No, it’s not a cousin of the ipad, and it’s pronounced  ”eye- paaaydio”, not “i -patio”.

It’s a terrific new technology that I love, and talked about a few weeks ago here. But I thought I’d dive a bit deeper and learn more. Earlier this morning, I interviewed the CEO of ipadio, Mark Smith. (good friend Aaron Strout also did a nice review of ipadio here as well)

Have a listen below. (if anything, us Yankees will love his English accent)

We talk about:

  • The resurgence of audio use with mobile phones. How businesses and individuals can gather  and share real-time content using ipadio. (think news and sports reporting- you instantly produce and share interviews and updates. ESPN, CNN, NYTimes, take notice
  • Quite simply, audiocasting, or as they call it, “phlogging”, is a easier, and much more efficient and and inexpensive alternative to video.
  • Geo-location and ipadio.  The topic du jour. You’ll notice that this podcast originated in the UK.
  • Everyone has a smartphone, why not use the smartphone for what it is optimized for?
  • And take a peek at Mark’s favorite pastime- how does he fit into this car?!!!

really small jaguar

PrintFriendly
Tagged with:  

imgname--newspaper_death_roll---50226711--whokilledthenewspaper2I continue to be fascinated by the struggle of mainstream news media and the explosion of local media

Some really interesting statistics for you here, courtesy of Paul Gillin . He gave a terrific (and very well received) presentation at last week’s Inbound Marketing Summit. ( For a link to his presentation on slideshare- click here)

The average age of a US Daily Newspaper is 57 years old
Average age of a network evening news viewer- 63 years old
US Newsrooms staffs have been reduced 45% since 1991

Or as Paul put it very well,  “It’s not the newspapers that are dying, it is the readers!”

So, where does that leave us? It leaves us with a the hyper-local social media movement. Citizen journalists are now blogging their news from every small town across the country, and big-time old-school establishments are now taking notice. Companies are popping up that seek to collect and aggregate local content from local bloggers onto a consistent platform.

So, I did a little digging, and found the following four companies (and there are plenty more) who are making a go of it.

www.patch.com- NY/NJ/CT- tri state area so far. (Founded by AOL CEO Tim Armstrong) Nice intuitive, easy interface. My favorite so far.
www.everyblock.com- as the NY Times calls it- “the most ambitious hyperlocal sites out there” It’s got a nice iphone App, but I don’t consider this service hyperlocal at all. They simply focus on big cities (for now) and not their surrounding communities. I’d did a quick search for my local community- nothing came up.
www.topix.com- They certainly get local, but not impressed with all the google ads. A really messy page bombarding you with ads for my credit score, viagra, and refinancing.
www.backfence.com. They’re gettin’ there- now it looks like a virtual yellow pages. No content- yet.

So, this leaves us with a final question. What’s going to happen to the local blogger? Should I start blogging for my local town?

My friend Rachel Happe from The Community Roundtable suggested to make a go of it. I can videotape local businesses, post content, tell stories, and well, see what happens. I’m tempted to, but will www.patch.com swoop in and take over?

Hmmmm….

PrintFriendly
Tagged with: