³ÉÈËÂÛ̳

« Previous | Main | Next »

Podcasts on other mobile devices

Post categories:

Simon Cross Simon Cross | 10:27 UK time, Monday, 17 March 2008

I’m starting to sound like a stuck record. All my posts on this blog seem to be about Podcasting. Specifically, making our podcasts available on other platforms. Annoyingly, this post is no different, but I think its still worthy of mentioning some more cool work we’ve done to optimise our mini-audio-on-demand service for new mobile devices.

First we did the iPhone, which was swish, and very zeitgeisty. But we always said we’d be doing the same for other devices; so here's our first simple-but-elegant iteration of this.

Screenshot of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Podcasts on the Sony PSP

What we’ve built is our entire podcast directory in distilled form, with layout and markup optimised for three new device types, the and other newer Nseries phones, the , and a generic xHTML version for other .

/radio/podcasts/nk/ for Nokia Nseries phone
/radio/podcasts/ps/ for the Sony PSP
/radio/podcasts/mobile/ for generic mobile devices

... or you can just go to /podcasts on your preferred device, and we’ll do the rest.

Screenshot of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Podcasts on the Nokia N95

The reason behind this is that 2007/2008 are the years that have seen the first mass-market wi-fi capable phones – the N95 being the biggest seller by far – but also the iPhone of course. In addition, increased memory on these devices, and the means we have the right climate for mobile podcasting to be a viable product.

We put a crack team on this, and we’re really chuffed with the results. All the credit goes to Max Lehmann, Tim Broom, Wolfgang Weidner and James Whitmarsh for making it happen.

So how did we choose these devices? Our excellent mobile teams here at the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ gave us stats on device takeup, and we matched these with the user-agents our server sees downloading podcasts. The top device classes were the N95 and the PSP – the latter of which accounted for a staggering 5% of all podcast downloads. Others notable devices were the and device classes.

There's more on how and why we did this, along with some background on the contentious decisions we had to make after the jump...

Now onto the most contentious issue. Why would we do this at all? In some ways we’re breaking the rules of the web. Specifically, creating multiple URLs for the same resource (a podcast ‘keepnet’) and we’re customising our markup for a discrete number of devices. In essence, this against everything we’re trying to achieve, but there's are some practical reasons why.

Screenshot of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Podcasts on the Sony PSP

Firstly, the mobile world is strange, and not at all like the desktop world. Different devices have wildly different capabilities, and targeting them all with a single codebase means we’d miss out on a number of features – the iPhone for example requires media to be embedded in a very different way to an N95. It’s not just the data too. As the devices capabilities change, you need to structure your navigation differently and provide different messages to the user. There comes a point where conditionally building your pages using XSSI, Apache Includes and patchily-supported mobile CSS becomes way too hard. At that point, you need to pick a few high profile devices and optimise your experience for them. Not that we’ve forgotten the rest of the devices out there – we’ve built a generic XHTML version which most devices with a browser can display. However, it might link to features and content which your device can’t play or read – enhanced podcasts, and RSS for example.

Screenshot of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Podcasts on the Nokia N95

Secondly, the ideal solution would be to have a single URL and change the extension for each device type. This is quite a tricky task in our current serving infrastructure, and something we couldn’t achieve on this project but its certainly the direction we are moving in. There was also the requirement to allow people to browse the desktop version on their device as well as the optimised version if they wanted to. This meant we couldn’t so silent rewrites based on user agents, and we had to replicate the resources and different URLs.

Lastly, why just podcasts? Well, over the last year or so, we’ve seen Podcasts become a ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ product offering in their own right. They transcend radio networks and particular shows. Some of them aggregate content from a number of programmes, and others are compilations and aggregations, like the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳’s NewsPod. It also seems that these downloads are content in a condensed shape which people like listening to on the move. They’re not 3 hour programmes, they’re typically 15-30 minutes long – ideal for downloading in a train station when you have wi-fi for 5 minutes at a time. Also, they’re mp3 files, and thus non-DRM. Pretty much any device and play them. Heck, my car’s sat-nav can, and my mate’s fridge can too. That makes them easy to develop with and syndicate.

A quick word about our future plans. Currently our podcast directory is a little silo of data, all on its own – its only very loosely tied to our other mammoth database of programmes and on-demand content which powers iPlayer and /programmes - PIPs. This is not good. It's content, but its not that findable, and from a podcast, you certainly can’t find the original on-demand version of a programme. We want to change this. Soon, we’ll be working on moving our podcasts catalogue in with our big PIPs database. Then podcasts might be available in iPlayer, /programmes etc, and best of all, you’ll be able to create your own feeds based on tags, genres, presenters, contributors and so on – that will be properly powerful. It also means we can create a dynamic podcast directory and overcome all the technical limitations I mentioned earlier.

This is some way off – we have to change our production workflow to make it happen, and right now we’re busy getting all radio into iPlayer proper, but watch this space – when it happens, Podcasts will become even better. For now, get out your mobile devices, and get listening on the move!

Comments

  1. At 10:49 PM on 19 Mar 2008, Ian U wrote:

    Hi, thanks for this, it's useful and interesting... one quick thought was, it'd be incredibly useful to Nokia N-series devices if you could crack how to add the podcasts to the Nokia Podcasting app, rather than simply the feeds. I know that's a Nokia problem really, I just wasn't sure if there was a way of offering the feeds so that the N-series device sent it to the podcast app rather than the default...
    Thanks for the blog, keep it up.
    Ian.

  2. At 07:45 PM on 26 Mar 2008, wrote:

    "The ideal solution would be to have a single URL and change the extension for each device type. This is quite a tricky task in our current serving infrastructure, and something we couldn’t achieve on this project but its certainly the direction we are moving in."

    Good to know, but I'd be interested to know more about the problems you experienced. Was it purely a server thing, or did you struggle to get different stylesheets/javascripts/etc to work to target the different platforms from one URL?

    Have you looked through this much: (it's a little verbose!)

This post is closed to new comments.

³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ iD

³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ navigation

Copyright © 2015 ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳. The ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read more.

This page is best viewed in an up-to-date web browser with style sheets (CSS) enabled. While you will be able to view the content of this page in your current browser, you will not be able to get the full visual experience. Please consider upgrading your browser software or enabling style sheets (CSS) if you are able to do so.