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MARP Radio & Interactivity 2008 - Part 2
Second session from 20th May 2008 (apologies for the delay!)
Here's some links:
- Quicktime Interactivity
- ACB Radio
- Some coverage of BBC's Annotatable Audio project: at journalism.co.uk; and at Tom Coates at Plasticbag
- Go Elf Yourself
- NPR Story of the Day
- Benjamin Walker's Theory of Everything
- SatCom (at The Guardian)
- BOB (BU campus only)
- Twistori
- Twittervision
- Last.FM (me!)
- del.icio.us (me!)
- del.icio.us popular mp3
- Radio Clash
- casetteboy
Tuesday 27th will be the last of our formally scheduled sessions, so I suggest that you come with ideas for projects you might like to throw around - however small or monumental they might be - anything from learning how to use a RSS feed, through to hacking SatNavs. I don't promise to know how to do all of these things :-) If you can't make the session, feel free to post your suggestions here.
Also, let me know what you'd like to do with the rest of the time we have - six hours in all. Either let me know in the session on Tuesday, or again, add a comment below, or email me.
Direct Download for MARP Radio and Interactivity Seminar podcast part 2
MARP Radio & Interactivity 2008 - Part 1
Thursday, 15 May, 2008 - 11:12
Here's a recording of the first session on Radio and Interactivity from the MA Radio Production at Bournemouth Media School, and some links to things we talked about:
Some key points for those who couldn't attend:
- We'll meet on Tuesdays, and save the time from the Thursday sessions for later
- Next Tuesday, we'll discuss examples of interactive radio / audio that you've found that you enjoy. It would be great if you could post links in the comments below before the session!
- Part of the purpose of the next two sessions is to thrash out ideas about what you'd like to do with interactivity - something for your showreel? a collaborative project? individual work? tutorials or workshops? etc.
Direct Download for MARP Radio and Interactivity Seminar podcast part 1
Old audiences, new producers
Wednesday, 21 February, 2007 - 15:25
MA Radio Production Seminar, Bournemouth Media School, 12 Feb 2007: Old audiences, new producers
In a time of hypermediacy, in which forms and genres are in flux, and experiments can happen, it's worth considering, what is radio, what is sound, what is art, and what is / might be the intersection? What happens when you hand your schedule over to the wisdom of the crowd? What are the people we used to call the audience now making and doing? What is the difference between amateur and professional? Here are some links to get you thinking...
- Let them sing it for you
- Sound Art at Wikipedia
- Soundseeing at AudioCollective
- Own [Sound] Art Podcast
- Learn on the go podcasts
- Open Culture Podcast directory
- Podcast Directory Genre List
- Silence Radio
- Podcasting resources
- UBUWEB sound archive
- Martin Luther King at Jewish Journal
- RSS feed for most popular mp3s at delicious
- Benjamin Walker's Theory of Everything
Our last session is on Monday 26th, and it would be great to know what things you'd like to know how to do. Post a comment below for suggestions :)
Hypermediate Radio, part 2
Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 15:06
MA Radio Production Seminar, Bournemouth Media School, 29 Jan 2007: Hypermediate Radio, Part 2
Again, unedited rushes of the second part of our seminar - remix, re-use, re-mash, redistribute, re-purpose, re-send...
Show notes:
Direct Download for MA Radio Production Seminar podcast part 2 mp3
Hypermediate Radio, part 1
Monday, 29 January, 2007 - 14:55
MA Radio Production Seminar, Bournemouth Media School, 29 Jan 2007: Hypermediate Radio, Part 1
Here's the recording of the first half of our seminar. Unedited rushes... feel free to remix, re-edit and re-purpose, and post back what you made if you like :)
Show notes:
- Hex the Dex
- Radio Free Calamity
- Creative Commons
- Creative Archive
- Art Mobs
- Mashups
- History of podcasting
- RSS & Syndication
Direct Download for MA Radio Production Seminar podcast part 1 mp3
Holy shit
Wednesday, 08 November, 2006 - 21:07
So I was kind of weirded out. I get a message from PodShow that a recording I made available there got played on a podcast. I check out the podcast and it's an American Catholic version of Kenny Everett. Praise the Lord.
