How to synchronize your podcasts with Windows Media player

Want to see how to use this feature the cool way?
Watch this video using your Windows Media PlayerCheckout the video for a step-by-step demonstration!
(And let me know if you experienced any difficulties)

If you don’t have an iPod but you want an easy way to synchronize your podcasts with your Pocket PC or any other MP3 player, you can configure Windows Media Player to automatically sync newly downloaded podcasts and even deleted podcasts.

It took a little while to monkey around with this but I got it to work and it works like a charm. Check out the video I’ve put together and let me know what you think!

If you don’t want to watch a video, here’s what I did:

  • Set Podcatcher directory
  • Set WMP additional directory
  • Create new auto playlist
  • Insert removable media
  • Edit sync settings
  • Assign playlist
  • Open properties of removable media
  • Uncheck convert files
  • Check create hierarchy & start sync

Use your favorite Podcatcher to automatically download new video and audio tips as they come! Subscribe to the Podcast and automatically download new video and audio tips as they come!

Bullies move to text messaging

I guess where there are kids, there are bullies. And where there are bullies, there’s a nonprofit organization funded by your tax dollars that’s telling us the obvious: it’s wrong.

Apparently 1 in 5 kids gets bullied electronically and text messaging is the most popular. A report by NCH gives you an idea of what kids are saying to each other, which sounds very much like what we used to say to each other back when I was a kid (except the “we’ll burn your house down” part):

“You’ve got ‘you’re big, you’re fat, you smell and nobody likes you’ right through to ‘we know where you live and we’re going to burn down your house and you’re going to die'”

In fact, there’s even a Web site: http://stoptextbully.com/.

Need more info? Cnet has a good article on it.

So what’s the solution? It’s the same one today that is used to be a long time ago: beat the crap out of the bully. Except now instead of fists, it’s hacking geeks to the rescue! Shut ’em down, boyz!

Podcasting for schools: a natural application

Clearly, podcasting can be a huge benefit for schools. I can think of a few applications right off:

  • Classes (obviously)
  • School announcements
  • Teacher reports to the parents
  • Guest speaker presentations
  • Internal School news magazine
  • Faculty development

Here’s an article written by Russell Educational Consultancy and Productions, “Exploiting the educational potential of podcasting“. Take a read and post your comments here. Thanks to Podcasting News for catching this one.

iPodder’s last breath: a new update

You just gotta love the guys at iPodder, makers of a great podcatcher (I use it and love it). They know they’re toast because iTunes is coming and of course MS can’t be too far behind (if not ahead???). So what are they doing? They’re goin’ out with style by delivering the lastest version 2.1 with a collection of cool features as posted by Podcasting News:

  • In response to user voting on the ipodder-dev mailinglist, one-click subscription support has been enabled
  • Ability to synch subscriptions to remote OPML files (works with feedmanagers like podnova)
  • Auto cleanup: Ability to specify on a per-feed basis that older episodes should be cleaned up.
  • Genre overriding in iTunes.
  • New right-click option for feeds: Open downloads folder
  • Right-click menus in the episodes and downloads tab link to show notes and hyperlinks found within RSS item description.

Way to go iPodder team! You guys rock! You should have made tons of money and been able to retire by now. I’m very sorry to report that you only got a few scraps in your cookie jar instead. I don’t think this is a good example of the Open Source model.

iTunes 4.9 with podcatching coming really, really soon

If you heard Adam Curry’s “Daily Source Code” yesterday you heard him mention that iTunes is coming in two weeks or less.

Get ready all you podcasters for the avalanche of 38Million iTunes desktops coming to a podcast near you. I hope this means my stats will crank up another notch!

Got Acrobat 7.0? Get Patch.

Adobe Systems rolled out patches for security vulnerabilities found in Adobe Reader 7.0 and 7.0.1, and in Adobe Acrobat 7.0 and 7.0.1. From Infoworld:

According to Adobe officials, the vulnerability is within the Adobe Reader control. If an XML script is embedded in JavaScript, it is possible to discover the existence of local files, according to a security advisory from the company. An attacker could then maliciously use the gathered information. But the statement pointed out that the local files can be found only if the attacker knows the complete file names and paths in advance of such an attack.

