I like listening to podcasts. Here are some
of the mostly mobile tech podcasts I follow (or don't) together with links to
their XML feeds or sites. The BBC, so strong in most things radio, seems to
have bowed out of the fight when it comes to tech podcasting and several of the
non-BBC podcasts below have a real Radio 4 feel about them.
There's a little review of each but if you
can't be bothered reading these you can scroll down to the bottom of the page,
scoff at, say "pfff" or something worse of or perhaps even agree with
my top three. It's all for fun and if you are a presenter and your podcast
hasn't made my top three, thanks anyway for your stuff because creativity takes
time and your efforts are appreciated if the content isn't always (by me).
Read on MacDuff...
Steve Litchfield and Rafe Blandford
This is the thinking man's or woman's guide
to Windows mobile tech. They seemed to have settled now for two
presenters. It is so civilised and sounds like the kind of tech podcast
the BBC should be making (but aren't). It has arguably the finest radio
presenter in the business in the genial Rafe Blandford. I have the feeling that
he is on the way to even greater things and we are catching him at the
beginning of a mainstream TV/radio career. The BBC should snap him up. Makes my
top four tech podcasts. See below.
Steve Litchfield, Ted
Salmon, Gavin Fabiani-Laymond, David Markrich
This is another thinking man's or woman's
guide, this time to general mobile tech. Civilised, knowledgeable and charming.
Makes my top four tech podcasts. See below.
David Markrich and Gavin Fabiani-Laymond
Good humoured and congenial conversation from
two presenters who know their tech stuff. It's gone monthly and I have the
feeling it will soon disappear as its presenters go off to do other things. (Updated on July 18 2015. Indeed, this podcast seems to have disappeared and replaced by a 404 error message.)
Created by Ben Smith of Wireless Worker and
co-hosted by Ewan MacLeod of Mobile Industry Review and Rafe Blandford
One of those 'strength to strength' podcasts.
The chemistry is just right. If BBC producers listened and learned how to do it
and we would be spared the weakening and over-earnest 'Tech Tent' and the
irretrievably dire 'Click'. Entertainingly waspish and never better than
when the panellists are having a go at each other. High wittertainment factor.
Constant leg-pulling of Rafe Blandford - the others claim he lives on an landed
estate with servants in attendance etc. Very high technical knowledge evident
on the panel and it has Rafe, one of the gentlemen of the industry.
Luke Westaway and others.
Suffers from the presenters feeling they have
to turn every news item into a "larf". I wish they wouldn't do this.
It gives it a lads-down-the-pub feel all the time. Gave up listening to it for
this reason. I must listen to this again sometime to see whether it has
improved...
Well, I did listen again but it still
has the lads-down-the-pub feel . It might be your thing. It isn't mine. One
presenter starting crooning in a silly voice as they went through their intros.
I'll try listening again one day.
One day.
Darien Graham-Smith, Tim Danton, Sasha
Muller, Vaughn Highfield, Tom McMullan, Jonathan Bray
It occasionally lacks a little needed
"edge" if Tim Danton is missing. And Barry Collins has never been
properly replaced. If you're reading this, Barry, do, do please return. Sadly,
I feel I have to demote this from my now top three Tech podcasts for the simple
reason that there is an increasing use of "uptalk" on the podcast.
Here's a YouTube video to explain what "uptalk" is and why it ruins
what you have to say. (Darien is not guilty of uptalk - one or two others are.)
Kevin Wright, Nick Robinson and Richard Yates
It has a presenter who moans such a lot
in a mighty Ipswich accent and claims not to be a fruit-related company name
fanboy. I'll leave you to be the judge of the latter. The gushing adulation of Apple by the lead presenter has been getting steadily worse of late and the podcast is beginning to get a little cringeworthy and predictable because of it. Richard Yates is a splendid sometime addition to the team and provides some much needed balance.
Presented by Samuel Gibbs, Simon Barnard,
Martin Love and Hannah Jane Parkinson.
The whole programme has seen a re-launch in a
'magazine' format sans Alex Krotoski. It has also entered the dark age of
Uptalk. I tried to listen but it was no good and I couldn't continue. To
experience Uptalk for yourself just imitate Hannah Jane Parkinson; one of
the best exponents of Uptalk on the air, ever.
In case you don't know Uptalk, just say
My name is [insert your name] and let your voice rise at the end as if
you're not sure what your name is and as if you are frightened you are
upsetting your listener by telling him or her what your name is and as if you desperately want them to agree with you
what your name is but most of all as if you desperately want your listener to like you.
This is the Guardian tech podcast for dedicated
Guardianistas everywhere. And why not? As Barry Norman used to say. Expect lots
of stories about women making it big in the Tech world. Hooray! And lots of
stories about university computing departments being full of males. Boo! It can
also get a bit sweary if any Guardianista hate figure or theme (e.g. er?
pornography? sexism?) features in a news story. It experiences often a bewildering
change of personnel and so lacks any kind of structure or
continuity. Occasionally it does get really quite boring especially when they
do a "one-off" podcast, yet again, such as a whole programme
interview... yet again. No signs of improvement. When Charles Arthur comes on
it perks up but he never does these days.
The show is currently presented by Gareth
Mitchell and with expert comments from Bill Thompson.
I wrote a savage review about this and
then deleted it. Suffice it to say this podcast is not for me. Here's a bit I
didn't redact...
It takes a lot to put me off a tech
podcast but this show manages it. I no longer listen. I can't bear it. Where to
start? If you remember Blue Peter in the 60s and 70s, Petra the dog, the Blue
Peter Garden and Ukrainian folk dancers endlessly appearing in the studio you
will get a feel for this podcast is put together. The aforementioned
represented what the Beeb decided children liked. This podcast is what the BBC
think appeals to techie listeners and if it doesn't, well it jolly well should
do. A by-the-way, the expert Bill Thompson sounds uncannily and spookily
like Charles Arthur from the Guardian. On its website Click is described as
"BBC’s flagship technology programme". Ora pro nobis.
I MUST bring myself to listen to this
again. I will steel myself and do it. I want to be fair.
Liat Clark, Katie Collins, James
Temperton and Michael Rundle
Nate Lanxon reminded me of Alan Partridge.
Sorry, I couldn't help it. He did. Olivia left the show to go the Mirror. A
loud boo. The show reached a dizzying peak when suddenly it was left in the
hands of its three female presenters in summer 2014. The chemistry of these
three women giggling with some hefty technical insight to boot at stuff going
on in the tech world was very, very good. Condé Nast should have taken note of
how well the podcast worked sans Nate but didn't.
Suddenly, out of the blue, one day we
found ourselves listening to "Nate's last podcast" and then he was
gone...
Someone once wrote in suggesting Liat did an
audio book. Yes, oh yes.
It's gone a little more serious but in
a good way. You miss Liat when she isn't there, which happens too often. It has
still never recaptured the heights of Summer 2014 with 3 female presenters in
charge.
Rory Cellan-Jones
Lacks something. Perhaps this podcast
is trying too hard and doesn't sound laid-back enough. I don't know. I'm not a
radio producer. (Also, BBC World Service podcasts as a rule are rarely as good
as those on Radio 4 - they're too generic - just compare 'More or Less' Radio 4
and WS versions.)
No improvement so I stopped
listening. I'll try again later in the year.
Drum
rollllllllllllllllllll.....................
The Top
three Podcasts of 2015
(tough
call - all are very good)
1) The 361 Degrees Podcast
2) All About Windows Phone
3) The Phones Show Chat