- Oct 2024
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- Sep 2024
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podcasts.reclaimed.tech podcasts.reclaimed.tech
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https://podcasts.reclaimed.tech/@ds106radioSummerCamp
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- Aug 2024
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www.austintypewriterink.com www.austintypewriterink.com
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thesiswhisperer.com thesiswhisperer.comPodcasts1
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https://thesiswhisperer.com/podcasts/<br /> On The Reg (OTR) is a podcast about Work, with an academic slant.
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- Jul 2024
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ericweinstein.org ericweinstein.org
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The Portal A podcast hosted by Eric Weinstein, The Portal is a journey of discovery. It is wide ranging and deep diving discussions with distinguished guests from the realms of science, culture and business. Join us as we seek portals that will carry us through the impossible- and beyond.
The Portal
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- Jun 2024
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disruptedjournal.postdigitalcultures.org disruptedjournal.postdigitalcultures.org
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Comment by drneilfox: Hello. This is my first entry. Dario and I plan to create a podcast that has three elements:
1) A formal exploration of the podcast form using our own podcast as a case study. 2) A discussion around academic research and the podcast. 3) A discussion around the 'disruptive journal' featuring input from JMP contributors.
The aim is to construct a text that operates as a viable and valid piece of research and also is reflexive regarding the changing nature of academic research.
We will be talking in person late July following some leave and will be emailing disruptive JMP participants shortly to invite them to participate.
For now I listening to podcasts to prepare, and recommend the latest NPR Invisibilia episode on problem solving, and any episode of the brilliant Longford Podcast.
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- Dec 2023
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www.linkedin.com www.linkedin.com
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Matt GrossMatt Gross (He/Him) • 1st (He/Him) • 1st Vice President, Digital Initiatives at Archetype MediaVice President, Digital Initiatives at Archetype Media 4d • 4d • So, here's an interesting project I launched two weeks ago: The HistoryNet Podcast, a mostly automated transformation of HistoryNet's archive of 25,000+ stories into an AI-driven daily podcast, powered by Instaread and Zapier. The voices are pretty good! The stories are better than pretty good! The implications are... maybe terrifying? Curious to hear what you think. Listen at https://lnkd.in/emUTduyC or, as they always say, "wherever you get your podcasts."
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7142905086325780480/
One can now relatively easily use various tools in combination with artificial intelligence-based voices and reading to convert large corpuses of text into audiobooks, podcasts or other spoken media.
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- Nov 2023
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soundcloud.com soundcloud.comSeason 81
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https://soundcloud.com/tao-of-wao/sets/season-8
Podcast of the We are Open co-op<br /> https://blog.weareopen.coop/
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- Sep 2023
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a16z.simplecast.com a16z.simplecast.com
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https://a16z.simplecast.com/episodes/a-true-second-brain-xrODaBD2
Recommended by Michael Grossman
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- Jun 2023
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welshclass.wales welshclass.wales
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https://welshclass.wales/podcast%2Fpodlediad
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web.hypothes.is web.hypothes.is
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I always like to point to a text that changed my thinking about this question, and that’s Kathleen Yancey’s “Writing in the 21st Century.” It basically states that students are writing more than ever before. If you were to challenge a group of students (which I have) to document how many text messages, TikTok, IG posts, Facebook posts, tweets, emails they send out in a day, the sheer volume of writing is staggering. Why we don’t value that writing in academia is the question for me.
interesting point! some other things in my head:
1) in addition to our increased writing endeavors, we've also been engaging in extensive reading as well, but our reading material has evolved beyond books, encompassing the plethora of content available in the vast expanse of cyberspace
2) and while the quantity of reading has expanded significantly, it is equally intriguing to recognize that the nature of these texts has shifted towards shorter formats—tweets, ig post captions, microblogs, etc
3) AND lastly, the act of reading has swiftly evolved into the realm of listening, with the emergence of podcasts, audiobooks, listenable videos, and similar forms of content consumption
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- Mar 2023
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twodads.fm twodads.fm
- Jan 2023
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wiki.rel8.dev wiki.rel8.dev
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https://wiki.rel8.dev/tools_for_thinking_podcast
see also: https://www.betaworks.com/media
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- Dec 2022
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t73f.de t73f.de
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Am 4.1.23 werden wir ab 18 Uhr online mit den anderen Teilnehmern besprechen, wie wir das Format weiter entwickeln wollen. Wir haben es schon einmal Zettelcast getauft, ein (verteilter) Podcast rund um Zettelkästen.
https://t73f.de/blog/2022/zettelcast/
Detlef Stern, Klaus Kusanowsky and others are doing a distributed podcast cleverly called Zettelcast on 2023-01-04 starting at 18:00.
