Re: Still Waiting for an Answer

A week or so ago here, I asked a question about the distinction -- if

> any -- between 'podcasting' and audio/video 'streaming' which is a > technique which has been on the net for a long time. > No one has yet replied! Is 'podcasting' just a new name for an old > technique? Is it thus named because the (rather specialized) computers > which are used for receiving 'podcasts' do not typically do any other > functions like 'normal' computers? Is it because 'podcasters' often > times do not have any 'regular, over-the-air' type broadcasts to > accompany their computerized streaming presentations? > Can anyone answer these questions, or is 'podcasting' just much ado > about nothing new?

PLEASE remove my email address, too much SPAM as it is.

Podcasting is the process of creating audio files that will be downloaded into iPods and listened to at the convenience of the downloader. It isn't much different from downloading a WAV to a Windows PC and listening to it on a laptop during a long flight.

Actually, the big difference is the iPod is a lot smaller than a laptop and the batteries should last longer.

For streaming, you have to have connectivity for the entire length of the artifact (1 hour for an hour long show). With the WAV/podcast, you only need to be connected long enough to download the file.

- David

[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: But, if I download the entire file to whatever system I intended to use to listen, then iPod='streaming' in that case, doesn't it? And if I were so inclined, I could use a search engine to go around all over the net looking for .wav files, download them all as found to my jillion GB hard drive and play them off as desired. Apparently, if I understand your message, podcast is a way of doing that same thing, but 'more effeciently' and 'quicker'? PAT]
Reply to
David B. Horvath, CCP
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