iTunes users: Please use Subscribe in iTunes instead of Preview in your MP3 player. (It's easier that way. Plus, iTunes does not properly handle M3U playlists, so the preview won't work.)
So I found out that the subscription silently ran out on my voicemail account, and I figured it would be a good time to try to get a new number. As luck would have it, a nearby area code had a number available containing "92783", the digits for "WASTE". The rest is history.
How would you like to spread the word in your AIM profile?
It's Dro Kulix's weekly radio show! It's a podcast, and if you're reading this, you have all you need to get started—really! But if you don't know what podcasting is, I can explain it in one paragraph. That's right—by the end of the next paragraph, you'll be savvy to the next big thing in broadcasting... Read on.
The following is the elevator speech I've come up with for the new phenomenon. Drop me a line to tell me whether you think it works and what might make it better...
Here's the none-too-technical lowdown: A podcast is an online audio broadcast—like a radio show, except it's on-demand instead of live, and you can get it whenever you want! New episodes of a given podcast are released periodically (WasteCast, for example, is a weekly show), and some audio players (like iTunes and Winamp) can be set up to list and even automatically get the newest episodes as they become available! Contrary to what the name might suggest, podcasting wasn't created by Apple, and you certainly don't need an iPod or iTunes to get in on the action. But if you have both, iTunes can even automatically sync new episodes to your iPod! It's a cool setup, and it's not even esoteric anymore: The medium already has its own unique personalities, like Adam "The Podfather" Curry, former MTV VJ and longtime tech pioneer, and Leo Laporte of The Screen Savers fame. In addition to the fantastic library of independent offerings, The iTunes Podcast Directory now lists podcasts from many major media outlets. And a new audio search engine being launched by Yahoo! aims to make podcasts as searchable as the rest of the web. So, here's the long and short: Podcasting is the new independent radio (and, along with streaming and satellite, the new radio, period), it's free, and thanks to some novel technology, it's quickly becoming just as easy as radio was in the old world!
If you just want to listen right away, please, be my guest.
But if you have iTunes or Winamp (or one of several other podcast players/aggregators out there), you're equipped for the full experience. So:
Most importantly, if you're still in the dark about any of this, I'd be happy to help you through it, because every human who doesn't understand is another listener lost, and I won't stand for that! So shoot an email to wastecast@radio.sprawling.org and ask anything.
Subscribe your favorite podcast player to http://radio.sprawling.org/wastecast/feed.
Instructions on how to subscribe are below.
Here are some ways to get the WasteCast every week while hardly even trying!
To subscribe automatically:
If that doesn't work, then to subscribe manually:
http://radio.sprawling.org/wastecast/feed and then click OK.iTunes will attempt to update the subscription according to the preferences set by clicking the Settings... button in the lower-right corner of the window.
To subscribe:
http://radio.sprawling.org/wastecast/feed and then complete the rest of the dialog as desired (you can usually leave it as is) and click OK.To download (or stream) an episode:
The feed URI is http://radio.sprawling.org/wastecast/feed. I'm assuming that if you already have a dedicated aggregator, you probably know what to do with it. But, if you're new, or just curious...
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