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- Nov 2022
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www.listennotes.com www.listennotes.com
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micro.blog micro.blog
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JohnPhilpin I have read a number of questions from people in different communities I am part of, asking for Podcast recommendations. I don’t think it is an easy question to answer. 1) There are millions of these puppies 2) Because I like something doesn’t mean you will 3) My recommendations this week might be different next - because 'moods' 4) and and and I wrote this post as a starting point. Happy to share my current OPML with anyone who wants it - add a comment below - or email me. Happy to offer my thoughts on what you might like if I know more about what you like. I won't typically offer BIG NAME podcasts.
https://micro.blog/JohnPhilpin/14165886
@JohnPhilpin Recommendations can often come cheap, particularly on iTunes where everyone begs for reviews. I prefer hearing about what people actually listened to. What did you invest your time in/on? This is why I sporadically maintain what I call a faux-cast or a feed of podcasts and audio I've actually listened to: https://boffosocko.com/2018/03/08/podcasts-of-things-ive-listened-to-or-want-to-listen-to/
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- Oct 2022
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www.betaworks.com www.betaworks.com
- Sep 2022
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www.kpcc.org www.kpcc.orgAirTalk1
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https://www.kpcc.org/show/airtalk<br /> Audio RSS Feed: https://www.kpcc.org/show/airtalk/rss.xml
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- Aug 2022
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podcasts.apple.com podcasts.apple.com
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- Jun 2022
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thrivingonoverload.com thrivingonoverload.com
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https://thrivingonoverload.com/episodes/
This podcast looks interesting and relevant to the tools for thought space.
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- Apr 2022
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www.janeausten.pludhlab.org www.janeausten.pludhlab.org
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baseball
For a long time, Austen's use of the word baseball in Northanger Abbey was cited as its first appearance in the English language. But as this episode from the podcast The Thing About Austen explains, this was a mistake. Co-hosts Zan Cammack (she/her) and Diane Neu (she/her) address past speculation regarding Austen's role in the invention of this word, while providing illuminating historical context about Regency sports (Did Austen's contemporaries play baseball?), gender (Was it socially acceptable for women to play cricket and baseball?), and the supposed "all-American" game (If it was common in Britain, when did baseball makes its way into American national identity?).!
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- Feb 2022
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www.thedriftmag.com www.thedriftmag.com
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“This American Life” and “Radiolab,” and maybe narrative podcasting as a form, are inspiresting.
I agree -- they're larely without substance but "interesting" and "inspiring". Which is not necessarily a bad thing.
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- Oct 2021
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theliturgists.com theliturgists.comEvents1
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THE SUNDAY THING
The Sunday Thing
The love of money is the root of all evil
This week, Michael Gungor asked us to discuss money in our breakout groups.
Money is power
We outsource our power and authority to those who claim to have greater access to capital, because we underestimate and undervalue our own social influence, economic capacity, and political agency. The entreprecariat is designed for learned helplessness (social: individualism), trained incapacities (economic: specialization), and bureaucratic intransigence (political: authoritarianism). https://hypothes.is/a/667dOC0bEeyV6Itx3ySxmw
Indigenous cultures in Canada were disempowered by outlawing the cultural practice of generosity (potlatch) and replacing the practice with centralized power over the medium of exchange: money. Money is a mechanism of disempowerment.
Money is a shared story we tell ourselves about what has value. https://www.npr.org/transcripts/795246685
We translated “ekklesia” as church. It is the deliberative body of the experiment in democracy in Athens, Greece. The people who are figuring out how to live together in the commons. The work of the people. The Liturgists.
The Story of Money
In this hour, On the Media looks at the story of money, from its uncertain origins to its digital reinvention in the form of cryptocurrency.
