
The Hobson & Holtz Report - Podcast #21: April 4, 2005
Content summary: Listeners’ comments: podcast annotating, indexing and navigating; running VNRs and press releases is shoddy journalism; mainstream media is not the way to go with youth messaging; searching blog feeds for photos, audio and video; Print media will still be around for a while; Darren Barefoot’s not smoking the podcasting dope; Catholic Insider at the Vatican; Jakob Nielsen and URL visibility; IABC Chair blog relaunching; preparing for Global PR Blog Week 2.0; Upcoming interview.
Show notes for April 4, 2005
Welcome to For Immediate Release: The Hobson & Holtz Report, a 72-minute conversation recorded live from Concord, California, USA, and Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Download the file here (MP3, 30.4MB), or sign up for the RSS feed to get it and future shows automatically. (For automatic synchronization with your iPod or other digital player, you’ll also need software such as the FeedDemon RSS aggregator, or the free ipodder or DopplerRadio).
In this edition:
Intro:
- 00:29 Shel and Neville on what’s in this week’s show; how to give your feedback; show notes
- 02:43 Comments from the last show
Features:
- 11:03 Digital media supplanting printed media - Canadian survey says no, US survey says yes; electronic ‘books’
- 25:26 Darren Barefoot‘s not smoking the podcasting dope - Here’s why he should be; Catholic Insider podcasting from the Vatican
Short Takes:
- 50.58 Web usability guru Jakob Nielsen responds to Shel’s post on URL visibility
- 56:36 IABC Chair blog to relaunch on 6 April. Can it become the place to engage with communicators?
- 60:23 Global PR Blog Week 2.0 now in preparation. Do you want to be part of it?
Outro:
- 65:30 Upcoming interview Tuesday April 5 - James Cherkoff and Johnnie Moore on open source marketing
- 66:35 Show notes; how to give your feedback; about the music and the band; outro music
Links for the blogs, individuals, companies and organizations we discussed or mentioned in the show:
Intro - Uri Levanon, Annodex, Dan York, Peter West, Chris Ritke, 49media.com.
Features - Judy Gombita, Marketing Daily, Washington Post, US Online Publishers Association survey, Brian Kilgore, 17, Cosmo Girl, Allure, Cosmopolitan, The Times, Independent, PC World, Business Week, Business 2.0, Wired, PARC, Jakob Nielsen, Darren Barefoot on podcasting, Adam Curry, FCC, Catholic Insider, Roderick Vonhogen, Podcast Alley, Bob Edwards, Endurance Radio, Emile Borquin, Dawn & Drew Show, Rock & Roll Geek Show, GM FastLane Blog, Eric Rice, Warner Bros, Autoblog, Volvo, PEW Internet podcasting survey, iPod, Associations Unorthodox, Podcast Brothers, Gatorade, Silicon Valley Watcher, Tom Foremski, Nielsen Norman Group, David Berlind, ZD Net, Internet Explorer, IABC Chair Blog, David Kistle, Warren Bickford, IABC Memberspeak, Allan Jenkins, Global PR Blog Week 1.0, Global PR Blog Week 2.0, PR blogger directory on Bloglines, Constantin Basturea, The New PR Wiki, Elizabeth Albrycht.
Outro - James Cherkoff, Johnnie Moore, ChangeThis, Open Sauce Live, Garageband.com, BB Chung King & The Buddaheads, Company Graveyard, For Immediate Release, A Shel of My Former Self, NevOn.
If you have comments or questions about this show, or suggestions for our future shows, email us at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), or call the Comment Line at +1 206 984 0931. You can email your comments, questions and suggestions as MP3 file attachments, if you wish (max. 5Mb attachment, please!). We’ll be happy to see how we can include your audio contribution in a show.
So, until Thursday April 7…
Great show, as usual. I’ve been listening. My apologies for not commenting more often. Busy. Bummer.
Made a phone call comment. Hope it went through and is usable. Can’t sleep right now, so decided to make the call. :grin:
And, about show #20, Elizabeth’s ‘blogzine’ is something I’m so happy to hear about. I so often find myself telling my students that she is one to read and follow. Looking forward to her advice.
On WordPress, I’m so saddened by that ‘episode’ of poor judgement. The faithful of WordPress don’t seem to get just how bad it looks for them. Comments to Matt’s blog have mostly been the “We love you, Matt” kinds of support. That is great, but there should be some realization of the negative impacts this fiasco caused. Matt has fessed up, to a degree. He, and all of the other particpants, need to be even more transparent and open to effectively restore the luster to WordPress.
Anyone that reads my blog knows, I am an unashamed lover and promoter of the WordPress platform. I use it for my blog and those for my students. I also love opensource. These events do not do the opensource movement, nor WordPress, any good.
Posted by Robert on 04/04 at 11:35 PM
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