About these Authors
Matt May is a Web accessibility specialist, and has written on the interaction of people and technology since 1995. He keeps his own weblog at
bestkungfu.com, and produces a podcast called
Staccato, which features Creative Commons-licensed music.
Alex Williamsblogs, consults and produces unconference style events, where people immerse in DIY media. These are fun occasions, designed for people who want to get together with authors, artists, technologists and leading thinkers to converse, eat, listen to music, write, shoot photos and post podcasts and videoblogs. Alex also works with companies to establish DIY approaches, where writing, photography, voice and video come together to create new conversations and communities. Alex is currently fascinated with digital photography. His girlfriend calls him a Flickrholic. Send Alex a nice message: alexhwilliams at gmail.com.
Nicole Simon loves blogging and podcasting, dashed with an European view. As consultant she helps to facilitate such tools for business purposes or personal publishing empires. She can be found at
cruel to be kind and on her private blog
Useful Sounds.
Roland Tanglao is a well known podcasting enthusiast and a passionate advocate of blogs, RSS, and social software as a means of online expression for people, organizations and businesses. He is a prominent participant in the blogosphere and online communities and one of the founders of Bryght and as Bryght's Chief Blogging Officer reads hundreds of blogs daily. He graduated from the University of Waterloo, worked at Nortel Networks where he ran its first internal corporate blog, has has been blogging since 1999, and was the first business blogging consultant in Canada.
1. Dan Cheung on July 25, 2005 12:16 PM writes...
The July 2005 market analysis report by iPODCASTle has extremely useful podcast market information. It is currently a Free Download from www.ipodcastle.com. I think the iPODCASTle report does a better job.
The report does not contain many predictions, but more strategic market analyses with detailed assumptions. The report shows billion dollar worth market broken down in segments: 1. Serving Podcast Audience, 2. Podcast Creators and 3. Advertisers. It includes business models etc. Read more at www.ipodcastle.com.
Permalink to Comment2. John Garcia on July 28, 2005 01:12 PM writes...
iPodcastle Market Report (www.ipodcastle.com) has very well laid out assumptions, a market size analysis and a clear breakdown of the podcasting market. The Gap Analysis section of the paper points out business opportunities and ideas to play and make money in the podcasting market. The paper is available as a download from www.ipodcastle.com
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