On the Media: Full Faith & Credit
Squid Game
People were also discussing Squid Game.
Squid Game was on my mind today before the call. “The reality of the history of Canada’s mining industry makes #SquidGame look like child’s play.” https://twitter.com/bauhouse/status/1449726452098682881?s=20
The truth is that all of the gold that was mined out of the Klondike was under Indigenous land. There was no treaty with any of Indigenous peoples in the Yukon.
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www.wnycstudios.org www.wnycstudios.org
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In this hour, On the Media looks at the story of money, from its uncertain origins to its digital reinvention in the form of cryptocurrency.
The Story of Money
Ten autumns ago came two watershed moments in the history of money. In September 2008, the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers triggered a financial meltdown from which the world has yet to fully recover. The following month, someone using the name Satoshi Nakamoto introduced BitCoin, the first cryptocurrency. Before our eyes, the very architecture of money was evolving — potentially changing the world in the process. In this hour, On the Media looks at the story of money, from its uncertain origins to its digital reinvention in the form of cryptocurrency.
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twitter.com twitter.com
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The reality of the history of Canada’s mining industry makes #SquidGame look like child’s play.
“The truth is that all of the gold that was mined out of the Klondike was under Indigenous land. There was no treaty with any of the Indigenous peoples in the Yukon.”
“That land was stolen by the Canadian state and that gold was whisked away by private interests. The Federal Government only signed land claims with Indigenous peoples in the Yukon in the 1990s, but by that point, almost all the gold had been mined out of the ground.”
“The Klondike gold rush was a rolling disaster that captured tens of thousands of people. When the first European explorers came to the Americas, they came here looking for gold. In the 1890s, that lust for precious metals eventually led men to the farthest reaches of this continent.”
“Today, instead of 100,000 people descending on a small patch of land, you have large corporations digging treasures out of the ground. But the legacies these mining operations leave behind are just like what happened in the Klondike: workers with broken bodies, environmental destruction, the dispossession of Indigenous land, sexual violence. The gold rushes never stopped. They just morphed into something different.”
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www.canadaland.com www.canadaland.com
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When gold was discovered in the Yukon, 100,000 people desperately tried to make it to a small patch of land in one of the most remote environments on the continent. Few made it all the way. The Klondike Gold Rush was many things: a media conspiracy, a ponzi scheme, a land grab. But above all, it was a humanitarian disaster that stretched over much of the Pacific Northwest.
“The truth is that all of the gold that was mined out of the Klondike was under Indigenous land. There was no treaty with any of the Indigenous peoples in the Yukon.”
“That land was stolen by the Canadian state and that gold was whisked away by private interests. The Federal Government only signed land claims with Indigenous peoples in the Yukon in the 1990s, but by that point, almost all the gold had been mined out of the ground.”
“The Klondike gold rush was a rolling disaster that captured tens of thousands of people. When the first European explorers came to the Americas, they came here looking for gold. In the 1890s, that lust for precious metals eventually led men to the farthest reaches of this continent.”
“Today, instead of 100,000 people descending on a small patch of land, you have large corporations digging treasures out of the ground. But the legacies these mining operations leave behind are just like what happened in the Klondike: workers with broken bodies, environmental destruction, the dispossession of Indigenous land, sexual violence. The gold rushes never stopped. They just morphed into something different.”
Canada is Fake
“Canada is not an accident or a work in progress or a thought experiment. I mean that Canada is a scam — a pyramid scheme, a ruse, a heist. Canada is a front. And it’s a front for a massive network of resource extraction companies, oil barons, and mining magnates.”
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resilience.pub resilience.pub
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Failure is a part of the process of learning.
Design for Resilience
Podcast
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castbox.fm castbox.fm
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Free upload and storage. It’s the simplest way to get started with podcasting.
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app.stackbit.com app.stackbit.com
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Podcaster
Stackbit has added a Podcaster theme
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soundcloud.com soundcloud.com
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Design for Resilience is not a podcast just for professional designers. This a podcast for human beings, who may have forgotten that they are creative. We build our personal resilience by first remembering that we are all designers.
I just published my first podcast episode.
