Take Control of Podcasting on the Mac, Second Edition
Start podcasting or take it to the next level with our step-by-step guide!
Beginning a podcast is easier than starting a radio station, but it's still hard to assemble your hardware and software, and learn the tricks of the trade. You can easily meet that challenge with start-to-finish guidance from long-time podcaster Andy Affleck. Listen to promo...
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Contents & Intro
What's New
FAQ
The ebook opens with a look at how to plan a podcast's topic, format, and polish. Then Andy focuses on choosing the right microphone and audio software, followed by step-by-step instructions for recording using Audio Hijack Pro, GarageBand, Sound Studio, WireTap Studio, and Übercaster, with advice about conducting interviews by phone, iChat, and Skype. Once your audio is in the can, you'll learn how to use audio plug-ins to make the recording sound better, complete with downloadable sound files to supplement the text. You'll also find out how to edit out any awkward bits, plug in additional audio, and mix tracks. Finally, the ebook covers how to encode your podcast, add useful tags and chapters, find a publishing tool, and publish your podcast for the world to hear.
Includes a coupon worth up to $14 off Audio Hijack Pro and Fission.
Read this ebook to learn the answers to questions such as:
What types of microphones are best for podcasting?
Which software should I use to record and edit my podcast?
How can I find and use audio plug-ins to improve my podcast's sound quality?
What's the best way to conduct a podcast interview?
Should I record directly into MP3 format or encode later?
How do I remove weird pauses or other glitches from my recording?
How do I smoothly add music to the start and end of my podcast?
What should I watch out for when choosing an Internet host for my podcast?
What tools are available for publishing podcasts?
Where should I promote my podcast to attract the most listeners?
Can anyone create a podcast and list it in the iTunes Store?
"Our school podcast is sounding much more professional now that
we're using software recommended in the book and following Andy's
tips."
-Mark Warner, Teacher, The Downs CE Primary School (UK)
Tell us if you create or improve a podcast with the help of Take Control of Podcasting on the Mac, as Mark Warner did.
Book Info
118 pages
Version 2.0
Updated 04-Sep-08
2.3 MB download
Free sample with Table of Contents, Introduction, Quick Start, and section starts.
About the Author
Andy Williams Affleck built Dartmouth College's first Web site in 1993, created the original Web site for the sitcom Friends, and started a virtual community that's still around a decade later. When he's not producing his Take Control of Podcasting on the Mac podcast, he's a senior project manager and accessible Web design expert.
This book gives you all the information you need to begin your first podcast quickly and without spending much (if any) money by suggesting which software and hardware to buy for better results and teaching you how to use it. This book was written by Andy J. Williams Affleck, edited by Geoff Duncan, and published by TidBITS Publishing Inc.
Introduction
I discovered podcasting before it had a name. In August 2004, Adam Curry, a former MTV VJ, began producing a daily show from his home in the Netherlands in which he talked about topics that interested him and he played music he felt like sharing.
Others had produced "audio blogs" before, most notably Dave Winer, who created subscription and update standards first for text and later for attachments—including audio—without which podcasting couldn't exist. But it wasn't until both Curry wrote some primitive software and Winer popularized it that summer that something gelled, making podcasting a fad, a trend, and now a part of tens of thousands of Web sites.
When I heard Curry's original show, I was immediately fascinated. I began producing my own show just a few months later. I started podcasting because I've always been something of a sucker for new technologies. My Web log has been continuously active since 1994, making it one of the oldest out there, and I had always dreamed of adding media beyond text and graphics. Podcasting opened that door for me. I wrote this book to open the door for you as well.
A podcast is a downloadable audio file. It could be as simple as a song that a podcaster wanted to share, or it might be a full-blown audio show edited together in the style of a radio program. Most podcasts are free to listeners. Subscription and automatic downloading makes podcasting distinct from audio files linked from Web sites.
An individual podcast, also known as an episode, is typically retrieved using software, sometimes called a podcatcher, that automatically and regularly checks for newer episodes. A podcast file is usually in MP3 or AAC format, though other audio formats can be used as well. The publishing side of podcasting is syndication; the retrieval side is subscription. Most podcasts can also be downloaded manually.
