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Description

Welcome to the longest show I've posted to date. On average these shows
run about 15 minutes and when they've gone overĀ  3o minutes I tend to
break them into parts. The main reason for the length, which is about
52 minutes, is the inclusion of multiple comments and excerpts from
presentations from PAB. My main goal here is to give you a sense of the
event, which is quite unique among conferences. But the downside is how
much time it adds to the show. And editing multiple interviews
complicates the production process. Even up to the last few hours
before posting I found some errors that required me to rerecord some
sections. Most of the changes are changes in attributions, another time
sink in production, which I got wrong on the first recording pass.



I'm satisfied with the final show, even though it's long. If it's a
bother, let me know, I'm compressing it down as much as I can. In the
future, I'm thinking about using Apple's AAC format, which makes mp3
files smaller but retains higher quality. It also allows me to bookmark
and add graphics, but, as far as I know, AAC files only play on iTunes
and iPods and I don't want to exclude any listeners. Any thoughts?



Because I am including a number of voices besides my own I've added a note at the bottom of the blog that indicates the type of Creative Commons license I'm using, which is attribution, non-commercial, share alike.
I'll talk a little more about CC in a future show, right now understand
that you can use all or part of this show as long as you include the
name of the speaker and where the audio came from. You can't sell it
and if you include any part of it in your own podcast you are bound by
the same license. Thanks to Connie Crosby for pointing me the the right direction on this topic, for some reason I find the legal aspects of publishing baffling.



This show is about my experience at Podcaster's Across Borders
and begins with my personal thoughts about the event. Halfway through I
have some excerpts of presentations and some brief commentary on what I
took away from the experience and then I finish with a series of
interviews I recorded at the end of the weekend as the room slowly
emptied. It was a great experience and I've put in a lot of effort
trying to put into words what it all meant, because, as I try to
explain, PAB wasn't your regular new media conference. Lots of people
were trying to figure it out besides me. Check out the comments on David Peralty's blog and you'll see a wide range of reactions.

If
you're just interested in the excerpts I've got the timecode listed
below. In addition, all the presentations will be posted at Podcaster's
Across Borders throughout the summer. Subscribe!

I've also
listed the names and URLs of all the people mentioned or heard in this
show. Some have podcasts, some blogs and some are thinking about it.

If
there was any message or call to action people took away from the event
(and there was plenty) one of the most important was find your voice
and share it. I second that.

Contents:




Links:

Conference attendees and presenters who have kindly allowed me to record and post their comments in this show: