Podcasting Officially a Word 281
goldseries writes "The BBC is reporting that the New Oxford American Dictionary is
adding podcasting to the dictionary. A year ago it was rejected because not enough people were reading it, but, in a ode to the speed of technology's growth, it is being declared the word of the year. Podcasting has been in the Oxford Dictionary of English since last summer. Podcast beat out words such as lifehack and rootkit for inclusion in the dictionaries. I guess no one needs to know what a rootkit is."
Food for thought... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a word that was ubiquitous some number of years ago. Can't say I've heard anyone use Xerox as a verb in quite a while. Now it's copy or photocopy. Podcasting will go the same way, eventually. I seriously doubt it will take more than 10 years, much less 50.
Re:Food for thought... (Score:5, Insightful)
Quite possibly. Remember how 'Hoover' became a generic term for a vacuum cleaner? How 'walkman' became a generic term for a portable personal cassette player?
I would not be surprised to see 'iPod' becoming a generic term for digital audio players - or, if Apple defends its trademark as well as it probably will, the obvious corruption to just plain 'pod'. The increasingly widespread currency of the word 'podcast' might well cause this to happen more quickly. If you can listen to podcasts on it, it's a pod, right? Not an iPod, because that's only the Apple ones, but a pod nonetheless...
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
I would, simply because there is one already that everyone uses: "MP3 player". Wherever it plays MP3s or not (the Sony ones that played only their craptastic format were still generally called MP3 players). Surprising maybe, since it's two words and MP3 isn't exactly a wizbang-cute sounding word, but there you go.
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Wow. You mean you actually know somebody who doesn't own one?
When is he going to start bragging about it on the Internet, like those nutty crackpots who choose not to own TV sets and can't shut up about it?
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
I guess to be part of hte in crowd I better go burn a good 250$ right now, eh?
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
You can get a mp3 player for 20$ if you want...
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:3, Insightful)
The way everybody was so close and friendly with each other on New York subways before the invention of the Sony Walkman? The world you live in sounds like it must be really nice. I wouldn't know, as I've never seen it.
Seriously, you sound like a total ass when you assume that you KNOW the reason why other people bought their iPods. I can o
Re:Food for thought... (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's where we disagree I suppose. I've heard this term used by a wide range of people, in billboard advertisements, TV adverts... Heck, check the MediaMarkt audio and video [mediamarkt.de] page and see where the iPod is (hint: click on "Die beliebtesten MP3"). Saturn has the iPods in their "MP3 section." The term "MP3 Player" is very widely extended, where "everyone" stands for a large portion of the general population (sure,
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Hi can I get a coke?
What kind?
Mountain Dew, please.
Re:Food for thought... (Score:5, Insightful)
Marry N'uncle, a swivven'd comely wench shall tell thee by the nonce.
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Food for thought... (Score:2)
Pah (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Pah (Score:2, Interesting)
Right. can someone explain to me the difference between new trendy "podcast" and the old "ftp" or "scp" or "http" that we use for everything else? It's the same old technology just dressed up and marketed by Apple under another name. Hell, you don't even need Apple or an iPod to be involved in listening to these audio broadcasts.
It's a marketing gimmick.
Re:Pah (Score:5, Insightful)
Convenience. Back in the early 90s, I remember many remarks like yours about the new WWW. "Can someone explain to me the difference between this new trendy "world wide web" and just downloading files by ftp? It's only text and gifs anyway". Yes podcasts are all just mp3s and xml. They're also one hell of a lot more convenient, in the same way that anyone sane would rather go to www.site.com/index.html instead of manually downloading some text with references to half a dozen images and then go hunting down the images it referred to.
Podcast = find a show you like, subscribe. listen.
Audio Download = find a show you like, find how to download it from that particular site, find how often it's updated to know when to check again, download it, move it to your player/audio device, listen.
Admittedly neither is much different to the other for one single download of one episode. or two. perhaps three, but when you find ten separate podcasts you quite like listening to each episode of, you're bound to just throw it in the too-annoying-to-continue-with basket. This kind of automation benefits the listeners who keep getting their shows easily, and the casters themselves who don't have to continually get their audience to go through a rigmarole of steps just to hear the show. Radio doesn't make you do that.
