Have you had a look at iTunesU? It is a part of the iTunes Store however
allows for the up-loading of free lectures, language lessons, audiobooks, etc, which
your students can then listen to on their iPods, iPhones, Mac or PC. There
are currently over 100,000 educational audio and video files. A list of
colleges + universities and museums which have mounted material at this
location can be found by Googling iTunesU.
Christine
E. Sammon, B.A., M.A.
Director Library
V: 403-284-7630
F: 403-284-6682
www.acad.ca
ACAD is a leading centre for education and
research, and a catalyst for creative inquiry and cultural development. We
engage the world and create possibilities.
From: ART LIBRARIES
SOCIETY DISCUSSION LIST [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Natalia Lonchyna
Sent: January 29, 2009 2:17 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ARLIS-L] Archiving audio
interviews
Dear
Colleagues,
With
the popularity of podcasts and the improvement in the quality
of
digital recordings, we are slowly accumulating audio files that feature
interviews
with artists, conversations with curators, etc.
Is
anyone is familiar with archiving audio files?
Any
suggestions for organizing them? archiving them? best practices?
Many
thanks,
Natalia
Natalia J Lonchyna, Librarian
Art Reference Library
Mailing address: 4630
Street address:
919.664.6769 (direct line)
919.733.8034 (fax)
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Modern American Paintings from the Bequest of Fannie and Alan
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Highlights of
the American Collection | Opens February 15, 2009
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