Learning about the Makuleke People of Pafuri through the editing of another South African Podcast

Kruger2Canyons.com have commissioned LittleSmasher to make another podcast for their website. It features the model of South African land restitution that is the Makuleke concession in the Kruger National Park, now benefiting the people from whom it was taken in 1969.



Interesting stuff.

Amplify’d from www.kruger2canyons.com

K2C PODCAST #1 | Kruger's SINGITA LEBOMBO


"24 hours at a luxury safari lodge"









Kruger2Canyons.com spent a fabulous day exploring and documenting Singita's Private Reserve, deep inside (but still part of) the Kruger National Park on the border with Mozambique.

Read more at www.kruger2canyons.com
 

LittleSmasher was there first!

After six years of podcasting professionally, LittleSmasher proclaims that the medium is still being 'discovered' by those who have an audience to reach.

Amplify’d from www.independent.co.uk


The podcast has a weekly audience of 35,000 and is an important marketing tool
for his live work. "It's nothing like a TV or radio show in terms of
the numbers of people listening but they have chosen to download it and it's
a more intimate experience. This is the thing most responsible for my
audience doubling in size on tour."


Being independently produced, As It Occurs to Me offers Herring artistic
licence. "It's so hard to get on radio and TV and the whole Sachsgate
thing has made it harder to do interesting and challenging stuff," he
says. "The nice thing about podcasts is that if people don't like them
they don't download them. There are no compliance issues."

One of the most successful exponents is Richard Herring, who produces two weekly podcasts

One of the most successful exponents is Richard Herring, who produces two weekly podcasts

Podcasts: Why the future sounds funny

Podcasts are bringing stand-up comedy to new audiences. As the BBC gets in on the act, Frank Skinner and Richard Herring give Ian Burrell the lowdown on downloads

Read more at www.independent.co.uk
 

Free Podcasts for Christmas

...just in case you're interested.

Amplify’d from www.guardian.co.uk

Short stories podcasts: 12 tales for Christmas

Philip Pullman
Philip Pullman. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe

Saturday's an exciting day for us in the audio department. We're launching our new series of podcasts, but podcasts with a difference. We've invited some of the country's top authors to read us their favourite short story by another writer. So you'll hear Philip Pullman reading Chekhov, Rose Tremain reading Yiyun and William Boyd reading JG Ballard, and then discuss why they chose those particular stories.

We're running 12 of these from Saturday every day until Christmas. But it's been a project that we've been working on since the summer, when the Guardian's Review editor Lisa Allardice came up with the idea. She says: "We're familiar with audio books, but with writers choosing their favourite story they bring something of themselves to the reading.

Producer Tim Maby was surprised at how authors are now so used to reading aloud they even move the microphones to where it best suits them: "Anne Enright, for instance, likes to hug it." Tim says Rose Tremain commented that all writers like showing off, while Philip Pullman revealed he loves talking in to a mic.
these recordings really show why podcasting is so much better than radio: they will remain on our website and on iTunes and be a resource for people forever. You don't have to be sitting next to your wireless at a certain time to catch them.

Saturday 11 December: Philip Pullman reading The Beauties by Anton Chekhov

Sunday 12 December: William Boyd reading My Dream of Flying to Wake Island by JG Ballard

Monday 13 December: Anne Enright reading Fat by Raymond Carver

Tuesday 14 December: Colm Tóibín reading Music at Annahullion by Eugene McCabe

Wednesday 15 December: Margaret Drabble reading The Doll's House by Katherine Mansfield

Thursday 16 December: Jeanette Winterson reading The Night Driver by Italo Calvino

Friday 17 December: Rose Tremain reading Extra by Yiyun Li

Saturday 18 December: Julian Barnes reading Homage to Switzerland by Ernest Hemingway

Sunday 19 December: Tessa Hadley reading The Jungle by Elizabeth Bowen

Monday 20 December: Helen Dunmore reading My Oedipus Complex by Frank O'Connor

Tuesday 21 December: Ali Smith reading Conversation With My Father by Grace Paley

Wednesday 22 December: Helen Simpson reading The Kitchen Child by Angela Carter

Each podcast will be published at guardian.co.uk/books
Read more at www.guardian.co.uk
 

Lights, Solar, ACTION! Even the BBC recognise the influence of this in their History of the World in 100 Objects

Lights For Learning have just returned from installation projects in Zambia and Zimbabwe. Official feedback from their previous trip has shown that in just ONE YEAR a particular school's pass rate increased by 540%.

Enrolment rates have increased by up to 20% due to the need for children and adults to tend land and take their wares to market during the daylight hours. It really feels like a different world.

Countries like the UK have developed away from this challenging way of life.

Quite literally and metaphorically, Lights For Learning are working toward a brighter future.

Download this if you want to hear from the people talking about the sorts of challenges they face and how LFL are helping...

http://j.mp/LFL-MilengeLights.