Re:Pah (Score:5, Informative)
Apple really did do something good when they added podcasts into iTunes. Since iTunes is basically the only "official" way to get music onto an iPod anyway (and the one used by most people who own one), the whole podcast thing is made completely simple. You find a podcast in iTunes.. anyone can get their podcast in there, it doesn't take a license agreement or anything with apple, just an available feed that you tell them about. Every time you load up iTunes to resync your iPod, it automatically goes and downloads any new episodes of all of your podcast subscriptions. No bookmarks, no checking back on each one at different web sites for each one (imagine checking 20 websites a day, all for a different podcast, just to see if one updated). Just load up iTunes, update all of your podcasts, update your iPod, and you're good to go. I know on a mac anyway just plugging in the iPod will do all of those steps for you, as usually the default action to an iPod being plugged in is to run iTunes and update it.
Now granted, the end result of automatic podcast updates through iTunes will get you the same as if you went to those 20 different sites and downloaded sperate mp3 files from each and manually put them all onto your iPod (or other mp3 player I suppose), but it's not as easy. And this is where you sound the most silly.
It's exactly the same thing with a distribution method tacked on.
Well DUH! That's the key! Distribution methods are super important, that's what the grandparent was pointing out! Who wants to go and download each element of all web pages you travel to as all of their seperate components and put them together themselves when you can just use a web browser that does all of that for you? An easy distribution method will make a technology go from something that's "neat" that a bunch of geeks will toy with, to something that the general population will jump on.
Re:Pah (Score:5, Informative)
No. You don't get it. You don't have to go find it and download it, You don't have to check back periodically, you don't have to copy it to your iPod, you don't have to bookmark anything, yes it does magically appear on your iPod. You do have to figure out how to find it the first time, but hey. if you can't find something by typing in a search term on the iTunes Music Store and clicking "subscribe" you've probably already been institutionalized.
As you hinted at by saying "barring an RSS feed" that's just what the xml side of a podcast is. an RSS feed that podcasting software (like iTunes) takes, and then does everything you need automagically.
Plugging the iPod in to charge it kickstarts all the syncing behind your back. Yes, magic, once you've done that first step of finding a podcast you like and going "ooh. I like that" and clicking subscribe. Done. Nothing else to be bothered about except listening to it.
Re:Pah (Score:2)
Re:Pah (Score:2)
For the geeks, that might be the path, but if you're using an iPod anyway, it probably makes more sense to look the podcast up on iTMS via iTunes. That mechanism is no harder than buying music, which sev
Re:Pah (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Could you please clarify? (Score:3, Informative)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Of course, I must be too stupid to be posting on Slashdot if I bother to argue with a trolling Anonymous Coward whose tinfoil hat is a bit too tight.
Re:Pah (Score:2, Informative)
internet radio or webradio.
podcasting is kind of funny to me. 2600 and other have been doing it for much longer than podcasting has even been thought of.
what kills me is the lamer Adam Curry still tries to claim ownership of it. Yay a washed up hasbenn VJ that is trying to hijack something that has existed for a long time now.
Re:Pah (Score:2, Troll)
I see no reason to litter my language with advertisements for what I maintain is a poor product (runs on proprietary software, lacks important features, remarkably expensive, Apple's terms of service with iTunes—what is commonly used with an iPod—change after the purchase [eff.org]).
Re:Pah (Score:2)
a "podcast" is not an "audio download". or rather, that's only part of it. it's also important that it be potentially time-shifted, (at least sorta) subscription based, and automated downloads.
now my real questions is: what do we do when they get it wrong? they've defined it as explicitly being music; i'm subscribed to several podcasts, and only one ha
Including rootkit would be more consistent (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks to Sony and the like, there are more than enough people running a rootkit, so include the word already...
New Oxford Japanese Dictionary (Score:3, Funny)
Needed in the Japanese version for the Sony employees (music/CD division).
Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:3, Interesting)
There's nothing particularly special about it.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:5, Informative)
If you're going to be cynical, be properly cynical and stop using words that sound like buzzwords but mean absolutely nothing.