Arthur Lee: 1945 - 2006
Saturday, 26 August, 2006 - 01:14
In memory of Arthur Lee (1945 - 2006)
Menticulture podcast - To Arthur Lee
Prelude
Saturday, 06 May, 2006 - 22:55
I've just started a new web site called Don Chihuahua, which will eventually explain itself, but suffice to say for now that it is about performing music, and is as much fictional as it is factual. Today, I thought I'd officially launch, with a recording dedicated to my father, whose birthday would have been today.
Listen: Bach - Prelude mp3
J.S. Bach
Sunday, 19 March, 2006 - 13:29
I've worn my fingers raw, trying to emulate Andre Segovia's interpretation of Bach's Sarabande.
It was particularly difficult since I've had no time to play for a few months, so I'm extremely rusty.
This recording is dedicated to Mailan, who says such lovely things about my playing :)
Bach - Sarabande, played by Joe: mp3
The Canterbury Tales: The General Prologue
Friday, 17 March, 2006 - 21:45
The Canterbury Tales: The General Prologue - Lines 1 - 34 by Geoffrey Chaucer
The Canterbury Tales: The General Prologue mp3 podcast
Westonbirt Arboretum
Sunday, 27 November, 2005 - 20:45
Autumn Soundseeing: Westonbirt Arboretum
Menticulture Westonbirt Arboretum podcast mp3
UK Summer Soundseeing
Sunday, 16 October, 2005 - 23:55
What I did this summer - UK Summer Soundseeing podcast
Been a long break from podcasting, so we make up for it with a hour-long UK soundseeing special. Climbing waterfalls in Welsh valleys, folk music in Penzance, what there isn't to do in Lincolnshire when you're young, and why public art isn't very public...
Some links from the show:
- Thinking of the Outside
- Love sometimes has barriers... at The Wooster Collective
- The Freeway Blogger
- Banksy
- Submerge
Menticulture's UK Summer Soundseeing Podcast mp3
Science week part 8
Final podcast from the OU Practising Science residential school, wherein the author returns, exhausted, to the real world, head full of rigourous knowledge found through well-established methodologies.
Science week part 8 podcast mp3
Science week part 7
The end of the last full day, and the world is full of decay...
Science week part 7 podcast mp3
Science week part 6
Thursday, 21 July, 2005 - 08:24
Biology and Titan day. In Life Sciences we looked at mitosis and the effect of radiation on chromosomes, and then I went to a seminar about the latest data from Titan...
Science week part 6 podcast mp3
Science week part 5
Wednesday, 20 July, 2005 - 18:55
Last night was karaoke night at the OU residential school. Fortunately I was spared the humiliation of singing, but one of the girls in my tutor group has was fantastic, so you can hear Faye sing...
I'm not very with it in this podcast ;)
Science week part five podcast mp3
Science week part 4
Tuesday, 19 July, 2005 - 17:13
Group research project today and a very brief post and podcast :)
Science week part four podcast mp3
Science week part 3
Today was field trip day - a trip to Birling Gap and Newhaven on the south coast, to study the geology and ecology of the area and their relationship to each other.
Fantastic day if long and tiring... But really good experience of acquiring raw data and using it.
We looked at the geology of the chalk cliffs, the flint seams and the other rocks and soils at the top, and figured out what they tell us about the history of the area. We also examined the kinds of vegetation on the cliff-tops and figured out how the geological history has shaped the kind of plant life that exists now.
Almost too shattered to speak...
Science week part three podcast mp3
Science week part 2
Wow. Today was chemistry day. We put samples of metal salts into a bunsen burner flame and compared the colours of the flames. Then we did spectroscopy to get a more precise measurement of the different metals' spectral fingerprint. Once you can do this, you can tell what distant stars are made of. How cool.
Then we mixed up different reagents into metal nitrates, and saw which ones produced precipitate and how they changed colour. Then went on to use these techniques to assess the amount of aluminium present in drinking water. Hands-on practical stuff.
Chemistry was always my least favourite part of scince at school, but the stuff we did today was really engaging. The activities are brilliantly constructed and prepared, and the tutors are great.
Tomorrow we do the field trip on the South coast. Early start...
Connecting via mobile is WAY expensive, so sod that, I'm off to find some free wifi hot-spots in town :)
BTW - thanks to 5511 5305 in Brighton whoever you are for letting me stowaway on your broadband wireless!!
Science week part two podcast mp3
Science week part 1
Saturday, 16 July, 2005 - 23:50
This is the first of a week of podcasts from my science practise residential school with the Open University.
