Thought this might interest all of us vintage Mac fans - here's
somebody talking about his Mac OS 9 setup that he uses to produce one
of Sweden's most successful podcasts on cars:
http://www.macos9lives.com/create-a-podcast-on-mac-os-9
* note the URL says "http", so it's not behind encryption. Feel free to visit and read it inside your favorite retro browser :-)
On 2024-11-17 16:18:49 +0000, Sebastian P. said:
Thought this might interest all of us vintage Mac fans - here's
somebody talking about his Mac OS 9 setup that he uses to produce one
of Sweden's most successful podcasts on cars:
http://www.macos9lives.com/create-a-podcast-on-mac-os-9
* note the URL says "http", so it's not behind encryption. Feel free to visit
and read it inside your favorite retro browser :-)
A "podcast" is really just a sound file. It can be created or listened
to on almost anything with sound capabilities, the version or type of
OS is irrelevant. You could make a podcast on an old Commodore 64
without any real trouble.
The name "podcast" probably needs to be consigned to history, since
Apple no longer makes iPod devices. :-( Maybe they should now be
called something like "pre-recorded audio shows".
In article <vhdjjq$qco8$[email protected]>,
Your Name <[email protected]> wrote:
On 2024-11-17 16:18:49 +0000, Sebastian P. said:
Thought this might interest all of us vintage Mac fans - here's
somebody talking about his Mac OS 9 setup that he uses to produce one
of Sweden's most successful podcasts on cars:
http://www.macos9lives.com/create-a-podcast-on-mac-os-9
* note the URL says "http", so it's not behind encryption. Feel free to visit
and read it inside your favorite retro browser :-)
A "podcast" is really just a sound file. It can be created or listened
to on almost anything with sound capabilities, the version or type of
OS is irrelevant. You could make a podcast on an old Commodore 64
without any real trouble.
The name "podcast" probably needs to be consigned to history, since
Apple no longer makes iPod devices. :-( Maybe they should now be
called something like "pre-recorded audio shows".
Very true! But when you want something that sounds professional and
"radio like", a Commodore 64, recording to tape on the kitchen radio or recording onto someones answering machine doesn't really cut it. You
want to some audio processing, editing and do *something* that adds some
kind of production value to the sound.
But yeah, it's just a sound file. If you don't care about sound quality
you can surely use whatever with recording capabilities to do it.
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