Elsewhere Online: Bravery and Wall-e

Seth Godin has it right when he says…

“Marketing isn’t always about pandering to the masses and shooting for the quick payoff. Often, the best marketing doesn’t feel like marketing at all”

…in this short blog post on Disney/Pixar’s Wall-e. Pixar certainly provides and example we should all follow, in new media and traditional media.

Read the entire post Bravery and Wall-e

(Via Seth’s Blog.)

LIVE: Prelude to Revolution Part 3 – A July 4th Radio Play – 4pm PDT

Sunday, June 29, 2008

EPISODE 3

Prelude to 1776
“Our Lives, our Fortunes and our Sacred Honor”

Time: 06/29/2008 4:00 PM PDT Pacific — 07:00 PM EDT

Live your liberty, don’t lose it in a history book.

We are going live again this weekend!!!

This is Prelude to Revolution – May 1775, to July 4th, 1776 – a live audio production of Eclipse-1 Media.

Listen LIVE via Talkshoe

News: Joss Whedon’s New Media Musical

I saw this story today in the LA Times. While, again, it is someone who has lots of money to invest, it does show some movement into the new media world by traditional media folks.

Another story on this show — Whedon’s Web Musical Fanboy-tastic!


Teaser from Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog on Vimeo.

From The Los Angeles Times…

Joss Whedon’s ‘Dr. Horrible’ trailer hits the net
11:26 AM PT, Jun 25 2008

Below is a short trailer for “Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog,” the much-anticipated three-part musical from “Buffy” creator Joss Whedon.

“Dr. Horrible” stars Neil Patrick Harris, Felicia Day and Nathan Fillion, and Whedon describes it as follows: “It’s the story of a low-rent super-villain, the hero who keeps beating him up, and the cute girl from the laundromat he’s too shy to talk to.”

The series, comprised of three 10-minute episodes, is poised to premiere on the Internet–most likely next month. Whedon began working on it during the writers strike, and it represents his first major experiment with Web-original programming.

New Show: Mean Mommies Club

I helped (a little) in getting Megan, Valerie and Erin’s new show, Mean Mommies Club up and running today. If you are a parent, or thinking of becoming one, check it out. Here is some info from their web site about their first episode, “Crying it out” .

1. Introductions: Megan, Valerie and Erin
2. Discussion of our motto
We are mean mommies because…
We don’t give in to temper tantrums.
We make you eat healthy food.
We are ruthless with time outs.
We are mean mommies because…
We are not raising kids,
We are raising responsible adults.

3. The Rules for ourselves on the show – don’t dis hubby’s or friends, above all respect! This isn’t a complaint session it’s a discussion.
4. We love the Mean Daddies
5. Megan’s encounter with Target employee during a time out.
6. Does “crying it out” cause Brain Damage?
Dr. Mike at Pediacast
7. Major thanks to the following for helping Megan with her techtard questions. This show could not have been posted with out the help of the following people:
Jason Tucker
Douglas E. Welch
Chris Moody
8. Also thanks to Megan’s husband Craig for recording our contact information.

Tech: Do you own your domain name? The answer may surprise you

In my role as a computer consultant, I often have to deliver bad news like “Well, the hard drive is dead,” “I’m sorry, but you overwrote that important file,” or “I think it’s time for a new computer.” Frequently, in these Internet times, I have to deliver another piece of bad news. “Did you know that you don’t really own your domain name?” I am always met with incredulity, by people who realize they have no ownership rights to the domain name for the personal web sites, or worse still, their business. How can this happen? It is easier than you might think. Normally, it is because when you first set up a domain, you hired someone to do it for you.

If you set up your own domain name or know where it is hosted, along with usernames and passwords for access, you can stop reading now. You still might want to do the first step below, just to confirm your domain is yours, but chances are everything is ok. If you didn’t set up your own domain, and have no idea where it might be hosted, then continue reading and I will show you how to find that information and regain control of it.

Who “owns” your domain?

In order to use a domain on the Internet, like welchwrite.com, you need to register that name with a domain name registrar. “A domain name registrar is a company accredited by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and/or by a national ccTLD authority to register Internet domain names. These “retail” companies are often distinct from the “wholesale” domain name registry operator.” (Wikipedia.com, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name_registrar) There are hundreds of domain name registrars these days, so there are a few steps involved in getting information about your domain. Let’s begin with a service called Whois. Each domain registrar has there own version for searching domains registered there.

