Podcast (Wordhole): Difference between revisions

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This should become the Wordhole entry page on 'podcast'.
===Definition===
'''''podcast [noun]'''''
 
A broadcast accessible as a digital audio file that can be downloaded from the Internet and played on a personal device. [Wikipedia] It is a portmanteau of the words broadcast and iPod. [Oxford Reference]
 
'''''to podcast [verb]'''''
 
Is "to record something as a podcast". [Cambridge Dictionary]
podcasting [noun]
Is the activity of making a broadcast and putting it on the Internet. [Oxford Learners Dictionary]
 
===Personal definition===
A (weekly and not necessarily self-contained) broadcast live or pre-recorded at Radio WORM, Rotterdam that is uploaded to our own server and the mixcloud site of Radio WORM where it can be streamed online.
 
===Sidestory/Mentioned in===
The term dates back to 2004 when it was first mentioned by columnist and BBC journalist Ben Hammersley in The Guardian and later that year by Danny Gregoire who introduced it in the iPodder-dev mailing list in an audioblogging community from where it was used by Adam Curry who was later credited for popularizing podcasting and therefore called the Podfather. [Wikipedia]


[[Category:Wordhole]]
[[Category:Wordhole]]

Revision as of 15:39, 11 October 2023

Definition

podcast [noun]

A broadcast accessible as a digital audio file that can be downloaded from the Internet and played on a personal device. [Wikipedia] It is a portmanteau of the words broadcast and iPod. [Oxford Reference]

to podcast [verb]

Is "to record something as a podcast". [Cambridge Dictionary] podcasting [noun] Is the activity of making a broadcast and putting it on the Internet. [Oxford Learners Dictionary]

Personal definition

A (weekly and not necessarily self-contained) broadcast live or pre-recorded at Radio WORM, Rotterdam that is uploaded to our own server and the mixcloud site of Radio WORM where it can be streamed online.

Sidestory/Mentioned in

The term dates back to 2004 when it was first mentioned by columnist and BBC journalist Ben Hammersley in The Guardian and later that year by Danny Gregoire who introduced it in the iPodder-dev mailing list in an audioblogging community from where it was used by Adam Curry who was later credited for popularizing podcasting and therefore called the Podfather. [Wikipedia]