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iPods and The
First Podcasts
Podcasts actually began when Apple came out with their iPod
player. Files were created that could be distributed as MP3
files and then downloaded to the iPods. iPods were able to
hold music and much more. iPods were any easy way to have the
music people wanted with them all the time. They could
download these files and store them on a very small player to
be heard again and again. However, as people became more
comfortable with using iPods, more than just songs were loaded
into them, such as pictures, videos, and clips. People began
using iPods as a way to hold many types of media in one
player.
So, as time went on people figured out how to load different
operating systems onto their iPods allowing them to use them
for so much more. Now they could be used as applications and
hold even more data. However, other people wanted to simply
share their files and be able download other people's files.
This was not a problem, since RSS feeds were already around
because they were used for blogs and other text updates. The
RSS feeds coding was slightly changed and what was developed
were links and other data were put into them of the sound or
video files. These files then could be read by the iPod and
shared and downloaded by users in the same way that the RSS
feeds worked with blog updates.
Conclusively, with the availability of files that could be
shared and updated by RSS feeds, podcasting took off.
Podcasting has now developed into a way for anyone to create
comedy shows, be a dj, or even be a host of a show. New and
different podcasts are created daily. From music videos to TV
programs to news and radio station episodes. With so many
podcasts being created, there needed to be a way for people to
receive updates regularly. That is where podcast clients came
in. Podcast clients have coding in them to check the RSS feeds
for updates and then to automatically update them. The podcast
client has all the subscription feeds that the user is
subscribed to and the client continually searches for new feed
updates and then automatically downloads. This eliminates the
need for users to have to go through files and go to websites
looking for new podcast episodes.
With so much technology, people were able to begin using other
media players in the same way as the iPod. Practically any MP3
player can play podcasts, even PlayStation Portable gaming
systems are able to read RSS files and play the podcasts.
iPods are of course still used for playing podcasts, however
now media players are being made that can read RSS feeds and
it is becoming a regular feature with these devices.
Podcasting is being used for more than just media file sharing
and storing and has become popular as a very quick way to
deliver information from one person to another. Podcasting and
blogging are becoming intertwined with each other, using the
low cost of connecting and the number of people online now a
days. |