Let’s start our domain search at the company that was the original domain registrar, Network Solutions. Point your web browser at http://www.networksolutions.com/whois/index.jsp. Enter your domain name where indicated and click Search. In my case, the whois search returned the following results:

Domain names in the .com and .net domains can now be registered
with many different competing registrars. Go to http://www.internic.net
for detailed information.
Domain Name: WELCHWRITE.COM
   Registrar: TUCOWS INC.
   Whois Server: whois.tucows.com
   Referral URL: http://domainhelp.opensrs.net
   Name Server: NS3.SECURESERVER.NET
   Name Server: NS4.SECURESERVER.NET
   Status: ok
   Updated Date: 16-sep-2006
   Creation Date: 30-jul-1997
   Expiration Date: 29-jul-2009

This tells me that my domain is not registered with Network Solutions, but it gives me a pointer to the company that does have that information, Tucows, Inc., and a web address for their Whois service. So, now we go there. I will point out a few important sections in the printout below.

Whois info for, welchwrite.com:
Registrant:
 The WelchWrite Company, Inc.
 ****************************
 Van Nuys, CA 91411
 US
 Domain name: WELCHWRITE.COM

** NOTE: My domain is registered to my company name. Yous should be registered to your company name or your name directly

 Administrative Contact:
    Welch, Douglas  *****@welchwrite.com
    
    ****************************
    Van Nuys, CA 91411
    US
    818-***-****    Fax: 818-***-****

** NOTE: I am listed as the Administrative contact on my domain as you should be. In some cases, there might also be a billing contact which should also be you.

Technical Contact:
    Admin, Domain  dns-admin@mobreg.com
    P.O. Box 481166
    http://www.mobreg.com/
    Los Angeles, CA 90048
    US
    714-883-3299    Fax: 520-395-2884

** NOTE: This is the name of my domain name registrar and where I would go with any questions or technical issues

 Registration Service Provider:
    MobReg.com, support@sudjam.com
    818-244-3770
    http://www.mobreg.com/
    Mobreg.com is a division of Sudjam LLC. Help desk is avaiable to be
    contacted for domain login/passwords, DNS/Nameserver changes, and
    general domain support questions.

 Registrar of Record: TUCOWS, INC.
 Record last updated on 16-Sep-2006.
 Record expires on 29-Jul-2009.
 Record created on 30-Jul-1997.

NOTE: Don’t let your domain names expire or you could lose the name entirely.

 Registrar Domain Name Help Center:
    http://domainhelp.tucows.com
 Domain servers in listed order:
    NS3.SECURESERVER.NET   
    NS4.SECURESERVER.NET   
 Domain status: ok

Finally, if you, or your company’s, name and information, do not appear somewhere in this form, you do not own your domain. You have no ability to transfer the name to another registrar, point the domain name to a new web hosting company or even renew the domain. The people or company listed have complete control over your domain name and can do with it as they wish.

Sure, there is an arbitration procedure you can request, but, trust me, it is infinitely easier to own your domain from the start, rather than try to wrest its control from someone else. For more info on arbitration see http://www.icann.org/udrp/udrp.htm

Do it yourself

How do you insure control over your own domain names? First, you need to control the process from the beginning. You either need to do your own registrations or do them in the company of someone who knows how. Not only do you need to make sure all the data is entered correctly, you need to have all the usernames and passwords that you might need to make changes in the future. Even more, you should be the only one that has that information. If you need to have someone make a change for you, make sure you change the password once their work is completed.

You may not want to get so deeply involved in the technical issues of your web sites, but this is one of those areas where you must, if you want to insure the future of your web properties.

Tech: Levelator Version 1.4.0

The Conversations Network has announced the latest version of their free Levelator audio utility.

This easy-to-use program for Windows, Mac and Linux can help bring your podcast audio up to new levels of quality.

From the web site…

About The Levelator™

So what is The Levelator? It’s software that runs on Windows, OS X (universal binary), or Linux (Ubuntu) that adjusts the audio levels within your podcast or other audio file for variations from one speaker to the next, for example. It’s not a compressor, normalizer or limiter although it contains all three. It’s much more than those tools, and it’s much simpler to use. The UI is dirt-simple: Drag-and-drop any WAV or AIFF file onto The Leveler’s application window, and a few moments later you’ll find a new version which just sounds better.

