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blogsTweaking the Drupal RSS Feeds to Download an Entire Audio ArchiveSubmitted by kentbye on Fri, 2006-02-03 18:26. audio | Development | DrupalI want to publish more interview audio, but I need to make a modification to Drupal before I do -- and I might need some PHP coding help to do it. I want to be able to have an RSS feed that people can pop into iTunes at any time and download all 86 of my interviews.
I need to have my audience be able to very quickly and easily have access to all of my source material by copying one feed into an audio aggregator and let it do a bulk download of all the files. Expecting people to download each interview is out of the question -- there are too many. I could split it up separate feed sections, but I want to make downloading all of the files as easy as possible with four easy steps:
And so I imagine that this will require a relatively simple Drupal module or "PHP node" that can produce the necessary XML data to do the trick. I welcome any help in making this happen since it seems like it should be a pretty useful feature to have. I specifically need to take all of the nodes that have the "Interview Audio" tag, and produce the RSS code to send down the Feedburner feed. The issue is that my regular feed is limited to displaying 25 posts -- and I also have the full text selected. This means that this Drupal only displays the last 25 posts for all of the feeds, but for the posts tagged with "Interview Audio" I want it to display the last 86 posts. I also don't want to send the full text down the "Interview Audio" feed because I plan on posting the entire transcript with each audio file, and this would inevitably exceed Feedburner's bandwidth limit by the time I would reach the 86th post. So either I need to dig into the Drupal code myself and hack something together, or I need to find someone who can help out. I'm going to assess the solution until I run into a road block, and then I can start publishing more interview audio. Below I've posted the code for the module... What I Have, What I Need & What You Can Do To HelpSubmitted by kentbye on Fri, 2006-02-03 16:58. Development | Status | VolunteerMomentum is building for The Echo Chamber Project, and it is time to share my assessment of What I Have. What I Need. And What You Can Do to Help. I believe that I've collected a critical mass of value, and I'm hoping to leverage this towards taking this ambitious project to the next level. My biggest need at the moment is help recruiting PHP developers to help implement some of the collaborative editing infrastructure for sequencing sound bite sequences. This infrastructure will enable even more people to get involved. The biggest thing that everyone interested in helping out can do is to start listening to the Interview Audio (via Audio Feed or All Media Feed) that I'm publishing as well as reading through these interview transcripts. I am going to need your help with making sense of all of this information and insights that I've collected once the tools are finally in place for you to do so. The more familiar you are with the material, the more that you'll be able to get involved and participate. So take a look at the assets that I've gathered below, and think about the following:
Finally, let me know that you're listening by either sending me an e-mail at Kent@KentBye.com -- leaving a comment below -- or signing up as a user to this site. *** WHAT I HAVE ***
*** WHAT I NEED FOR THE SHORT-TERM ***
*** WHAT I NEED FOR THE LONG-TERM ***
* * * * * * * * I know that's a lot of stuff, but this interview material, technology assets and theories that I've gathered has the potential to snowball and manifest every single one of these desires. We can do this together. So what's your next step for helping it happen? Releasing All Interview Audio Soon -- Help by ListeningSubmitted by kentbye on Fri, 2006-02-03 16:58. audio | StatusI will be publishing more Interview Audio as soon as this technical issue is resolved. So please subscribe to the Interview Audio Feed -- or the more inclusive All Media Feed -- and start listening. There is 50+ hours worth of quality information and knowledge that I've collected so far, and people need to start digesting it. That's because I'm going to need your help with editing sound bite sequences -- as well as gathering a larger context for the footage by you becoming familiar with material and then sharing what it means to you through the various mechanisms that are put into place. So I'm going to be releasing the audio in the following four chunks.