Get your update from:
http://www.adobe.com/support/downloads

Build your own Web command with YubNub

I just found out about an interesting new service YubNub that allows you to use and create “command line” stuff for the Web.

So for example, if you do Google image searches, you simply type in “gim flower” into YubNub and you’ll get it.

What’s neat-o about YubNub is that it’s a “social” command line which lets you create commands that get added to YubNub’s dictionary.

In fact, I created a command too:

Google has this neat feature where you can search for the definition of a word by searching for “define:word”. So, I created a YubNub command for it, “gdef”. So if you want a definition of say, podcasting, you type in “gdef podcasting” and voila!

I don’t know if this will catch on or if it’s just a Geek Toy. For now it’s a Geek toy to me.

Your credit card number: it’s everywhere you don’t want it to be

You should call your bank/credit card company and find out if your card was one of the ones recently stolen. This CNET article left me shaking my head for a few reasons:

The data security breach, possibly the largest to date, happened because intruders were able to exploit software security vulnerabilities to install a rogue program on the network of CardSystems Solutions, MasterCard International spokeswoman Jessica Antle said. The program captured credit card data, she said.

“install rogue program” is code-word for “some dumb*ss let a trojan horse get installed”.

The probe also found that the Atlanta-based payment processor did not meet MasterCard’s security regulations. CardSystems held onto records that it should have discarded, and it stored transaction data in unencrypted form, Antle said.

Now, whose fault is it that CardSystems continued (and continues) to operate? I caught a GMSV article quoting CEO John Perry that they retained all those excess records for “research” purposes? Research on what? To sell to whom? WTF!

MasterCard declined to disclose more information on the breach, citing an ongoing investigation by the FBI.

Oh, that’s nice. How convenient.

The data processor’s Web site runs on Microsoft’s Windows 2000 operating system and IIS Server 5.0, which has fueled speculation that its other set-ups may also be Microsoft-based.

So, what, did they forget to install a service pack or “security” update?

Now comes the really scary part:

MBNA, one of the largest U.S. credit card issuers, said it has received information from CardSystems about exposed customer accounts. The company won’t contact the individuals affected but is keeping a close eye on the compromised accounts, said Jim Donahue, an MBNA spokesman.

Well, isn’t that special? They won’t even tell their customers that their cards have been stolen. Is that to protect the innocent, help the FBI, or just not have to deal with freaking out their customers because they’ve contracted with a loser organization?

Lest we think that CardSystems is the only loser in the group let me remind you:

Two weeks ago, CitiFinancial said tapes containing unencrypted information on 3.9 million customers were lost by the United Parcel Service while in transit to a credit bureau. …data leaks have been reported by Bank of America and Wachovia, data brokers ChoicePoint and LexisNexis, and the University of California at Berkeley and Stanford University.

Clearly, a new way of doing this has to be done. We simply can’t trust that those that hold the data can responsibly treat it.

Call your bank.

Will profit kill open source?

I just listened to this well thought-out presentation by Kim Polese of SpikeSource talking about what her company does, which is to put a smart IT-management layer atop open source components and I walk away with a couple of thoughts:

  • Very cool idea.
  • What will OSS developers who are doing this for free start feeling when they see SpikeSource start earning money on the free code they wrote?
  • How long will important software continue to be free once somebody is sitting on top of it and making money?

This will be interesting to watch. If the OSS community was based on all the developers doing it for free and being broke all as a group, then the insertion of profit taking might spoil the soup for all.

If, however, OSS was built on the faith that “code it and we’ll figure out how to make money one day” and if SpikeSource can figure out a way to help all those volunteer developers, there could be something huge here.

What could happen when you put Apple and Nokia together?

I just caught this Infoworld article that Apple and Nokia have opened up a browser partnership.

Nokia has announced that it using open source software in developing a new mobile Web browser for its Series 60 SmartPhone — and that this has been developed in cooperation with Apple.

What does this mean?

First, some obvious facts:

  • Apple knows there’s a company called Nokia.
  • Apple knows that Nokia is developing mp3 functionality.
  • Apple wants to expand iPod functionality.
  • Apple knows that pretty soon every competitor is going to get medieval on the iPod.

And now, the obvious conclusion:

  • Apple and Nokia will soon be delivering jointly-labled iPod uberphones.

(Don’t let the smoke screen of this Browser Partnersshp announcement fool you).