Read More

News: Lend Me Your Ears: Advertisers Begin To Target Podcasts

Lend Me Your Ears: Advertisers Begin To Target Podcasts
BY PETE BARLAS
INVESTOR’S BUSINESS DAILY

Posted 6/20/2008

Podcast audiences have branched out far beyond just geeks. And advertisers are starting to like them, too.

After having placed ads with Web sites and search engines, more advertisers are starting to spread their ad dollars to audio and video podcasts in an attempt to reach certain consumers.

Read the entire article

Douglas and Rosanne participating in New Media Panel this evening

Rosanne and I will be joining some other LA New Media folks for this panel on The Future of Online Content, tonight, 730pm, at Blankspaces (5405 Wilshire Blvd, LA).

Douglas

Recorded video of the event

Live .TV show provided by Ustream


Here is the information on the panel…

Panel on the Future of Online Content
June 16th, 2008 — Tiger Team, mytvshow, online video, socialmedia, television

[I’m going to ask my panelists about this eMarketer chart from last year showing advertising spending for online video and projections until 2011. I would like to know if they are heartened or saddened by these projections, and if they think they will remain accurate. Considering that advertisers still spend around $65 Billion a year for television ads, $4 Billion in 2011 is a comparatively small piece of the pie. See Paul La Monica’s pithy blog post on these facts.]

I’m moderating a panel on the future of online video content, from the perspective of those who are actually creating online content in a professional manner. I created this panel for the premier of atelevision show I co-created for Tru TV. Rather than go on about my experiences with network television, I thought it more appropriate to look to the future, especially because my primary profession is that of emerging media specialist, not a creator-producer in the entertainment industry. After the panel I will update this post with my thoughts on the bits of wisdom from my panelists.

Panelists include:

Amanda Congdon, the host and executive producer of Sometimesdaily. http://sometimesdaily.com/ and blogger at http://amandacongdon.com
Gilad Lotan – Technologist / Digital Media, Endemol USA -http://endemolusa.tv
Ken LaZebnik from http://www.Strike.tv
Hayden Black of Goodnight Burbank: http://goodnightburbank.com and http://www.abigailsxratedteendiary.com
Michael Pilla of http://www.indieflix.com
Tim Street of http://www.frenchmaidtv.com/
Doug and Rosanne Welch, http://welchwrite.com especially with regard to podcasting

Get your script (and more) on! – Celtx 1.0

Celtx is an open source screenwriting program with great tools that easily rival commerical products like Final Draft and others. I have used Celtx to write several scripts and my television writing wife, Rosanne, recommends it to her students whenever she teaches television writing at Cal State Fullerton or UCLA Extension. Celtx 1.0 adds many new features and perfects those features we were already using. Whether you are writing TV, movies, multimedia projects or even comic books, Celtx is a great tool to get your ideas on paper.

Download Celtx

This video outlines the new features available in Celtx 1.0

iPod Ready Video

News: Tech Nation: Scott Sigler’s Book Infected

Author Scott Sigler is credited with having the first podcast novel, Earthcore. His latest book, Infected, is now headed up the book charts. In this interview, he talks about Infected, but also about how podcasting helped to establish his writing career.

Dr. Moira Gunn speaks with Scott Sigler, who talks about his bioterror thriller “Infected.” While it’s based on the premise of a biological weapon on the loose, he’s actually a modern day Charles Dickens.

Listen to this show

CIPNW gets a mention in the Austin Podcasters Group podcast

Fred Castenda, from the Austin Podcasters Group, let me know today that they have highlighted my TubeMogul screeencast demo in their latest podcast.

Thanks to Fred and the entire Austin group for the link love. (SMILE)

Demo: Tubemogul.com video distribution web site

As a video blogger, podcaster, or someone who just produces video on occasion, one important aspect is to get your video out to the largest number of viewers possible. This means uploading your video to a number sites, which can be quite time consuming.

TubeMogul.com allows you to upload and describe your video once and then have it uploaded to a wide variety of video sharing sites.

This demo shows the upload and launch process on TubeMogul.com

iPod Ready Video

Demo: Woopra.com Real Time Web Statistics

I recorded this screencast demo to show off the new Woopra.com service which provided web site owners with real-time stats for their sites.