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help.anchor.fm help.anchor.fm
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Create an Apple Podcasts Connect account
Submitting your podcast to Apple Podcasts for distribution
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builderscollective.com builderscollective.com
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A podcast about resilience inspired Caleb Chan to compose this theme music, incorporating a heartbeat and a world music influence.
Design for Resilience
Exploring how we imagine, design, and build the future together.
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soundcloud.com soundcloud.com
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Exploring how we imagine, design, and build the future together.
A podcast about resilience inspired Caleb Chan to compose this theme music, incorporating a heartbeat and a world music influence.
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podcasters.apple.com podcasters.apple.com
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Apple Podcasts for Creators
Today, I am learning about podcasting. Where to start? How about Apple?
First, sign up as an individual, Stephen Bau, under the company name, Builders Collective.
We're setting up your account.
This could take up to a day, so check back later. When we're finished, you can start adding shows.
I wonder why people use foot marks rather than apostrophes in their typography. Apple, you should know better.
Minutes Later
There's nothing here — yet.
You haven't added any shows yet. Click Add Show to get started.
Choose a Show Type
You can publish a show on Apple Podcasts with or without an RSS feed, so the first step is to pick the type of show you want to distribute. Note that you’ll be able to add paid subscriber audio to either kind of show.
Add a show with an RSS feed
Your show will be available on Apple Podcasts or anywhere you distribute your RSS feed. This is the best option if you want to manage episodes through your podcast hosting provider.
Add a show without an RSS feed
Your show will only be available on Apple Podcasts. This is the best option if you want to manage episodes in Apple Podcasts Connect and offer a subscription.
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sandyandnora.com sandyandnora.com
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At the beginning of this episode, Sandy Hudson tells Nora Loreto about a podcast on NPR, Invisibilia.
The episodes that I listened to were about an anti-news news website in Stockton, California. How news has shifted and changed.
The Invisibilia episode is entitled, The Chaos Machine: An Endless Hole.
I ended up following this rabbit hole all the way to The View from Somewhere podcast episode featuring a discussion of Hallin’s spheres. Truly fascinating!
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podcasts.apple.com podcasts.apple.com
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journalism historian David Mindich
The View from Somewhere
Hallin’s spheres
At 11 minutes into this podcast episode, David Mindich provides an overview of Hallin’s spheres.
Hallin divides the world of political discourse into three concentric spheres: consensus, legitimate controversy, and deviance. In the sphere of consensus, journalists assume everyone agrees. The sphere of legitimate controversy includes the standard political debates, and journalists are expected to remain neutral. The sphere of deviance falls outside the bounds of legitimate debate, and journalists can ignore it. These boundaries shift, as public opinion shifts.
I learned about this podcast from Sandy and Nora in their episode, Canada’s democratic deficit.
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www.kickstarter.com www.kickstarter.com
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A podcast about journalism with a purpose.
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www.lewispants.com www.lewispants.com
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The podcast focuses on the troubled history of “objectivity” and how it has been used to gatekeep and exclude people of color, queer and trans people, and people organizing for their labor rights and communities.
I learned about this podcast through Sandy and Nora.
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www.unboxyourworld.com www.unboxyourworld.com
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Where philosophy meets tech.
Design Philosophy
This seems to be the space that I occupy on the edges of design education and practice.
Maria Selting of Unbox Your World podcast has just shared the raw audio of our conversation to get feedback before she publishes the episode, Redesigning Design: Applying UX Principles to Design a Better Future.
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edgeeffects.net edgeeffects.net
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The Edge Effects podcast features interviews with scholars, scientists, activists, and artists who engage with questions of environmental and cultural change.
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www.humanetech.com www.humanetech.com
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A Whirlwind Week of Whistleblowing
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www.wnycstudios.org www.wnycstudios.org
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From a six hour service outage to a senate whistleblower hearing, the PR disasters keep mounting for Facebook.
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onezero.medium.com onezero.medium.com
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Literally everyone is just following orders from the machine.
Fascist Architecture
See Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil by Hannah Arendt.
“It spells out so clearly that Nazi Germany’s worst atrocities and many atrocities the world over were not only the ideas of singular evil men. They were supported and enacted by systems, by groups of people who woke up in the morning and went to offices to work on it.”
