The History of
the iPod Podcast
What is now called a podcast traces
its orgins to the
first ipod podcasts, the creation of
distributed mp3 files
that could be downloaded and played on
Apple's music
player, the iPod. When the iPod came out, and
users
discovered what a wonderful thing it was for
holding
music, some people had the idea of loading things
that
weren't necessarily songs. Some of the people that
got
their hands on the iPod took the route of
reverse
engineering the iPod and loading on different
firmware,
or operating system, but others had the idea of
sharing
small sound files that could be played on the iPod.
The
technology for distributing the files already
existed,
with RSS feeds. RSS feeds were a means of
generating
machine readable files that could share
information
between a server and a user. Many blogs already
used
them to keep readers up to date with the latest posts,
but
some hopeful podcasters had the idea of enclosing
links
to sound files within the RSS feed and downloading
the
file to the computer.
With the change in RSS feeds, ipod
podcast took off,
and podcasting became a popular way to share
files.
Users saw podcasting as a way to become radio
hosts,
or dj's, and a variety of podcasts began popping
up.
Software was written to automatically check the
RSS
feeds, extract the links to the podcast episodes,
and
download the files. These programs became known
as
podcast clients.
By this time, podcasting had moved
beyond the ipod,
and they were not simply making an ipod
podcast
anymore. Some people had figured out how to use
even
the PlayStation Portable gaming console as a
podcast
player. It was more difficult that downloading
podcasts
to the ipod, since the PSP used a different format for
it's
files, but PSP podcasts began popping up. In
addition,
podcasting made inroads to the wider audience
of
people without iPods, who simply saw podcasting as
an
extremely convenient way to receive news, music,
and
entertainment over the internet.
Today, while the iPod podcast type
still exists, fewer
people subscribe to podcasts as a way of
gaining
portable media files they can listen to
anywhere.
Although that is still an attractive part of
podcasting, it
seems to be eclipsed by the ease with which
podcasting
has become a content delivery system. Now,
podcasting
has become tied up with the rising number of audio
and
video blogs, where blogging is done not by post,
but
through media files uploaded to the blog. These
blogs,
and podcasting in general, take advantage of
the
shrinking cost of broadband internet connections,
and
the rising number of people with high speed access
to
offer a picture of the internet rich with multimedia
files.