footalk episode #1
It’s up! Download it.
It’s up! Download it.
I don’t know why it took me so many years to finally do something like this, but I finally decided and made time to start a podcast. It’s called Footalk and I record it with an old coworker and friend Richard Herrera. We first toyed with the idea over dinner last month thinking it would be kind of fun. So, after getting my act together and purchasing what was needed, our first episode is up!
We both consider this a trial run to see if we get enough interest and downloads from the public and our adorning fans. So far, the little feed that we have gotten has been positive. Richard and I share one main thing in common: we’re web designers. We have a love for web standards and enjoy technology in general. The topics we covered in the first episode range from what the podcast is about, web design, conferences we want to or will attend, and a website pick to show you.
There’s plenty of ideas for us to cover and we don’t know where the podcast will go but if there’s enough interest and downloads, we’ll keep it going! So, if you’re bored for and have about 25 minutes you can waste, please download and support our brand new Podcast, Footalk.
Footalk
Episode 0 (20MB mp3 format download)
Richard’s Footalk coverage
Commuting in LA sucks. It doesn’t matter where you live, commuting here is torture. Traffic, smog, bad drivers, more traffic, crazy drivers, the list goes on and on. Thus, a temporary relief to this commute is listening to the radio. Today’s technology allows us to listen to radio broadcasts, tapes, CDs, and now iPods and newer digital devices.
I tend to mix between half of the above. I like listening to some of my mp3s on CD, sometimes to NPR, sometimes to the local radio stations such as KCRW, or I’ll listen to talk radio such as Jim Rome. However, my desires are changing ever since I discovered podcasting. Although I cannot technically take advantage of this technology, I can still utilize it. So what’s the big deal? Well, I think this is going to change and shape the way we listen to the radio in the near future.