A podcast is an RSS feed with the URL of an audio file in each entry.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
The mainstream media have been using the term for years. Well known pop groups have done entire concerts as webcasts.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
well for audio you'd certainly hear the difference.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
podcasting is actually time-shifting, where you
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
Nice hack with the spoken email BTW. I'm still wating for festival, or even Microsoft's TTS software to sound half as good as Apple's PlainTalk voices did back on System 7 in 1994.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
I'm a little surprised you haven't heard of webcasts - the word has been been around for a long time.
I'm mildly amused that you accuse me of using buzzwords whilst defending 'podcast' - a word clearly designed for the call-all-mp3-players-ipods crowd.
an RSS feed with the URL of an audio file in each entry
You don't think that is not more accurately described by the existing word webcast? The RSS feed is going to be delivered via http, server by a web server.
At no point is an iPOD neccessary - so Why TF
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
There's a few good reason to call it a podcast.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:3, Informative)
Broadcast, podcast, webcast all rhyme, they all end with cast.
2. Many people download podcasts so they can listen to them on their portable music player.
I agree - but so what?
3. The most popular portable music player today is the iPod
Riiiiiiight. But again, so what?
4. iTunes is one of the most pop
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's less words. It's entered the public consciousness as Podcast. Apparently, "birthplace", "bump", "torture", "olympian", and "mountaineer" weren't discrete words till Shakespeare coined them [about.com] and they entered the public consciousness.
Remember, language is a forever mutating beast and will continue to do so, whether you like it or not.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:3, Funny)
I was dismayed to learn that Shakespeare coined the odious terms marketable and gossip, but all is well because he also apparently gave us addiction, aroused, zany and puking - four words I couldn't have made it through college without.
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why does podcasting need its own word? (Score:2)
Here [kernel.org] is one of the earliest "podcasts" I can find. When will the iPod have aiff and au support?
$sys$ROOTKIT (Score:5, Interesting)
FYI, if you anagram Podcast, you can come up with 'Stop a CD'
Other Technical Words.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Other Technical Words.. (Score:2)
Rootkit is in the New Oxford American Dictionary.. (Score:5, Funny)
Excuse me? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Excuse me? (Score:5, Insightful)
The point is that it's such an easier interface for the end user that it has become popular in its own rights. Technically, television is movies, just in your home and not in a movie theatre, but that doesn't mean that there shouldn't be another word describing it because the interface is different.
And what's with the attitude that a dictionary is some sort of sacred document that should only include words that you think means something special? Is it the third-grade teacher mentality, which says that "ain't" isn't a word, despite its common usage? The great thing about dictionaries is that they can include all forms of words, and give you the proper instances for use. In the example above, the Oxford English Dictionary says:
A proper dictionary should include words that people want to understand the definition of. If everyone is using the word podcast, and you don't know what it is, a dictionary might be a good place to look it up, especially nowadays when dictionary information is available online so can be distributed faster.
=Brian
Re:Excuse me? (Score:2)
I dunno if he is full of crap or not, but at least he wasn't anal about it. It makes sense too, there is no reason to use ain't for 'is not' when isn't is just as short and is more proper.
Re:Excuse me? (Score:2)
"Youse", on the other hand, drives me nuts. It's y'all or nothing.
Re:Excuse me? (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not even generic - it was created in part based on a modern day product. If anything, it should be going into a slang reference guide not a dictionary.
There are many words in the English language that started out as brand names. Common examples are kleenex and band-aid. Its not surprising that words based on brand names for computer hardware, software, or processes have made it into the Oxford dictionary.
Will "podcast" be used 10 years from now? (Score:2)
Surely there will be more sophisticated audio distribution methods in the future...
But a vacuum cleaner is an entirely different thing... a product that started as a service industry and was revolutionized by turning it into a portable appliance for home use.
Vacuums for the removal of particulate matter from air are a revolution in fluid dynamics and basic application of scientific principles.
Podcasts are... FUCKING AUDIO FILES ON A WEBLOG.
Durrrrrr....
You are oh so right.... (Score:4, Insightful)
No, no non-techies should have to know about this. They ought to live in a world where it is ok to listen to a CD you bought legally in a normal shop.
podcast or blogcast? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:podcast or blogcast? (Score:2)
Please kill me now... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Please kill me now... (Score:2)
What's the big deal anyway? The ubiquity of MP3 players, the invention of RSS, and the ease with which a person can record audio/video makes the invention of an online audio feed inevitable; it has to be called SOMETHING, and podcast is as good as any.