The first three chunks are the solution-oriented interviews that are investigating how to more tightly integrate the latest new media trends into journalistic practices. The are all of fairly short 5 to 25-minute interviews that I conducted at conferences throughout 2005 and 2006. The bulk of the 45 sit-down interviews were conducted during the summer of 2004 right after the New York Times Mea Culpa, and before all of the media controversies leading up to the 2004 election. These were much more extensive and in-depth 30 to 90-minute interviews focusing on both the systemic and specific problems with the media during the build-up to the Iraq war. So hopefully the technical development of the collaborative filmmaking infrastructure will eventually be completed and converge with a large community of volunteers who have listened to the source material and are all eager to start editing sequences together for the first-ever, massively scalable collaborative documentary. Community Audio: Kent Bye Interview by Robin GoodSubmitted by kentbye on Fri, 2006-02-03 16:44. About | CommunityAudio | KentBye | PR | Status![]() New Media trendspotter Robin Good conducted a 24-minute interview with me last week talking about pre-war US media, the collaborative aspects of The Echo Chamber Project, and the Open Source Intelligence Conference that I attended. Good has put together the most comprehensive launching pad to The Echo Chamber Project so far filling by his post with a lot of good pointers and graphics. He introduces me and the project by saying:
Check out the rest of the post, and the complete transcript for the interview here. Some Pioneering Efforts in Independent Film DistributionSubmitted by kentbye on Wed, 2006-02-01 11:43. Distribution | Economics | Editing | Film | PRNow that it is so cheap to produce and distribute your own multimedia material, the value added provided by distribution companies is not as much as it used to be. The Internet has shattered the previous barriers for distributing video and information around the world, which has created an information explosion. And as Herbert Simon says, "a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention." So the mainstream media companies and movie distributers are now competing with individual bloggers, podcasters and videobloggers for the attention of audiences. And so instead of pre-filtering gatekeepers deciding what will and will not be published, now anyone can publish anything and it is up to post-filtering systems like Amazon's recommendation systems or word of mouth that is built up from a network and community of followers. Below are a few pointers to how this environment is changing the field of film distribution... Dynamically Creating Sound Bite Sequences with SMIL & DrupalSubmitted by kentbye on Tue, 2006-01-31 18:33. audio | Development | Drupal | Editing | playlist | SMILVICTORY! I am now able to dynamically generate audio metadata and have it be recognized by Quicktime as an edited sound bite sequence! This is a HUGE breakthrough for my collaborative editing schema. Here is a demo of a sequence of three sound bites that have been excerpted from longer audio files and strung together. I've found a way for Drupal to automatically edit sound bite sequences without having to generate any text files or generate muxed audio files that need to be written to the server.
More details below... Interviews from an Open Source Intelligence ConferenceSubmitted by kentbye on Wed, 2006-01-25 16:24. citizenjournalism | IntelAnalysis | Journalism | Open Source | Theory | trends | VlogI attended a conference on Open Source Intelligence and collected over 3 hours of interviews from the 10 of the presenters. My citizen journalism coverage was looking through the following two lenses:
FYI:You can use this feed to download all of the interview audio. More information below... Interview Audio: Peter Morville, Information Scientist, Information Architecture Pioneer & Author of "Ambient Findability"Submitted by kentbye on Wed, 2006-01-25 15:12. findability | informationarchitecture | Interview | InterviewAudio | KM | opensourceintelligence![]() (22:23 / 6.4 MB / Subscribe to Interview Audio) Listen to an interview with Peter Morville. More information on the Open Source Intelligence conference here. Transcript Coming Soon. Interview Audio: Stephen E. Arnold, Technology Consultant and Author of "The Google Legacy"Submitted by kentbye on Wed, 2006-01-25 15:07. digg | Google | Interview | InterviewAudio | Journalism | opensourceintelligence | Social | technology![]() (30:57 / 7.5 MB / Subscribe to Interview Audio) Listen to an interview with Stephen E. Arnold. More information on the Open Source Intelligence conference here. Transcript Coming Soon. Interview Audio: Robert Young Pelton, Adventurer, Journalist and Author of "The World's Most Dangerous Places"Submitted by kentbye on Wed, 2006-01-25 15:05. fundamentalism | Interview | InterviewAudio | opensourceintelligence | peace | propaganda | war![]() (19:26 / 5.6 MB / Subscribe to Interview Audio) Listen to an interview with Robert Young Pelton. More information on the Open Source Intelligence conference here. Transcript Coming Soon. |