I've had this idea rolling around in my head for quite a few months now, and I thought I'd finally put it out there to see what other people think about it (and see if some other people would be willing to help, more importantly)...
I'm thinking about starting up a regular (probably monthly) JRiver focused podcast. We could use it to:
- Discuss the changelog of MC over the past month.
- Do in-depth investigations of new features.
- How-Tos and Demos of existing features
- Answer "mailbag" questions (users could post a question on the release thread of the previous podcast, and we'd choose the ones we want to answer)
- Interview JRiver developers and Plugin Authors
- Discuss A/V topics in general, related to various uses of MC (A/V equipment, etc)
- And probably have some fun.
I'm thinking of modeling the structure of the show on the Joystiq Podcast and the Tech Report podcast (somewhere in-between these two shows). Being community-driven, it will likely have a fairly irreverent style, and knowing me, might qualify for the "adult" tag on iTunes (though I'll try my best to keep it mostly-clean and professional).
I have all of the equipment and software necessary to actually create the podcast, and I could probably handle the technical aspects of recording and producing the MP3. Like most podcasts, I imagine we would use Skype to actually place the "conference call", so having participation from far-flung users shouldn't be an issue.
However, I would need a lot of help from the community here! First and foremost, I'd need some other people who could commit to actually being on the podcast with me to discuss these things, help plan the content, and whatnot. We'd also need someone who could provide the technical website-side resources we'd need (we need a "blogging" system of some kind, with hosting, and then we need to implement a RSS feed, serve it, and make it available). And, of course, we'd need listeners and a blessing from Jim wouldn't be bad at all!
What do you think?