I heard about Woopra.com via FriendFeed and user Christopher S. Penn

iPod Ready Video

Elsewhere Online: Reaper – multitrack audio production software for Windows and Mac

The Red Ferret Journal points on this new, free full functioning 30 day demo, audio recording and editing software. I have been looking for an alternative to Audacity to recommend to my podcasting students and clients, so I am looking into Reaper deeply.

As an aside, I love seeing multi-platform software is becoming more of the norm these days. I can never tell which computer I might want to use the software on, so it is great to have a choice.

Download: Reaper

Reaper – multitrack audio production software for Windows and Mac

Reaper

Reaper is a full function audio production program which comes with a shed load of features and tech smarts. The program is also tightly coded, which means no bloatware to contend with, a sure sign that someone is trying to do the job properly. Available as a fully working demo, and […]

(Via The Red Ferret Journal.)

New Media Interchange Meeting




New Media Interchange Meeting

Originally uploaded by dewelch

Wow! Tonight’s New Media Interchange meeting was better than I could have ever expected. We had a great group of people and so much conversation that the staff at Panera Bread was shooing us out the door long after official “closing” time.

I only had time to take a couple of pictures, but you can see them all on my Flickr page. Just click the photo to see more.

New Media Interchange LA Meeting Tomorrow Night – May 28 @ 7pm

We are only a day away from our first meeting of the new group, New Media Interchange.

My goal with this group is to bring together traditional and new media artists and technicians to foster the creation of new work.

I see so much wasted effort here in Los Angeles and much great creative work that is simply thrown away if it can’t find a place in the traditional media landscape. I have many friends who work on both sides of the traditional/new media world and would love to see them working together to create something instead of spending their lives pitching ideas with little to show for it.

We now have a new, open, market for our creative work and we should seek to exploit it for our benefit. Whether you are trying to create a promo piece for yourself, a show with online distribution of even an idea for a traditional broadcast television show, new media can provide you tools to get your message out to your audience directly.

Join us both online and in-person at New Media Interchange and let’s all make something special!


Please join me for the first meeting of New Media Interchange on Wed, May 28, 2008 at 7pm

The location is Panera Bread in Studio City

Ventura Boulevard
12131 Ventura Boulevard
Studio City, CA 91604
(818) 762-2226 | phone
(818) 762-5566 | fax

They have several good spaces indoors, a large patio and free Wifi.

Please RSVP for the meeting using Upcoming.org

Career Tips via Twitter

Last week I started a new daily Career Tips message using Twitter. If you are on Twitter already, you can type follow careertips or visit http://twitter.com/careertips


    Many-to-many media (m3) is best description for our new media world

    These days I am talking less and less about podcasting and more about new media. It is a superficial change, but one that I think reflects changes in the online media space. Of course, just as am in the middle of this transition, a better term has appeared that more accurately reflects the work I do for myself and others. — many-to-many media (m3). Many-to-many media encompasses all the current aspects of new media, which I believe should be parts of a whole, not something where you use only one part.

    For me, many-to-many media includes (1) podcasting, (2) online video sharing sites like YouTube et al, (3) live video streaming sites like uStream et al, and (4) social media sites like Facebook, Twitter, FriendFeed, etc. All of these areas involve many people creating media for many people, hence many-to-many media (m3).

    When talking with people who are interested in many-to-many media, I make a point of explaining the need for using all aspects of this model. Podcasting provides am automatic subscription model that brings content directly to a viewers PC, television or portable player so they can enjoy that media whenever and wherever they wish. Video sharing sites provide easy-to-access “one touch” video players which can be easily shared and embedded on your site and others. Live video streaming allows anyone to set up a LIVE show whenever and wherever it serves them best. Finally, social media sites provide a way to showcase your content while also raising the level of conversation and interaction between you and your audience.

    Taken as a whole, many-to-many media takes us far beyond the traditional media environment.

    Taken as a whole, many-to-many media takes us far beyond the traditional media environment. For little cost, we can create content in a variety of formats and share that content with tens of thousands of viewers with little more than a computer and and Internet connection.

    I am seeing now that, for me, the term many-to-many media is going to start supplanting both podcasting and new media as my descriptive term for the new media world we live in.