— Avery Trufelman, Nice Try! Podcast
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Magazine of the Bauhaus Movement
On September 8, 2021, I received an email from Orhan Cakir, Managing Director, Bauhaus Movement:
Dear Stephen…
I wanted to let you know that from November we will be publishing the Bauhaus Movement Magazine every 3 months. I would like to have an interview with you and your activities regarding the Bauhaus in Canada. The magazine is published in several languages and regions. Can you imagine a collaboration?
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drillednews.com drillednews.com
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The fossil fuel industry helped to create the PR industry, and publicists came up with disinformation and manipulation tactics that they deployed for oil, tobacco, and chemical companies for decades.
This is the missing curriculum in design education.
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Drilled, her climate change podcast, is in its sixth season, with more than a million downloads.
I am inspired by Amy Westervelt’s deep exploration of the history of public relations, advertising, and marketing to polish the reputations of billionaires and fossil fuel corporations in her podcast, Drilled.
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oneworld-publications.com oneworld-publications.com
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I recently found this book at Value Village while exploring the non-fiction books section. What caught my eye was the back cover’s reference to Sallie McFague. I learned about Sallie McFague from Tripp Fuller’s podcast, Homebrewed Christianity, when she died. He dedicated an episode to her influence. Her name also came up in conversation with Sophia at the Faith, Arts + Culture course at Bez Arts Hub.
When I read the title of the article, *The World as God’s Body,” I decided to purchase the book. I have been exploring this theme as it relates to the Gaia hypothesis in articles such as, A Prayer for the Earth.
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shop.bauhaus-movement.com shop.bauhaus-movement.com
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Bauhaus Podcast
Let’s shape our future, together.
The Bauhaus Podcast is a place for creative thinking We officially announce the launch of our new Bauhaus Podcast.
This podcast, where experts, users and professionals share their practical knowledge and experiences, is entirely dedicated to Bauhaus architecture, design and science in all its facets.
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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The Daily is part of my ritual of learning through long-form journalism in an audio format what is top of mind for many Americans. I was raised on American exceptionalism that was piped into Canada through several media channels: TV, radio, music, books, movies, etc.
Jacques Ellul called this Propaganda and The Technological Society.
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bauhouse.medium.com bauhouse.medium.com
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Because at the end of the day, all structures are, in some ways, ideology made manifest.
Avery Trufelman ends her podcast series, Nice Try! with these words in an episode entitled, Germania: Architecture in a Fascist Utopia.
One person’s utopia is another person’s dystopia.
The structure of the mind becomes the architecture of our reality. This thought became the foundation for a mental model for human experience, since these architectural plans for utopia seem like good ideas on paper, but when we live inside these structure in our daily reality, we realize that we have constructed our own mental prisons, the iron cage envisioned by Max Weber.
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It spells out so clearly that Nazi Germany’s worst atrocities and many atrocities the world over were not only the ideas of singular evil men. They were supported and enacted by systems, by groups of people who woke up in the morning and went to offices to work on it.
Avery Trufelman ends her podcast series, Nice Try! with these words in an episode entitled, Germania: Architecture in a Fascist Utopia.
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- Sep 2021
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I was wondering if anyone had thought to explore the idea of podcasts as a source of ethnographic or user experience research. Instead, I found a case study about the user experience of podcast listening.
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thinkingabouttoolsforthought.com thinkingabouttoolsforthought.com
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https://thinkingabouttoolsforthought.com/episode-005-interview-with-chris-aldrich/
This didn't turn out too badly for a half an hour. As ever I dislike listening to my own voice.
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iwillteachyoualanguage.com iwillteachyoualanguage.com
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www.whatifworldpodcast.com www.whatifworldpodcast.com
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Kids Podcast
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- Aug 2021
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mentalpivot.com mentalpivot.com
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https://mentalpivot.com/more-solutions-for-taking-podcast-notes-a-survey-of-the-apps/
Nothing much better here, but interesting to see that a handful of apps at least support something.
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mentalpivot.com mentalpivot.com
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https://mentalpivot.com/solutions-for-taking-notes-when-listening-to-podcasts/
I definitely need a better way of doing this myself. Not a fan of paying $5/month for NoteCast. Airr is iOS only.