A podcast is the online equivalent to an independent newspaper, except that the delivery mechanism, the medium, and the subscription are all online.
Personal On Demand Casting is now official word! (Score:2)
english has no "official" anything (Score:2, Interesting)
if you think to yourself "He can't possibly have an argument to support that statement!" You probably misread the statement.
All I have to say is... (Score:2)
Re:english has no "official" anything (Score:2)
"never" is an absolute that isn't true about your statement.
Why? It works fine for Scrabble(TM).
Re:english has no "official" anything (Score:2)
In order for the game to be played, there is only one baseball. Does this mean footballs do not exist?
"Never" is factual. The exaggeration comes from not having placed limits on what constitutes "information" (though from the context of the article, it can be derived by anyone). The purpose of the second sentence seems to have been lost on you.
Re:english has no "official" anything (Score:2)
"Dictionaries never were and never will be a source of information about the english language!"
Good thing they're useful as firestarter!
By the way, it should be "English" language...look it up if you don't believe me. =)
Different Strokes (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Different Strokes (Score:2)
News (at least for me) (Score:3, Funny)
Re:News (at least for me) (Score:2)
Give me a break (Score:2)
Lifehack? (Score:2)
Depends which country (Score:5, Funny)
Rootkit - sounds like some sort of fuckfest preparation guide!
Reminds me of... (Score:2)
Re:Reminds me of... (Score:2)
Dictionaries don't OFFICIALLY make things words. (Score:3, Insightful)
The author could have told us this (Score:2)
Dictionary.com Main Entry: podcasting
Part of Speech: noun
Definition: the Web-based broadcast of music which works with software that automatically detects new files and is accessed by subscription
Etymology: 2004; iPod + broadcasting
Podcasting is a temporary solution (Score:3, Insightful)
When iPods and other mp3-players have constant Internet access, "podcasting" will be about as common as people taping radio feeds on their cassette deck to play later. Hardly something requiring a new word.
how much did Sony pay... (Score:2)
Yay! (Score:2)
Congratulations Slashdot, yet again you've fallen victim to the Apple marketing machine. Podcasting wasn't invented by Apple [wikipedia.org], they just want you to think it was. Even Oxford terms it "a digital recording of a radio broadcast or similar program, made available on the Internet for downloading to a personal audio player". The word itself is stupid; you don't need an iPod to podcast (even though many are going to think the 'pod' part is refering to an iPod, it means any portable media player) and you don't h
What's in a name. . . a lot. . . (Score:2)
Most people listen to broadcasts, so listening to 'podcasts'
Re:Product word? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Product word? (Score:2, Funny)
Ehr... To me it sounds dirty. Like something one would do on a toilet...
Re:Product word? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Product word? (Score:2)
Anyway, anyone and Calvin knows that verbing weirds language.
Re:What!? (Score:5, Insightful)
Results 1 - 10 of about 74,600,000 for podcast. [google.com]
Results 1 - 10 of about 8,480,000 for rootkit [google.com]. So obviously podcast has more currency, and I think in the non-tech media the ratio would be much higher.
Re:What!? (Score:4, Interesting)
Only approximately 4.5 million users will be using podcasts by the end of 2005. [informationweek.com]
Up to 24 million users may be infected by the SONY rootkits [eff.org]. In addition, there ARE other rootkits out there...
Ah, well - I just felt like being a smart-ass.
Re:What!? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What!? (Score:2)
I Googled it and got nothing.
do that google search 5 years ago (Score:2)
Not in the Oxford Compact (Score:2)
Re:Bollocks (Score:2)
We have some excellent radio stations in the UK, that are better quality than 99% of podcasts, so I can't see podcasting getting popular here. In the US it's different - from what I hear they basically have no good radio at all.
Re:Bollocks (Score:2)
Re:Podcast all you want...Is anyone listening? (Score:2)
Top two on itunes at the moment:
1. The Ricky Gervais Show (Guardian)
2. The Best of Moyles (BBC)
It's nice to know that you colonials can get our british radio shows now and seem to like them...
Re:One slight error in article: (Score:2)
I dunno if I would mod that flame bait, judging from the pic in the article, OP seems pretty informative to me. Really gives meaning to the phrase "has a face for the radio."