Hola Steve,
how was it in Japan? I am guessing it was favolous. I don't think I
will be able to go, though. Too expensive.... However, I will have a
sample of that area on Friday. I am attending a conference in Seoul and
I will be presenting some visual poetry. I am actually using some of
the resources learnt in the workshop, and it looks great. Now, the
problem is to display it properly. The organizers in Seoul told me that
there will be a projector in the room, hopefully a computer based one
(communication is not so fluid with Seoul...). Well, I am not quite
sure of the steps to follow to make it happen (I forgot them!): how do
I connect my laptop to the projector? Could you please let me know
before Friday?
Gracias!
Tina
On Jun 8, 2005, at 9:55 PM, Steve Cavrak wrote:
> Podcast support in next version of iTunes
>
> By tim on May 22, 2005
> http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/05/podcast_support.html
>
> At the Wall Street Journal's D Conference, Steve Jobs tonight showed
> ipodder-like features in the next release of iTunes, supposedly
> available within about 60 days. I was glad to see this, since the
> "architecture of participation" has been the only one of the big Web
> 2.0 themes that Apple had seemed to be missing. He was slightly
> dismissive of populist podcasting, describing it as "Wayne's World
> for radio", and celebrating the arrival of professional radio
> stations into the market, but nonetheless, he was very high on the
> podcasting phenomenon, and the excitement that millions of users have
> displayed about it.
>
> In the Q&A, Jason Calcanis of Weblogs, Inc. asked if there was any
> possibility of using the iTunes music store for paid podcasting. Jobs
> replied that for the moment they were only considering it as free
> content, but that he was open to looking into it.
>
> Jobs also spoke about the prospect of iTunes on phones, and the
> difficulties of working with the carriers, saying something like: "As
> you know from our limited success at getting our computers into the
> Fortune 500, Apple's never been very good at going through corporate
> orifices in order to get at the end users. And if we can't do it with
> 500 companies, you can imagine it's even harder when there are only
> four.
> "
> On the subject of video features in iTunes, he said it was to play
> music videos and other bonus material in order to help the music
> studios promote the sale of albums as well as songs. But when pressed
> on the subject of whether or not there might eventually be movies for
> sale, he said "I'm going to have to leave that answer to our actions
> in the future." (He did repeat his past comments about the difficulty
> of creating a good movie experience on small form factor devices.)
>
> Tags: ipod itunes apple music
|