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talking history & librivox

Posted on February 17, 2007 by | Posted in News, on the web | Comments: 4 Comments on talking history & librivox

Talking History is a radio show with a great mandate:

Our weekly broadcast/internet radio program, Talking History, begun in 1996, focuses on all aspects of history: how we recall it, how we preserve it, how we interpret it, how we transform it into myth, and how we pass it on—as teachers, researchers, archivists, museum curators, and documentarians. The radio show is aimed at a non-professional audience, and is dedicated to bridging the gap between the history profession and a history-hungry public unaccustomed to the hair-splitting that many scholars are all-too-ready to engage in.

They’ve started linking to LibriVox audio for various shows (Not sure if they are broadcasting our audio too? Hope so), including some Thoreau (mp3), and Nietzsche (mp3) (read by yours truly).

When people have asked me “who will listen to LibriVox books,” I’ve always been a little uncomfortable about my response. I see our job as building a complete library of all public domain books in audio. Who listens, how, why and in what context is something for the future to determine. Will it be knitters? Commuters? The vision impaired? Cramming students? Ipod junkies? Zune fanatics? Will musicians use our audio? All of the above of course, and more.

Projects like Talking History demonstrate the value of having a public doman library like LibriVox. Who knows how our audio will be used in the next few weeks, next few months, next decades. The audio library is there for the world, and I am confident the world is a better place for its existence. That’s enough, and I don’t lose much sleep over figuring out our market.

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NEA on LibriVox

Posted on February 15, 2007 by | Posted in News, on the web | Comments: Comments Off on NEA on LibriVox

I think this has been around for a while, but our very own Cloudmountain reminds us in the forum of the nice words about LibriVox on the web site of the National Education Association:

LibriVox provides free audiobooks online …

Would you like to volunteer? LibriVox is looking for volunteers to read, listen, edit, suggest books, and work on their data base.

Maybe you’d like to see how many books are currently available. Or listen to a book.

[link]

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Sundown Lounge

Posted on November 13, 2006 by | Posted in News, on the web, Uncategorized | Comments: Comments Off on Sundown Lounge

Larry from the poetry podcast Sundown Lounge writes to tell us some LibriVox poems are in his latest show:

I have a section of the show called “Venue Verite” in which I occasionally visit local open mic poetry readings and record some of the poets for podsafe sharing with my global audience. This month I’m taking part in NaNoWriMo, so instead I’ve sampled some of the cool readings of public domain poems by Librivox members. The latest episode is no. 71, my post-election celebration.

I’m affiliated with Creative Commons, and I’ve taken pains to give the proper crediting, but I want to be sure, as well as give credits to the readers of the poems:

“O Captain! My Captain!,” by Walt Whitman, read by Ted McElroy
“Lawyers Know Too Much,” by Carl Sandburg, read by Alan Davis-Drake
“Ode 314,” by Rumi, read by Kayvan Sylvan

Please come check out the show and tell me what you think. I’m listed at iTunes, and my website is

www.larrywinfield.com

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