Visit http://www.LightsForLearning.org if you'd like to donate. All money goes directly to lighting installations.
Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

Solar-powered lamp and charger

BBC

A History of the World in 100 objects


There are around five billion mobile phones in use around the world todayThis lamp is powered by the small solar panel connected to it. As well as providing light, power from this panel can be used to charge mobile phones. This object has been chosen to reflect the ingenuity, and the challenges we face in the twenty-first century. The kit uses a range of new materials and technologies, including silicon-chip technology, which can also be found in computers and mobile phones. Here it is used in the solar photovoltaic cell, which converts sunlight into electricity. Exposing this cell to eight hours of bright sunshine provides up to 100 hours of lamp light.

How is this technology changing lives?

There are currently 1.6 billion people across the world without access to an electrical grid. In these areas, objects such as this allow people to study, work and socialise outside daylight hours, vastly improving the quality of many lives. Additionally, households using solar energy rather than kerosene lamps are able to avoid the risk of fire and the damage to health that kerosene can cause. Once purchased, this kit costs very little to run, making it a very efficient option for many people living in the world's poorest countries.

There are around five billion mobile phones in use around the world today

Read more at www.bbc.co.uk

Africa bound once more

LittleSmasher is gearing up for yet another podcast expedition into the deepest depths of Africa.

Yes, we'll be going to places without electricity in order to install solar powered lighting systems into schools for a client called LightsForLearning.org.

LittleSmasher will be there to witness it and to produce podcasts for this charity to use and distribute to donors and potential donors in order to evince the work that is being done out in the field.
"It's like having our own journalist documenting how people's money is spent and the unbelievable difference in makes on many people's lives out there" said a spokesperson.
LittleSmasher will be accompanying LightsForLearning to Zimbabwe and Zambia.  To listen to previous work for this client please feel free to download and listen to these episodes:

Worth every penny... 67p/month per household for the website and only a couple of quid a month for radio #bargain

I never knew how the licence fee was split up... but, thanks to some aimless time-waste surfing before lunch, I do now.
Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

The licence fee


The annual cost of a colour TV licence is £145.50 (as from 1 April 2010). A black and white TV licence is £49.

How the licence fee was spent in 2009/2010



Between 1 April 2009 and 31 March 2010 the cost was £142.50 – the equivalent of £11.88 per month or just under 40p per day.

The BBC used its income from the licence fee to pay for its TV, radio and online services, plus other costs, as shown below.

TV

£7.85 per month per household

Television costs

Radio

£2.01 per month per household

Radio costs

Online

£0.67 per month per household

Online costs

Other costs

£1.35 per month per household


Other costs

About the licence fee

Everyone in the UK who watches or records TV as it is broadcast needs to be covered by a TV licence. This includes TV on computers, mobile phones, DVD/video recorders and other devices.

The Government sets the level of the licence fee. The most recent funding settlement was in January 2007, when the licence fee was agreed for a six-year period, as shown below. The fee has to be approved each year by Parliament. The licence fee for 2012 will be fixed as part of the next funding settlement and the expected maximum is given below.
Date from Colour licence Black and white licence
1 April 2007 £135.50 £45.50
1 April 2008 £139.50 £47
1 April 2009 £142.50 £48
1 April 2010 £145.50 £49
1 April 2011 £148.50 £50
1 April 2012 £151.50 maximum £51 maximum
Read more at www.bbc.co.uk

Smartphones increasing podcasting opportunities?

It seems more and more people are getting smartphones, and more and more of those people are downloading podcasts to those phones allowing them to listen to those podcasts wherever and whenever they choose.

http://LittleSmasher.com encode their podcasts to optimise smartphone 'downloadability'.
allmediascotland.com - The Journalism and PR exhange
Radio listening via a 'smartphone' is becoming ever more popular, according to figures released today by the organisation that monitors radio listening behaviour in the UK.
Says RAJAR, some 20 per cent of smartphone owners - or 1.4 million people - have downloaded an application that enable them to listen to a radio service via their smartphone. The survey also reveals relatively high levels of people aged 15 and over listening to radio via the internet and also downloading a podcast: 31 per cent and 15 per cent, respectively.
Among the main findings of the survey:
* 71 per cent of those 'listen again' listeners (and they listen again to an average two programmes per week) say the service has no impact on the amount of live radio they listen to.
* 15 per cent of the adult 15+ population have downloaded a podcast. Almost half (47 per cent) of podcast users claim to listen to podcasts at least once a week but only 25 per cent of users find the time to listen to all the podcasts they download.
* The typical podcast user subscribes to just under five podcasts, and spends about an hour per week listening to them. As in previous surveys, comedy and music remain the two favourite genres.
* 77 per cent of podcast users listen to podcasts at home, and 45 per cent listen in the car or on public transport.
* Podcasting appears to have a positive effect on radio listening, with 36 per cent of respondents saying that they now listen to radio programmes to which they did not listen previously, up from 32 per in November last year.
* 20 per cent of smartphone owners have downloaded a radio app and, of those, over half (53 per cent) use their radio apps at least once a week.

Survey Reveals Increased 'Smartphone' Radio Listening

July 14 2010 11:57 Read more at www.allmediascotland.com