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November 13, 2005
Portable Media Expo, Day 2
Another great day yesterday at the Portable Media Expo. It’s amazing to see everyone so excited about the future for digital audio. Back almost two years ago when I started germinating the idea for what would become LearnOutLoud.com very few people were talking about spoken word audio. It was pretty much relegated to the backwaters of audio books and a budding, but still largely unknown, company called Audible.com.
Two years later spoken word audio is red hot and for good reason. I listened to an amazing keynote presentation today from Don Katz (the CEO and Founder of Audible.com) yesterday where he talked about the history of the spoken word. He mentioned that Plato and Aristotle were originally against text as they felt that it polluted the purest form of communication which was speech. He talked about how back a few centuries ago it was frowned upon to read silently.
Now we’re so accustomed to reading that people actually ask if it counts to listen to a book instead of reading it. Pretty bizarre when you consider that speech is the most ancient form of communication and the primary mode of communication throughout the majority of history. Don’s keynote was enlightening and if it becomes publicly available I will definitely post a link to it.
Later in the day I had a “full-body goosebump” experience while talking to Doug Kaye of IT Conversations. Doug has started a non-profit venture called The Conversations Network whose mission it is to record every live event around the world. Like IT Conversations which records many technology conferences and events, this group would record events in any of a number of areas including BioTech, Buiness, Politics and my personal favorite “ChangeTheWorld.” Mark my words. The Conversations Network will change the world. We will do all we can hear at LearnOutLoud to help.
Random shout-outs from yesterday go to Clay Cover and Dr. Greg Bolcer at Encryptanet, Sylvester Robertson at Cal State-San Bernadino and James Smith up in Olympia, Rodney Rumford over at podblaze, Emilie Cole from Audioluxe, Randy Dryburgh at Audioblog.com (very cool site, thanks for the T-shirt!) and Katie O’Shea at Chumbo Publishing (thanks for the software and how did I not realize you were from Minneapolis?).
Final thoughts on the Expo:
1. I’d go to something like this every week if I could. The energy was tremendous. The people were so much fun to talk to. The ideas that are being thrown about will literally change the world.
2. Hats off to the Bourquin brothers and everybody else who had a hand in pulling this off. It was unbelievable how well organized this event was. I expected some glitches or roughness around the edges. I’m sure there were some hiccups throughout the weekend but I didn’t see any during the two days I was there.
3. Digital media is an amazing space to be in right now. We are on the precipice of an era in which audio and video education of all shapes and forms will be available to anyone anywhere. That might mean a student in a developing country being able to watch lectures from UC-Berkeley or MIT. It might mean a travel-weary professional being able to stay at home with her husband and kids and listen to sessions from a conference rather than flying across the country to attend in person. It might mean someone growing up in China, Iraq or Afghanistan, learning English through podcasting and then using those skills to help form business relationships and better communication among nations. Or it simply might mean that that half hour you spend in traffic tomorrow morning will be a time of fulfillment and growth when in the past it’s been one of boredom and frustration.
Whatever it means it will mean that the world is a better place and we’re incredibly excited to be a part of it.
My all-time favorite rock group U2 is out on tour right now and there’s a part during the show where Bono offers a little fictional dialogue about how the rest of the band met The Edge, the group’s lead guitarist. He usually says something like the following (LINK):
“This,” he points stage left, “is the same sound as The Edge’s spaceship made when it arrived in the north of Dublin. Larry and myself and Adam just stood there and stared. A door opened and out came this astounding-looking man. Larry said: ‘Who are you?’ and he said: ‘I am The Edge.’ And Adam said: ‘Where are you from?’ and he said: ‘The future.’ And I said: ‘What’s it like?’ and he said: ‘It’s better!’
After attending the Portable Media Expo this weekend I feel like we got a chance to see the future. So if you want to ask me what the future is like my answer would be the same as the Edge’s answer.
It’s better.