POPULARITY
En NotiPod Hoy - Según un estudio de la Asociación para la Investigación de Medios de Comunicación (AIMC), 42% de los usuarios de altavoces inteligentes en España los usan para escuchar noticias. El 39% para escuchar radio en directo y el 15% para escuchar podcasts. Por otro lado, Siri de Apple se posiciona como el más conocido, seguido de Alexa de Amazon y de Google. - Publican “Tools for Podcasting”, un ebook con herramientas para podcasting. - Asociación GAMELX comienza a presentar los nominados a sus premios de podcasting 2019. - Apple compró Pop Up Archive, una startup para ayudar a encontrar podcasts. - PodScribe, una solución de orientación contextual para podcasts ya está disponible. - Beneficios de transcribir tu pódcast. - El descubrimiento basado en contenido cambiará la industria de podcasts. - Mujeres podcasters comparten consejos sobre el medio. - 64% de los estadounidenses les interesa pedir comida a través del asistente de voz. Pódcast recomendado: “Alimentarte”. Este es un pódcast sobre nutrición y alimentación saludable en los que se habla con otros expertos acerca de cómo adquirir nuevos hábitos para mejorar su salud de manera paulatina. Es conducido por la nutricionista Raquel Bernácer.
Tim Cook took a recent trip to China, and some have accused him of endorsing Chinese censorship. Bryan and Jeff talk about how complicated doing business in China is. They also look at why Sonos and IKEA have announced a partnership, and what Apple’s purchase of Pop Up Archive might mean. Then they fall down the rabbit hole of TextArc.
[Cheyenne talks to Michael Guerra and Jemma Brown about a new transcription tool produced by The Moth, Pop Up Archive and NYPL Labs called "Together We Listen."] https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/66348
[Cheyenne talks to Michael Guerra and Jemma Brown about a new transcription tool produced by The Moth, Pop Up Archive and NYPL Labs called "Together We Listen."] http://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/66348
With all the podcasts and audio content being produced, how do we make it more searchable, findable, and shareable, and then preserve it for the ages? Pop Up Archive is a start-up aiming to address those challenges. Anne Wootton is the company's co-founder and CEO, and she joins Adam to discuss Pop Up Archive's services and approach to growing podcasting. She explains how the company transcribes audio into searchable text that's also time-indexed, and what kinds of uses that data can be used for, like making audio more shareable. To illustrate, Anne details results from tests Pop Up Archive has been running on audio excerpts of different lengths shared on Twitter. Because she is working both with tech investors and the podcast community, Anne also shares her insights on how podcasting can advance as an industry, and what opportunities exist for podcast producers to grow their audience.
We all have ideas for features, products, and companies. But we cannot bring them to life alone. Partners and teams help us get out of our echo chambers, see possibilities we’ve never imagined, and put one foot in front of the other when the going gets rough. The best teams are composed of individuals with complementary skill sets, and as we learned back in Episode 4, empathy for one another. But you might be wondering: How does a team form over time? And how do you pick an initial partner or co-founder if you’re starting from scratch? In today’s episode of FemgineerTV we’re going to talk about how to pick partners, assemble a founding team to get your idea off the ground, and reveal the key ingredient to a lasting partnership. To help us out I’ve invited the co-founders of Pop Up Archive, Anne Wootton and Bailey Smith. Pop Up Archive is a startup based in Oakland, CA that makes sound searchable by using cutting edge speech-to-text technology. Anne Wootton is the CEO and Bailey Smith is the CTO. We’ll learn about how, as co-founders, they split their responsibilities, support each other, and resolve conflicts. Listen to the episode and learn: - The traits you should look for in a potential co-founder that are different from a teammate or an employee - How to communicate setbacks to your co-founder - How to critique each other constructively If you’re actively looking for a co-founder or if you already have one and want to improve your partnership, you’ll want to watch this episode! After you’ve listened to the episode join the conversation here: http://femgineer.com/?p=7246
[Emily Saltz from the Pop-Up Archive talks to Cheyenne about automated transcription for search, thus making audio a more shareable and accessible format for the web.] https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/60694
[Emily Saltz from the Pop-Up Archive talks to Cheyenne about automated transcription for search, thus making audio a more shareable and accessible format for the web.] http://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/60694
When Maurice Sendak’s now classic children’s book In the Night Kitchen was released in 1970, it caused a scandal. Its protagonist, a young boy, is bare naked throughout the book, amidst a landscape phallic milk bottles and free-flowing liquids. Parents cried pornography. Armchair psychologists jumped to analyze its Freudian subtext. But the kids? They just laughed. In this Popcast, we play you excerpts from Sendak's 1970 conversation with legendary interviewer Studs Terkel. Sendak balks at the idea of writing down to kids. In fact, Sendak thinks it's the kids who have “crap detectors” that allow them to tap into the real spirit of his books. Together, Sendak and Studs consider that it's the adults who can’t understand children’s literature, and not the other way around. Hear the full interview in The Studs Terkel Radio Archive collection on Pop Up Archive, from The WFMT Radio Network: https://www.popuparchive.com/collections/938/items/37552 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Astronauts don’t have days and nights like we do on earth, so they need some help regulating their sleep. Turns out, it takes a whole team of engineers down on earth to rouse NASA’s elite from their slumbers. In this Popcast, hear about the NASA tradition of "wake up songs" from Mission Control, including the one song that went too far. Written and produced by Eliza Smith, narrated by Eliza Smith and Jacob Winik, with editorial help from Emily Saltz. Audio from the NASA collection on Pop Up Archive: https://www.popuparchive.com/collections/1687 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It was 1950, just five years after the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The Soviet Union had just built their own bomb. And what did Americans, huddled around their radios, most want to hear? Comedian Bob Hope, joking about the world "blowing itself up." In this Popcast, Eliza Smith talks about "The Quick and the Dead," a 1950 NBC special about atomic energy, hosted by Bob Hope. Original audio can be found on Pop Up Archive, courtesy of the Broadcast Archives at WILL and Illinois Public Media: http://bit.ly/1Ij8A0Y See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In the early 1900s, journalist and renaissance man Charles Lummis set out to capture and preserve the Spanish folk songs of California, including the voice of one talent in particular: Manuela García. Listen to the story behind the Charles Fletcher Lummis wax cylinder collection at the Autry National Center. Find "La Cara Negra" and dozens of other songs from The Autry collection on Pop Up Archive: https://www.popuparchive.com/collections/2088 Learn more about the Autry National Center, and their wax cylinder recordings: http://theautry.org/collections/opera-2 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
With all the talk of a "golden age" of audio, it can be easy to forget that producers have been putting together intimate, conversational audio pieces for decades. In this Popcast, hear about the surprising podcast-like feel of a 1972 radio documentary about Sylvia Plath. Listen on Pop Up Archive, along with a full machine transcript: https://www.popuparchive.com/collections/4425/items/34632 Hear the original piece from the Pacifica Radio Archives on Pop Up Archive: www.popuparchive.com/collections/925/items/6821 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Anne Wooten, co-founder of Pop-Up Archive, talks about the problems facing digital audio collections in small institutions and the need to adopt common standards for cataloging and tracking audio recordings. For more information, visit http://digitalpreservation.gov/multimedia/videos/wooten.html&loclr=itu