Sharing the link from the app with timecode seems the best, but it would be nice to have the transcription piece as well.
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- Jul 2021
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www.airr.io www.airr.io
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Highlight & share the best moments from podcasts
This could be interesting for annotating and sharing data from podcasting. Sadly nothing for Android yet.
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- Jun 2021
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postlight.com postlight.com
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Recommended by [[Maggie Appleton]].
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- Apr 2021
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www.amplifimedia.com www.amplifimedia.com
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44% of all podcasts have produced three or fewer episodes.
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- Mar 2021
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publicinfrastructure.org publicinfrastructure.org
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<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Jeremy Cherfas</span> in IndieWeb chat (<time class='dt-published'>03/11/2021 14:46:39</time>)</cite></small>
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twitter.com twitter.com
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Dante Licona. (2020, December 8). What can NGOs, government and public institutions do on TikTok? Today @melisfiganmese and I shared some insights at #EuroPCom, the @EU_CoR conference for public communication. We were asked to talk about upcoming social media trends. Here’s a thread with some insights👇 https://t.co/GzOA66vstQ [Tweet]. @Dante_Licona. https://twitter.com/Dante_Licona/status/1336303773334069251
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- Oct 2020
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www.listennotes.com www.listennotes.com
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I don’t want to build yet another Podcast player app. I don’t want to trap listeners to Listen Notes. You come to Listen Notes and find the Podcasts or Podcast Episodes that you want to listen, then you leave Listen Notes to use your favorite Podcast player app to listen. Under this principle, Listen Notes shows RSS & brings traffic back to official websites of Podcasts. Many Podcast-related sites don’t show RSS, because they want to build a walled garden to make visitors stay there as long as possible.
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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Podcast listening can be harder to crack. There are so many shows! How do you find the ones you’ll like? And once you’ve found a show, where do you start: with the most recent episode? At the beginning? Some specific gem of an episode buried deep in the back catalog?
Perhaps start with making the RSS feeds easily discoverable?! I just spent 20 minutes doing some reasonably serious web gymnastics to extract the RSS feed for Caliphate (https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/podcasts/caliphate-isis-rukmini-callimachi.html) out of the iTunes feed using a JSON request tactic. Why can't the podcast's main page have or advertise the raw RSS feed?!
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- Jan 2019
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kottke.org kottke.org
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Seeing White. Recommended by a reader, this 14-part series on race and whiteness is essential listening.*
This is also one of the best things I consumed this past year.
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- Jul 2018
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alistapart.com alistapart.com
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People can post about what they’re actively listening to (either on their personal websites or via podcast apps that could report the percentage of the episode listened to) and send “listen” Webmentions to pages for podcasts or other audio content.
At some point, I'd love to have this built in automatically. I listen to (too many) podcasts and audiobooks. I'd like to have this automatically create a "Listen" post on my site.
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- Sep 2017
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Their path to that goal just looks—well, sounds—a bit different. It’s less a reinvention of the wheel, more a technological advancement. “The successful long-form print piece, the successful television documentary, the successful podcast will all be built around storytelling and narratives of people who are affected by what’s being investigated,” says Stephen Smith, executive editor and host of APM Reports.
The medium will change, the basics of journalism and storytelling have not. Now all we need is CNN to do more storytelling and use AJ+ for some source material.
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- Jun 2017
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bryanalexander.org bryanalexander.org
- Jul 2016
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journal.disruptivemedia.org.uk journal.disruptivemedia.org.uk
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Hello. This is my first entry. Dario and I plan to create a podcast that has three elements:
1) A formal exploration of the podcast form using our own podcast as a case study. 2) A discussion around academic research and the podcast. 3) A discussion around the 'disruptive journal' featuring input from JMP contributors.
The aim is to construct a text that operates as a viable and valid piece of research and also is reflexive regarding the changing nature of academic research.
We will be talking in person late July following some leave and will be emailing disruptive JMP participants shortly to invite them to participate.
For now I listening to podcasts to prepare, and recommend the latest NPR Invisibilia episode on problem solving, and any episode of the brilliant Longford Podcast.
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