I actually emailed the AudioBlog folks
last night about this – the message bounced.
I was thinking (in itself an improvement)
that it should be possible to simply record a message on your mobile and email
it.
Indeed my mobile (like most I suspect)
does allow this – the result is a .amr file type which is supported by
quicktime and realplayer.
I have server based email parser (C#)
which I want to incorporate into Vidyo to auto blog messages in this way.
However, would also be nice to be able to
just call it too!!
Sounds interesting!
steven :: http://stevenR2.com
From:
mobcasting@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mobcasting@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Chris Foster
Sent: 31 August 2005 10:46
To: mobcasting@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [mobcasting] Introduction
A belated hello to the
mobcasting list from
Foster, and I work in the
I'm interested in all types of mobile technology,
and I'm positive
mobcasting tools could be very useful, both in the
south, where mobile
phones are available and literacy is patchy, but
also in places like the uk
where such software could be used as an aid to
learning and social connections
Open source telephone projects such as asterix are
definitely a good way to
go to having a realisible mobcasting tool
(although like Andy I'm unsure of
the telephony jargon). Also, it might be worth
examining more "lo tech"
solutions, even if only for some experiments.
Hence, I flag a possible
combination, I worked on recently.
Initially all I wanted was to post to a blogger
blog from a phone (without
having to call the expensive
the skypeIn service, some free skype answering
software (called Jabbernut)
and some glue code. With the skypeIn you can call
a computer from any
phone, and the answering software will save
voicemail messages as wav
files on the pc. It is then just a matter of
detecting, converting and
uploading those files to the relevant
blog........But you can go further
than that. When you call skypeIn from your phone,
it can be answered by the
answering software using a personalised greeting
from your computer. It is
possible to change this file automatically using a
previous voice messages.
Hence, a primitive mobcasting app. I hope to be
able to adapt this in the
future to allow art students to share critiques of
public artworks within
my job.
I have to say that this type of approach has
problems at the moment. The
skypeIn quality is often so poor you cannot hear
it and the answering
software/my code is only just up to the task.
Saying that I think that
building this does highlight a number of issues,
particularly the
importance of a level of voice quality, and how
exactly the interactions
would work. Anyone interested in trying it out is
welcome to email
me for the code i wrote, its not too complicated,
written in python.
It seems like the technology is nearly good enough
to build some really
useful telephone/pc hybrid applications and I look
forward to working with
the list to help develop them.
Cheers
Chris