I've come to the University of Sussex at Lewes near Brighton, UK. The course is SXR103 Practising Science. I'm going to use these podcasts to keep notes of what we do, and see where using podcasting as a learning support will take me.
The first thing I've learnt is that while Sussex Uni doesn't have wireless internet access, I can use my mobile to connect to the internet!!! So these podcasts will be short and sweet, cos its slow and expensive :(
Science week part one podcast mp3
Self-fulfilling prophecy
Thursday, 14 July, 2005 - 21:01
This is a collage of found sounds and music in response to the events of July 7 in London.
When it happens so close to home, the impact is telescoped, and we sit up and take notice.
It happens every day in Iraq.
Shownotes:
- Music: This Mortal Coil, Ivy and Neet
- Music: Kate Bush, Waking the Witch
- Clips from BBC News
- Clip from Off the Wall, 12 July 2005, 2600 Hacker's Quarterly
- Extracts from The Power of Nightmares, including an interview with Jason Burke, who has argued that al-qaeda is a creation of western politicians
- Music: Faithless, Mass Destruction
- Music: This Mortal Coil, I Come and Stand at Every Door
Self-fulfilling Prophecy podcast mp3
I wouldn't describe this as podsafe
Podcasting and online learning
I've been thinking about how podcasting can add a new dimension to the learning experience, especially in the realm of distance/online learning. Some quotes and highlights from an online article published by the Univeristy of Illinois:
"Audio blogs can add an element of humanisation to an online course through voice. by way of diction, word stress and inflection, one gains a richer understanding of the enthusiasm or passion of the speaker... Some stories are told better orally than with text alone."
In summary...
- Great for students who have an auditory preference.
- Great for students with visual disabilities.
- Great for learning in the car - portable professional development which completely knocks the balls off "Learn French in 22 separate tapes which you have to rewind and forward wind without any fun element or personality at all".
- Great for totally up to date info. Online courses are generally written months in advance. They can't capture what's going on right now and relate today's news with learning. "Contemporizing course content" means that the learner is more likely "forge a more memorable bond with the content"
Podcasting Will Eat Itself
More Podcasting Will Eat Itself: this time we talk about, mass media, mp3s, barriers to entry and crocheted vulvas. Here's the shownotes:
- mental escher podcast
- area 51 podcast
- Radio Free Calamity podcast
- the Bluggcast
- podbat blog
- Blugg's explanation of OPML
- Duke University's first year iPod scheme
- article in The Independent about Duke University
- Bella Linda crochet blog
- a crocheted vulva
Podcasting Will Eat Itself part 3 mp3
Soundseeing in Budapest
Thursday, 30 June, 2005 - 14:08
Our friend Sarah decided to celebrate her birthday in Budapest, so we - Sarah, Alain, Cath, and I - went for a long weekend. You may or may not be pleased to know that I learnt to say 'Please can you mince it?' in Hungarian. This podcast is about jingles, graffiti, the war, the meaning of life, and facial carpet-burns.
The Budapest Soundseeing Podcast mp3
Shownotes:
- Our budapest Flickr set
- Ciganytanc
- Hungarian Cimbalom
- LUMU - Ludwig Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest
The Wedding Song
Wednesday, 29 June, 2005 - 18:45
Chris and George got married and Cath sang at the wedding and I accompanied on guitar, and Iron and Wine wrote the song and Cath replaced the words with her own, and we changed the name from 'Naked as we Came' to 'Happily we Came', and then we recorded it and put it on a CD for Chris and George, and then we made this podcast:
The Wedding Song mp3
Art Mobs
Wednesday, 22 June, 2005 - 22:30
The institutional voice is all very well, but I want what's under the radar.
Art Mobs is a project which gives you not only the chance to experience art in a new way by listening to alternative audio guides, but actually invites you to create your own guides.
Look at rocketboom for 8 Jun, and then try out these guides to various artworks, especially try the Francis Bacon, 'Painting', 1946 audio guide while looking at the painting itself!
Podcasting Will Eat Itself - Part 2
The second part of the first menticulture podcast.
Podcasting will Eat Itself part 2 mp3
Podcasting Will Eat Itself - Part 1
The first part of the first menticulture podcast.
Podcasting will Eat Itself part 1 mp3
