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Sunday, April 24, 2005

Blogs: it's all happening in Paris

Lesblogspariss1After this week's article in Wired about the strength and dynamism of the blogosphere in France, a new and even bolder indication of the massive adoption of the new media in the country is finally coming tomorrow, with the Les Blogs conference in the Sénat. As participant n°76, I'm looking forward to stimulating and enlightening speeches and discussions, catching up with familiar faces, meeting new ones, all while thinking outside-the box on tomorrow's Internet and looking beyond at the crossroads of technology, people and communities.

See you in a couple of hours!

Saturday, April 16, 2005

Videos à la Flickr

Video_googleLess than a month after Yahoo bought new-generation photo-sharing site Flickr, Google has just unveiled it own vision of content-sharing ... for videos. Through its Video Upload Program, it is adopting the same concept of a publication website (powered by its video search engine) and an uploader (or should I say Uploadr? :-) ). The interesting twist is that as a user you can set a price for the homemade videos you have uploaded, thereby opening the commercial doors to the content at the further end of the Long Tail. What seems to be currently missing however is the ability to enforce a specific form of copyright to one's own videos (such as Creative Commons).

Is Google thinking of turning itself as a search-powered, C2C platform - just like Ebay did for auctions and Craig's List for classified, albeit this time for searchable and indexed content? Only time will tell as the service is in its early stage, but as the technical barriers around videos on the web are disappearing one after the other (codecs, hosting, bandwidth...), this is the logical next frontier...

Friday, April 15, 2005

The business of podcasting

PodshowsIn the blogosphere, one of the latest focus of interest has been around podcasting, the innovative way of publishing, aggregating, syndicating and enjoying music online. As it is riding on both the wave of the booming digital audio player market (over 5 million iPods sold by Apple in its 2005 second quarter, and the strong competition with the 70% market leader driving the market even upper), and the ever-increasing readership and overall credibility of blogs as a content platform (just ask Rupert Murdoch), it is not surprising to see large media companies and content owners beginning to embrace the phenomenon: for instance, the BBC has been doing podcast trials and the "three podcasts were downloaded as MP3 files a total of 270,000 times in the first four months of the trial".

Again in the UK comes up Podshows, which I discovered this morning through DMeurope: two UK DJs, Paul Gambaccini and Tony Blackburn have started what is supposedly the first commercial podcasting service. Basically, it is an hybrid concept at the crossroads between a radio and a podcast repository. For roughly the same price as a legal download at one of the digital music stores out there, radio segments can be streamed on-demand or downloaded to digital players (through audio aggregators like iPodder). While the library is still in early stages, there is definitely potential in bringing both the niches at the end of the Long Tail along with households names and the top charts.

With such a service breaking the traditional barrier of instantaneity of radios and reconciliating broadcasting with downloading, I can but look forward to seeing more radios jumping on the bandwagon and adopting this concept. And what about a cross-over of Podshows and Last.fm?

Update (via Loïc): speaking of the BBC, it has just announced that it is expanding its podcasting trial to 20 more radio shows.