One thing that I’ve realized over the years is that the medium in which I do things can be just as important as the application that is being used.
In other words, sometimes I simply like it better when I use my iPhone for certain activities and applications even if the same apps exist in desktop form. Form and function are both important!
So when I saw that you could create and publish podcasts on your mobile device I had to check it out:
Caster Mobile Studio does just that, enabling you to create, record, and then publish a complete podcast right on your mobile device. Here’s the list of exhaustive features:
- Retina Display support
- Record chunks of audio at a time or all at once
- Waveform editor
- Clip reordering and deleting
- Cut, Copy, Paste
- Audio Normalization
- All podcast clips are combined into a single file
- Multi-track recording and editing
- Choose bitrate/number of channels and output format, supports wav, m4a/ALAC, and ogg/vorbis outputs
- Create and restore backups of your podcast projects
- iPhone version allows portrait or upside-down portrait for better microphone positioning
- Download your completed podcasts via FTP or publish directly from the palm of your hand!
- Existing podcast RSS files are synced with Caster
- All RSS Fields are editable from your device
- Review previously recorded podcasts
- Copy and paste between podcast issues
- Automatically generates a new RSS when publishing
- Upload existing audio clips for use in your podcast
- Full Dropbox support
- Preliminary libsyn support
- FTP Server to download your podcast via WIFI
- FTP Client to automatically publish your podcast
- Built in documentation
- Publish via email, and link in twitter and faceboo
This might just be the solution that will get you off your butt and into the podcast scene, and if it does, make sure to let me know.
Michael says
That is too cool! I am going to have to try it out.
Stephen Bateman says
Wow that looks awesome, probably totally worth the $10. Now all I need is an iPhone…
Andrew says
I may have to give this a try. Sometimes it’s a real hassle to have to drag my computer with me when I want to podcast while “on the road.”