Podcasting
Jetpak is Public
Created By: chrisbrogan
Last Modified: 07/14/06
Summary: A list of information related to podcasting in general, and maybe some links to things in specific.

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Be Your Own Hotspot


Turn a backpack into a portable, solar-powered Wi-Fi hotspot, and share a high-speed connection anywhere

By Mike Outmesguine

Mike Outmesguine


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I love the fact that more and more devices are sporting built-in Wi-Fi—the Sony PSP, smartphones, even Kodak’s EasyShare-One digital camera. The lone hitch: Wi-Fi is useless without a hotspot. Sure, thousands of spots are available, but few are free, and coverage is far from ubiquitous. What if you could marry the short-range power of Wi-Fi with the huge coverage areas of high-speed cellular services such as EV-DO to create a portable hotspot? You could use any Wi-Fi-enabled gadget anywhere you’ve got a cell signal. Play multiplayer games with friends in the park, or blog an event in real-time. Since EV-DO works at freeway speeds, you could even give Internet access to an entire road-trip caravan.

Those are exactly the kinds of things you can do with the backpack below. Its secret ingredient: the Junxion Box. Plug a cellular-network card into the book-size open-source-based device, and voilà—instant Wi-Fi hotspot, with speeds averaging around 700 kilobits per second. To power the box, I wired it to a 1.2-amp-hour battery and dropped both into the Voltaic Systems backpack, which has a built-in solar charger. Now I can surf for as long as three hours without being tethered to anything but a cell signal. The project isn’t cheap, but prices for the components and service are sure to come down in the next year or so. In the meantime, you can find me in the hills around Southern California. I’ll be the one surrounded by PSP-packing hikers.

See more photos of the backpack .

Parts List
Junxion Box wireless gateway $700; junxionbox.com
Verizon Wireless EV-DO PCMCIA card $100; verizonwireless.com
Voltaic Systems solar-charging backpack $230; voltaicsystems.com

These parts are available at any electronics store:
• 12-volt battery with spade terminals, 1.2 or higher amp-hour $15
• Male DC power plug, size M $5
• 18-gauge wire, black and red $5
• Female insulated quick-disconnect connectors, crimp-type, sized for battery spade terminals $3
• In-line fuse holder $7
• 20-amp fuse 50 cents


Credit: Illustration by Mckibillo.com

Instructions
1) Plug in your EV-DO card and set up the Junxion Box to automatically assign TCP/IP addresses using DHCP, and disable the authentication splash page.

2) To build the power-adapter cable, cut a length of red wire and a length of black. Strip one end of each wire and crimp a spade terminal connector onto each.

Strip the other end of the red wire, and solder it to one end of the fuse holder. Wrap the connection in electrical tape. Take apart the male DC power plug. Solder the end of the black wire to the negative terminal of the plug and the red wire to the positive. Wrap the exposed positive connection in electrical tape, and reassemble the power plug. Install a 20-amp fuse.

3) Connect the Junxion Box cigarette-lighter adapter to the backpack “power out” plug.

4) Connect the battery cable to the “battery” plug on the backpack’s charge controller.

5) Take a hike!

Howto Podcast with Skype

  1. Install SoundFlower on your Mac, this allows us to input and output sounds from different programs and have it all mix together.
  2. Configure Skype output to use SoundFlower (2ch). Skype input will be set to Default System Input or your USB recording device.
  3. Setup a new component on AHP to use the SoundFlower (2ch) as the input and set the output to silence.
  4. set up a new component on AHP

  5. Add a second new component to AHP and set the input to Default System Input or your USB recording device. Choose the output to be silence (You may opt to output the sound to SoundFlower (2ch) and setup a third component to record the mix you have created, then there is no need to mix it later from two files.)
  6. Add a second new component

  7. Add a third component and set the audio source to Application and choose Skype.
  8. Add a third component and set the audio

  9. Go into each component you created and click on hijack.
  10. click on hijack

  11. When you hijack the Skype monitoring component, it will prompt you to ‘instant hijack’ or ‘quit and relaunch’. Just quit and relaunch, it is fairly quick.
  12. The Skype monitoring component

Now we will setup the recordings.

  1. Go into the first two components and choose the recording tab. Set each one to record to mp3, you can setup the naming however you want. (Mp3 recording is VERY processor intensive and I find it can bring my mac mini to its knees if I try to record two at once. If you find this, be sure to use a different format like Apple lossless or wav.)
  2. Set each component to record to mp3

  3. Start your skype call.
  4. Go into the first two components again when you are ready to record. Hit the record button and make sure the red dot shows up next to each (WARNING: This is critical or your audio won’t record… We did this with one episode).
  5. Hit the record button making sure that the red dot appears

  6. Record your interview, you can keep an eye on sound levels on the effects tab of each component. It is important to make sure you are staying under 0 and you don’t make the clip light go red.
  7. Keep and eye on the sound levels - stay under 0

  8. When you are finished, hit recording again for the two components. You can also stop hijacking the three components and shutdown AudioHijack Pro.

Editing Resources

In Garageband, I run three or four tracks, depending on how much stuff
I have for any particular show. My voice track is set with a 10% noise
gate, 15% compression, the built in equalizer set to Vocal Presence,
the Apulsoft C3 Multiband Compressor set to Warmer, and the Speech
Enhancer set to Male Radio. The podsafe music track is set with 5%
compression, but nothing else; the same for the promo track if there
is one. I run 5% compression on the master track and have the Peak
Limiter set to the standard built in setting. The Peak Limiter is
important for those mornings when the coffee doesn't kick in soon enough.

If there's an interview track, I run 25% - 35% compression, a 20%
noise gate, and I usually end up boosting the volume by 3 - 5 db,
depending. The easiest way is to eyeball it and keep the meters just
below the yellow.
 

 
 





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