section, and I just seem to end up doing a lot of digging in it. Mainly to terrace it off and make flat spaces for the day I organise a TALO swapmeet over at my place.
Anyway, yesterday I had the bright idea to break out the old MP3 player and load it up with some audio. I’m not a big fan of music, though I do have a huge collection of very nice tunes from CCMixter, but I crave insights, ideas, debates and stuff. So I had a quick hunt for some audio, and all I found from the news reader was this recording from Australia’s Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)’s Radio National Law Report looking at Creative Commons (silly buggers took the audio recording away!!) But apart from that, I found very little.
I can’t remember who (Brian, D’Arcy, Alan) ah! it was Alan who is also noticing the drop in podcasting, but reckons audio publishing is still going strong. Just to be clear, I’m referring to education stuff – sorry to be a bore..
In 2005 when I was super keen on audio recordings from conferences and the like, it seemed that everyone was putting stuff up. At the time podcasting was the flavour flave, but that’s not the way I found my listening. At the time, and still to this day, my internet access was always limited by data caps, and every month I seem to go over that cap. At NZ$49 per month I can’t really afford to upgrade, and nor can I afford to subscribe to podcast feeds that will load me up with stuff without me being able to say yay or nay to it before hand. So, I’ve always simply reviewed the synopsis of the pending audio recording before deciding whether to load it up.
Back in 2005 is when I discovered the mighty Stephen Downes and his near over whelming amount of audio recorded presentations. I guess I could have another listen to those again… they certainly are worth reviewing. It was through Stephen’s recordings that I found myself in all this edublogging anarchy. His ideas, ethics, and principles struck a cord with me and gave me the voice I was looking for. At the time I was hungry for more audio, and did a lot of listening of many others during the long commutes to work I used to do. I still remember getting totally freaked out in the van as a I drove home one wet and misty night, listening to eLearning Queen’s recording of her thoughts about Boliva’s El Luison. I still get shivers..
But now I don’t commute so much, and don’t really have so much of that valuable time for listening, contemplating, reflecting etc. Today though, I have a very large hole to dig, and it would be a perfect time to fill my ears with the ideas of SD or anyone else of similar presentation / ideas / ethics / political caliber (in other words, worth listening to). So I have the dusty old MP3 player plugged in, I’m trawling the news reader, but its largely empty of audio! I actually have to go out and search for it! That’s a big change from 2005. Before, if people weren’t publishing their own audio, then they were pointing to it. Now, it seems very few people that I have in my reader (some 300 or so) are doing either.. is my experience common with others? Have we all lost our time for listening? Lordy knows I still pump out a lot of media, and audio is still right up there, most recently the 10 minute lecture series about online learning communities, but I can see that they have had only a few downloads… perhaps we are all slowin down (or is that speeding up) to a point where audio is just not high on the agenda..
I’m sure its just me.. I’m sure its just a reflection of how long its been since I updated my subscriptions and that all the tired and used up old edubloggers I’ve been reading for the past 3 years are starting to lose their energy. Or its because I haven’t defended my listening time from the encroaching administrivia that I have stopped watching out for it.. either way, this morning, its a searching I will go…
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December 23, 2007 at 11:18 am
Alan
Hope the hole is nicely filled, if not the ear drums.
There’s lots of content around, as noted- my original observation is really that the amount of “podcasting” in the original sense- subscribing to one source via RSS and having new content automatically downloaded to a computer and/or a mp3 must be really tiny small. It was a brilliantly conceived piecing together when it launched, but somewhat flawed in assuming one might want all the content a source produces.
Unless it is a class assignment or some true dedication to a show, I’m hard pressed to know why one would subscribe.
Of course more people use “podcast” in the more general sense of just posting audio. And since 2003, we have many more sources of media grabbing our attention (video, social networking sites…)
Some of the problem I think is what one can do with this form of media beyond listen to it- one cannot reference internal portions of the content, one cannot easily reply when there is disagreement. Its one big fat chunk.
That said I was listening to a few audio shows today- about the nly time I di is on long runs. This one was an ETS talk from Penn State University (http://podcasts.psu.edu/etstalk_35) and they spoke of many of their initiatives where students are blogging, podcasting… ironically at the end, when Cole was asking them about what podcasts they listen to, all said something similar, “not much.”
Its out there, just not organized? Or it is buried in some big hole in the hillside….
December 23, 2007 at 11:46 am
leighblackall
Hey Alan! Yes, you are right. I got lazy searching (30 seconds of it found me only pay for audio 😦 and ended up downing Downes that I had not heard yet. In his recent talk on Collaboration he referred to a Youtube movie that he thought out did any TV he had seen. So I downed tools and ran inside to load it up. Incredible! And many thanks for the link to PennState. I’ve loaded that one up now, and am back out there to dig some more 🙂 Who needs search when you’ve got CogDog in your network hey!! Many thanks mate.
December 23, 2007 at 2:35 pm
Stephen Downes
Yeah, that’s me. Ideas to dig holes by. 🙂
January 16, 2008 at 8:52 am
susan nash
Thank you for the comments about the audio blog on the Paraguayan mythological beast, El Luison. I really appreciate it! I’m with you — I think that information overload occurs much more quickly in the case of audio than in video. I’ve always loved This American Life … stories of eccentric relatives, etc…. maybe the story needs to come back into the structure…