Podcasts

Podcasts that I listen or view, and tips on how to create your own podcasts.

A review of Locly, a Geosearch application for iPhone

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I’m currently working on a web project at work, where one of my tasks is to look in to trends. One of the trends I have looked in to is smart phones with great web experiences and another is mashup technologies. During the project I came over an iPhone application called Locly.

locly-1

Ask yourself, how many times have you been in a new place and had no travel book or map with you. I guess your answer would be quite a few. Locly is an application that can find attractions, cafes and shops near by you, by making use of the inbuilt GPS of the 3G iPhone, or your local base station data if you have the first generation iPhone. With Locly you can also look at local photos from Flickr, and pull up Twitter or Wikipedia entries that are close to where you are now. Locly is reported to work in many countries throughout the world, but I can only say that it has worked surprisingly well for me here in Oslo, Norway.

locly-2

Locly is simply the best combination of geobased searches and mashups I have seen so far, and that not only on mobile devices.

locly-3

The mandatory screenshots are of course published on Flickr.

Yai, de király!

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Yesterday I bought an Argon iNet 1 (Internet Radio device) for my mom and grandma. For my mom so that she can listen to Norwegian radio stations when down in Hungary, and for my grandmother so that she can listen to some Hungarian radio stations when here in Norway.

It’s funny to think about the fact that radio stations have been on the internet for ages, but that we only have been listening to them through our computers. That can easily change with such a “killer device” as Argon iNet 1 (supports the following formats: MP3, WMA, AAC, WAV, AIFF and Real Audio – No Ogg Vorbis). Via your existing broadband internet connection (wireless or not) you can listen to almost endless amounts of radio stations (more then 12.000 stations are listed) and they all get loaded automatically. Stations are available from all corners of the world, even from the Vatikan state. iNet 1 comes with 67 Hungarian radio stations preconfigured. And if you are still missing a certain station then you can quickly add it to the list on the iNet homepage.

Argon iNet 1

My favourite radio channel, Slager Radio, was for example listed, and the first show I listened to was Lali Király with Boros Lajos. Thereby the name of this article (saying that this device is totally king). He also part of Slager’s morning show, Boomerang. A radio show that my colleague truely hates.

iNet 1 comes with both Ethernet and wifi (WEP and WPA), and if the internet isn’t enough for you, you can listen to normal FM-radio. You can also enjoy your entire digital music collection from your computer via iNet 1. I guess this is through UPnP (system requirements for streaming media from the computer are Windows XP, Mac OSX 10.2 or newer). And it doesn’t stop there, in best RTL Shop style I can tell you that you even subscribe to and listen to your favourite podcasts over a cup of coffee in the kitchen. My first podcast was Guardian Weekly. This device is awesome!!!

Some of the radio stations that I have been listening to, stream with an amazing quality. It is actually so good, that it leaves the DAB quality in the dust. So here is what I want from Argon, a net radio device that fits in with my homecinema system.

The iNet 1 is designed as a beautiful retro style table radio, in real wood. A lovely finish! The table radio also comes with a bass port and an alarm with snooze-function. The device comes with stereo sound output and a connection for headphones. If you want better quality on the FM broadcasts then what the built in telescope antenna can provide, you can screw the telescope antenna off and put another one in its place. Another handy feature included is a line input, so you can quickly connect your iPod to the radio. The FM-radio even comes with the RDS/RadioText, so that you can see the names of the stations.

My Favourite Radio Stations

iNet 1 is built up around technology from the English manufacturer RECIVA, who via the internet regularly maintains and updates the station lists and software for your radio. With iNet 1 you will also get access to a dedicated homepage, so you can via your computer define your own favorite channels and add more to the list. This way you can easily overlook the endless possibilities and adapt your internet radio the way you want it. I found it real easy to add a set of radio stations and podcasts as my favorites, but found the web site to be badly designed. As you can see from the screenshot, there is to much empty space on the pages and another thing was the pop up windows.

The Vegetable Orchestra

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Now I’m not a vegetarian, so this obviously doesn’t apply to me! How often have you heard your mom say don’t play with the food? Here’s a bunch of people doing a serious effort on getting their moms upset, and they are good at it too:

Footage of the vegetable orchestra during shopping, preparations and some clips of one of our live shows.

From their website you can read they perform music solely on instruments made of vegetables. Using carrot flutes, pumpkin basses, leek violins, leek-zucchini-vibrators, cucumberophones and celery bongos, the orchestra creates its own extraordinary and vegetabile sound universe.

As so often, I picked up the news about this special orchestra at Joanne Colan’s Rocketboom, my favourite webcast.

iPod Touch

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I haven’t had time writing on my blog lately, and there has sadly been a few things that should have made it to the blog. One thing that I really want to blog about, is that I have gotten myself an iPod Touch! I know, I know, after 6 years resisting the iPod, I gave in and got myself a 8 GB iPod Touch. I was trying it out in a local Apple store close to where I live, and got asked to demo it for three people that came in to the shop. Ok, so I did, but strangely enough it was me that ended up buying one!

iPod Touch

As some of you might know (iPhone – No Thank You! and  Another Reason to Say NO!), I have been critical to Apple’s approach to the mobile market. There is no reason for them to keep the phone completly closed. Windows Mobile and Symbian are both open, and the same goes for the Linux-driven phones. What made me change my mind was an article published on Engadget, that Apple had announced on its Hot News feed:

that it is currently at work on an SDK for the iPhone, the apps from which will naturally work on the iPod touch. Apparently it’s going to take ‘em until February to do it up right

I guess the combination of the impressive graphical userinterface and that the iPhone/iPod Touch soon will be more open, made me give in. iPod Touch is simply one of the best PDAs that I have ever tested: Beautiful calendar, addressbook and worldclock with alarms. And Safari, I am speachless.  There is no mobile browser like it. Opera, my other favourite, isn’t even close. I haven’t tested the YouTube-player included, or playing video on the device. But iPod Touch is great way of listening to my favourite music and podcasts. My HTC 4350 is currently collecting dust on the shelf. It used to be my music player and phone. Now I am back to carrying two devices around, my Nokia E60 and the iPod. But it is worth it. If or when Apple is releasing iPhone in Norway, I guess that will be the next device that I buy. Apple has brought PDAs and Smartphones to a new, higher level, and it is time for others to try to catch up.

If I can come with two finally advices, it would be one for you as a buyer and one to Apple. If you plan to buy an iPod Touch, and as me have ripped your music collection to 320 Kbps, then go for the 16 GB version of the iPod Touch. Other wise you will only have space for about 700 – 750 songs. I use such a high biterate cause I also sync my Mac against Apple TV, and that device is connected to my homecinema system. The advice to Apple should be no surprise, please update both the iPhone and iPod Touch to include WPA Enterprise! Students need it to be able to use the devices at universities across Europe and probably also in other parts of the world.

Flash Audio Player

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I have just found a great Audio Player plugin for WordPress, and there is also a tutorial for publishing this Audio Player on static web pages. I just had to try it with the first podcast I published at work.  Isn’t it just simple and beautiful? At least it is what I have been looking for, for quite some time now. The search has ended!

Oh, oh, I have just realized that I am getting closer and closer to actually start publishing podcasts on this blog.

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