Archive for April 30th, 2007

In My Mind And In My Car

Posted April 30, 2007 By Pattie Gillett

Video may have killed the radio star but the iPod has helped me re-discover NPR.

I know, it seems strange that a device that to some is nothing short of Doom for both terrestrial and satellite radio could actually turn someone on to the often dry, yet reliable and competent smarminess that is National Public Radio, but that’s exactly what has happened to me over the past several months.

After years of saying that I’d never have any need for one of them new-fangled mp3 players (as Dave will no doubt confirm), I broke down and bought one. An iPod Nano to be exact. Now don’t get me wrong, having at least a portion of my music collection available at the push of a click wheel is cool but what really got me attached to my Nano were the podcasts. I mean, seriously, where have these things been all my life?

I know, most of them have been on the radio but other than in my car, I never actually listened to the radio! And even then, I only listened to WXPN for tunes and to our local all-news outlet to confirm the traffic jams that I was already trapped in. How was I supposed to know when all these great public radio shows were even on let alone carve out time to sit and listen to them?

But, thanks to the fact that the fine people at NPR put most of their programming out in the form of podcasts, it doesn’t matter when Wait, Wait…Don’t Tell Me is on, all I know is that it downloads into my iTunes every Sunday evening, with a the same smarmy reliability each and every week. I can listen to it on the treadmill, in my car, at my desk at work, on my way to lunch, or when Dave is trying to talk to me about something and doesn’t realize that my ear buds are in.

So what’s on my iPod that can also be heard on NPR? Here are three of my faves:

Wait, Wait..Don’t Tell Me – the quiz show for NPR geeks that basically rewards us for listening all week. The show presents questions from the week’s news to a trio of “celebâ€? panelists and call-in listeners. Very funny, very topical, but a very poor choice to listen to while exercising because your fits of laughter really throw off the aerobic process. I’m just saying.

KRCW’s The Business – originating from Santa Monica’s brilliant public radio outlet, KCRW, but distributed by NPR, The Business is entertainment news and information that you can actually use. All the blather about who’s dating who, who’s in rehab, and who’s converted to Scientology is left to Us Weekly. This leaves host Claude Brodesser-Akner plenty of time to focus on such topics as the differences between scripts written on spec and those sold as pitches, the effect of CGI on movie budgets, the latest distribution technology, how piracy impacts the studios’ and the consumers’ bottom lines, etc. It’s good listening, so good that I’m bummed it only comes out once per week, but Brodesser-Akner often updates his blog in between and that helps ease the withdrawal. A side note: this show also has one of the few really cool theme songs in all of public radio. Imagine that.

This I Believe – A simple premise: someone – a different person each week, in fact – reads an essay which he or she has written summing up a core personal belief. You literally never know what you’re going to get. One week a jovial man extols his belief in good, slow-cooked barbecue. The next week, an Army wife describes why she believes that her husband will phone her each month from Iraq, as he has promised. The following week, the founder of Craig’slist talks about why he believes that the percentage of people who want to lie, cheat, and steal from their fellow man is relatively small. NPR claims that this is one of their most popular segments ever. I believe that.

Take a listen to any or all of these. On your iPod or even the old-fashioned way.

Hey, E-Mail, Get Offa My Cloud

Posted April 30, 2007 By Dave Thomer

So Wired magazine lets you subscribe dirt cheap – a dollar an issue – and Pattie and I both agree that it’s a great deal. There are many thought-provoking stories that I’m sure will provide much blog fodder in days to come. But there’s a trend in the reporting that makes me wonder if I’m hopelessly behind or the folks at Wired aren’t quite living in the world we are. There’s a lot of talk about the death of the PC and the upcoming future where all of our applications live on the network and we just access them from our web/net terminals. I’m sure I’m oversimplifying, and I apologize for that. But the paradigm example that was discussed in one article was e-mail and webmail, and the rise of Yahoo Mail and Google’s G-mail. And let me tell ya, I can not stand webmail. Several of the schools where I teach have web-based e-mail setups such that I can not use Mozilla Thunderbird to pull the messages down to my home desktop. This aggravates me to no end. I do not want to have to have several web browsers open at one time to be able to get my e-mail. I do not want to have to keep logging into a particular website to get my mail. I want to open my frackin’ e-mail program and tell it, “OK, fella, every couple of minutes, you go check all of my e-mail accounts and bring home the stuff that isn’t spam.” It ticks me off because when I can’t get to the net, or if I get absorbed in other projects, I miss e-mail from people that I would like to be able to respond to more promptly, and then I wind up feeling like an idiot. And I am not in favor of any technological advancement that makes me feel like an idiot.