Schedule

Schedule

Saturday, May 25

1369504800 The Tech Guy

Sunday, May 26

1369591200 The Tech Guy
1369605600 This Week in Tech

Monday, May 27

1369674000 Tech News Today
1369688400 Home Theater Geeks
1369693800 Frame Rate

Tuesday, May 28

1369760400 Tech News Today
1369764000 MacBreak Weekly
1369774800 The Giz Wiz
1369778400 Before You Buy
1369785600 All About Android
1369792800 NSFW

Wednesday, May 29

1369841400 FLOSS Weekly
1369846800 Tech News Today
1369850400 Security Now
1369857600 This Week in Google
1369864800 Triangulation
1369875600 Ham Nation

Thursday, May 30

1369933200 Tech News Today
1369936800 Windows Weekly
1369944000 iPad Today
1369951200 Know How...

Friday, May 31

1370019600 Tech News Today
1370023200 This Week in Law
1370030400 The Social Hour

Saturday, June 1

1370109600 The Tech Guy

Sunday, June 2

1370196000 The Tech Guy
1370210400 This Week in Tech

Monday, June 3

1370278800 Tech News Today
1370293200 Home Theater Geeks
1370298600 Frame Rate

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This Week in Law

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Tech News Today

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This Week In Computer Hardware

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Ham Nation

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Know How... 23

Podcast 101

December 13 2012

Find out everything you need to know to start your own podcast in today's episode.

The first thing you need is a topic for a show (and you don't always need that). After you do or don't have a topic, you should record it.

Recording
You'll need to record your audio with something. Most laptops these days have microphones built-in. You could just record audio with your smartphone.

Recording by yourself on a computer? Audacity is a free, cross-platform audio recorder and editor. For microphone options: Leo suggests the Plantronics .Audio 655 as a headset. Alternatively, you can use an XLR to USB adapter from Shure: Shure X2u. The adapter will allow you to use a wider variety of microphones with your computer.

If you want to use a computer and have others on the show, Skype is always useful. The tool Iyaz uses most is Call Recorder from ecamm for Mac OS X. It costs $20, but it records both video and audio, comes with a load of useful tools and is constantly updated (almost as fast as Skype is). Leo likes Pamela Call Recorder, which offers free Skype recording for up to 15 minutes. There are paid options available as well.

Editing
Before editing, we recommend using Levelator to even out your audio. Even if you're by yourself on your podcast, your volume could vary. You just have to drag and drop an AIFF or WAV file to Levelator and the program automatically brings quiet speech up to an audible level without you having to do anything. It's free and is cross-platform as well.

Once you've got your output file from Levelator Audacity is great editor for trimming your podcast or adding music or sound effects. Audacity can also be used to compress your file to something more manageable. If you want to make mp3s out of your audio file, you will have to download the LAME MP3 encoder, which is available for free. Instructions are available here.

Once your podcast is exported, give it a listen. If you don't want to listen to it, why should others?

Publishing
Where are you going to host your podcast? A number of blog services allow you to upload files up to a certain size for free. Iyaz is a fan of Posterous for setting up a blog that can act as your podcast home. Alternatively, you can upload your podcast to Archive.org, which will host your files forever for free.

From there, get the RSS URL from your blog and feed that into FeedBurner. FeedBurner has great tools for podcasting. We use FeedBurner because it acts as an intermediary between your podcast and podcast directories. We suggest submitting your FeedBurner feed to places like iTunes so if you ever change where you host your podcast, you can simply tell FeedBurner and it will do all the redirection for you.

And there you have it. You've got the know how to start a podcast.