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Web
Casting - The Future of Online Education |
by:
Jim
Edwards |
(c)
Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
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Despite the communications power of the
Internet, nothing
beats good old human interaction when it
comes to learning
a new skill.
You can always read a book, listen to a
tape, or watch a
video to learn how to do something, but,
in the end,
learning from a live teacher who can answer
your questions
on the spot works best.
Until recently, the Internet resembled a
large "book" of
electronic text and pictures where any extended
"human"
interactivity could only take place offline
by tele-
conference or in-person meetings.
Now, however, the appearance of cheap "web
casting" creates
an inexpensive opportunity for mass interactive
communication between people spread all
over the world.
"Web casting" (broadcasting through the
web) enables a
presenter to transmit a live presentation
over the Internet
to as many as 10,000 participants.
For most online events, participants only
need an Internet
connection through a standard phone line
and audio
speakers.
In the post-9/11 era, people simply don't
like to travel as
frequently. The meal and hotel costs associated
with
attending seminars or other adult education
events make it
even harder to attract a full audience.
However, with web casting, you can pull
together a large
group of people from around the world at
a specific time on
a given day, teach them something, and then
let them all
get back to their lives without the traditional
interruptions and expenses of travel.
Web casting enables you to literally present
just about any
type of information or educational material
you want.
You can do everything from a simple "radio"
type
presentation where people passively listen,
to a multimedia
presentation complete with Power Point slides
and live
tours of actual websites.
At this point, imagination seems to represent
the only
limitation as far as what you can do to
teach people
through the Internet using this technology.
Currently, large corporations and independent
speakers and
entrepreneurs seem to represent the majority
of web casting
users.
I believe this comes from the fact that
people simply don't
know about it yet and don't understand how
to use it.
Once that changes, web casting will go a
long way towards
replacing tele-conferencing as the preferred
means of long-
distance education.
In the future, as costs decrease even further,
you will
find people using web casting for everything
from online
family reunions and sales presentations,
to home-based
cooking shows and pay-per-view seminars.
As the technology
improves, the potential uses will skyrocket.
As with any new technology, a few drawbacks
exist.
Though web casting works with modem speeds
as low as 28K,
no one standard has emerged for broadcasting
content.
Some services require Real Player, while
others require
Microsoft's media player, and, as usual,
Mac users often
get left out in the cold without any options.
Right now, search engine giant Google.com
rates the best
source of information on how to offer your
own web cast.
Simply log on to Google, search for "webcast,"
and
investigate the ever-growing number of available
resources.
About the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist
and the co-
author of an amazing new ebook that will
teach you how to
use free articles to quickly drive thousands
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Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands
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Circulated by Bandoni
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