    Podcasting and New Media for Writers – Now open for registration

    UCLA Extension Writers Program is again offering our class, Podcasting and New Media for Writers, during the summer session. Registration is now open at http://uclaextension.edu“>http://uclaextension.edu.


    Podcasting and New Media for Writers

    Podcasting and New Media have given writers direct access to a worldwide audience and freed them from absolute dependency on television networks, radio stations, and publishers to buy and market their work. To the audience, new media is “what you want, where you want it, when you want it,” while to the podcast creator and producer, it is the ultimate creative freedom. This course covers the current state of this new medium; the basics of writing for it; and strategies for publicizing your podcast and expanding your readers, viewers, and listeners. Guest speakers available via audio and video podcast interviews, live interactive podcasts, and video conferences introduce you to the variety of ways you can use the medium. The course goal is to develop your own podcast based on individual professional or personal needs, interests, and goals. For technical requirements click here. Enrollment limited to 18 students. Additional technical requirements: Students need a recording device with microphone that is compatible with their computer; built-in microphones on laptops are acceptable. Students must have Apple iTunes software and access to audio recording software, such as Audacity or Apple GarageBand, to perform course exercises. High-speed Internet connection is required.

    Course Open Reg# T8766U

    No Textbook Required

    Online&nbspCourse
    July 9 – September 10

    $55 nonrefundable.

    Rosanne Welch, writer/producer; WGA member whose credits include five seasons as staff writer, executive story editor, and producer on the CBS series Touched by an Angel. Ms. Welch also has written for Fox Broadcasting’s Beverly Hills, 90210; Picket Fences for CBS and David E. Kelly Productions; and is the author of The Encyclopedia of Women in Aviation and Space.

    Douglas E. Welch, writer and computer analyst, whose work has been published in Wired, MacWorld, and Los Angeles Times. Mr. Welch is a member of LA Podcasters and Friends in Tech and produced his first show, Career Opportunities, in 2004. He has written and produced over 300 individual episodes and conducts podcasting seminars for schools and businesses.

    New Media Ascendancy is Inevitable

    Everyday we read about the on-going conflict between new media (podcasting, YouTube et al, live video streaming) and traditional media (television, radio). While I believe there is a place for both in our media diet, there is a clear inevitability that new media will displace television, just as television did to radio.

    Many-to-many media is quickly on the way to supremacy. The success of TiVO and video on-demand services makes it clear that the audience wants more control over their media and they want to consume “what they want, when they want, where they want it”. No matter what traditional media companies might create, anything that follows the old “broadcasting” model will continue to lose ground to media that provides interactivity and an on-demand accessibility, whether that is on a television set, computer screen or even our (ever more capable) cell phones. It would be folly to assume that new media is simply going to dry up and blow away.

    The new media genii can’t be put back in the bottle. The audience has experienced the freedom that comes with new distribution methods and they like it. In time they will even come to love it.

    The new media genii can’t be put back in the bottle. The audience has experienced the freedom that comes with new distribution methods and they like it. In time they will even come to love it. The Internet has changed the media playing field and it will never be what it once was. A once scarce resource, broadcasting bandwidth, has now been rendered obsolete. People have more and more opportunities for entertainment, created by people who would have never had a voice in traditional media. It is just as likely that you will be watching a show produced by your next door neighbor as one produced by NBC, ABC, and CBS, Worse still, without some major changes in the industry, the cost of network production will eventually outpace their advertising revenue as advertisers discover and adopt the new media advertising world. We are already seeing the beginning of that today.

    It is my hope that traditional media workers will come to recognize this inevitable progression and bring their talent and creativity to what is, after all, merely a new distribution channel. They have skills and talent that can be better used in a new media world where projects actually get produced instead of suffering endless succession of pitch sessions that result in nothing but disappointment. Yes, budgets will be smaller, but just like new media’s ascendancy, it is inevitable that money will continue to flow into new media until we are seeing show budgets much like their traditional media ancestors.

    Are you interested in the interchange between new and traditional media, join New Media Interchange, a group dedicated to bringing technology, creativity and entertainment together.

    Join the online mailing list or join us at one of our face-to-face meetings

    Visit http://groups.google.com/group/newmediainterchange

    RSVP to our first meeting on Wed, May 28 @ 7pm in Studio City, CA

    http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/649596/