Podcasting combines elements of several disparate technologies—
audio recording and editing, content syndication, and Internet file transfers—into a single seamless process that retrieves audio from a Web site onto listeners' computers and, usually, synchronizes it to an external digital audio player. One click on a subscription button can often initiate the whole process.
More Background Info: You can read about the history of podcasting, as well as the basics of subscribing to and listening to podcasts, in a TidBITS article that I wrote called "Podcasting: The People's Radio". See also my follow-up article detailing Apple's iTunes podcatching features.
Creating your own podcasts can be highly rewarding. I enjoy pulling together music, my writings, random thoughts, and interviews with people into a single show. Other people simulate the classic style of old-time radio theater.
Academic institutions such as Stanford University and the Harvard University Graduate School of Education are looking at how podcasts can supplement classroom teaching. Major companies use podcasting as a way to get their content out to a much wider audience.
Podcasts don't need the professional veneer of a commercial radio broadcast. In fact, some podcasters feel it's antithetical to the podcasting spirit to be overly professional. Just start recording. If your content is worthwhile, you'll find an audience. You can always improve your production as you discover what works and what doesn't.
What's in a Name? You don't need an iPod to listen to podcasts. If another media player were the cool toy everyone had to have, podcasting would be called sandiskcasting or zunecasting. (Okay, no it wouldn't; Apple has a gift for names, but Apple didn't coin podcast.)
Some people use the term audio blogging, which doesn't encompass the variety of material found in podcasts, or netcast, which has neither the charm nor the specificity of podcast. There was rumbling at one point about Apple asserting legal rights to the term "pod" and some people worried that calling something a podcast would open them up to litigation. We're several years into the podcasting phenomena and that hasn't happened, so I don't feel a need to re-title this book just yet.
Podcasting Quick Start
This book shows you how to plan, record, edit, encode, and publish a podcast. You can learn about these steps in any order, but I encourage beginners to read the material in sequence.
Plan your podcast:
Understand the process; see Plan Your Podcast.
Brush up on your vocabulary in Learn Podcasting Terminology.
Record your podcast:
Make sure you have the hardware and software that fits your needs and budget; see Set Up Your Studio.
Consult Use Good Microphone Techniques in order to avoid common mistakes.
Find advice and procedures for how to Record Your Podcast , and read steps for how to Record an Interview Using iChat , Record VoIP in Audio Hijack Pro , or Record VoIP in WireTap Studio.
Edit and encode your podcast:
Learn basic audio editing techniques in Edit Your Podcast .
Tag your podcast with metadata and add chapters for navigating an episode; see Tag and Add Chapters to Your Podcast.
Decide which encoding settings you want to use and encode your podcast for uploading; read Encode Your Podcast.
Publish and promote your podcast:
Understand Bandwidth Costs so you don't go broke if you become popular.
Upload and host your show; see Tools to Publish Podcasts.
Syndicate your show; consult Understand Syndication Formats and Promote Your Podcast.
This new version covers new programs and updates of other programs. It also adds new coverage of advanced techniques and sample sounds. The most important changes include:
I added coverage of two new programs: WireTap Studio and Übercaster. Both are powerful tools to consider adding to your podcasting toolbox. In particular, see:
Record with WireTap Studio
Record with Übercaster
Edit with WireTap Studio
Edit with Übercaster
I switched the GarageBand coverage in the book from looking at GarageBand 3 to mostly focusing on GarageBand 4, which ships with iLife '08 and is also commonly known as GarageBand '08. In particular, see Choose Your Audio Software, but changes relating to GarageBand 4 are sprinkled throughout.
I dropped coverage of Audacity. Though it is a powerful tool, I no longer feel recommend it for podcasting. Very few podcasters who I know still use it due to its instability and confusing interface.
I added a discussion of how to Use Audio Plug-ins to Sound Your Best, where I describe what these plug-ins are and their different formats, and provide sound samples so that you can listen to what they do.
I added a subsection on how to Interview People Successfully. It looks at ways that you can make guests on your show sound their best.
I made many other smaller changes throughout the entire book, updating every section with new information.
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