Social Photo Podcast #2: @dailyshoot and Sharing Work Online

by Aaron on November 20, 2009

Red PomPom Bottle brush....Here’s the second episode of the Social Photo Podcast. Hosts Aaron Hockley and Lyza Danger Gardner talk about the @dailyshoot project as well as a variety of issues surrounding sharing work online. This episode is just over 10 minutes.

Links to Things We Talk About

Distribution and Feed

We’re now on iTunes – if you use iTunes, you can subscribe using this link: Subscribe on iTunes

You can also find the podcast as an attachment to the main Social Photo Talk RSS Feed. You should see a player at the bottom of this post if you want to listen directly, or you can grab the Episode 2 mp3 file directly.

Feedback

We’d love to have your feedback as we figure out the podcast (for example, this week I learned that apparently my mic wasn’t muted that time when I coughed. Either leave a comment here or send mail to podcast@socialphototalk.com – thanks!

Photo by ArunaR, used under Creative Commons licensing

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Social Photo Podcast #3: @dailyshoot Update, Flickr to Twitter, and Short Flickr URLs
  2. Social Photo Podcast #6: Family Photo Sharing, WordPress 2.9, and a Couple Funny Sites
  3. Social Photo Podcast #5: Copyright and Property Releases, Stock Photography and Journalism, Photo Sharing Poll Results
  • Thanks for the shout out about @dailyshoot!

    Lyza brings up several good points. Of course, we just got started and we launched with the lightest possible implementation of the idea of trying to help photographers get out there every day and shoot. So far, we've been impressed with what's happened with just a simple scheduled tweet. People are getting out, shooting, and letting us know about it. That's awesome.

    It's really interesting seeing what people project onto the simple start that we have. Is it a contest? Do the assignments have to be done the day they are assigned? Is there a time limit? How many photos should one take? The answer of course is that it's none of this, or as much of it as you want to make. In a way, we're trying to follow the idea of letting people walk across the grass of a new common area and see where to put the sidewalks.

    We're looking at how to get the process of putting in those sidewalks going. We'll get more info out there soon and we'll be asking people to help us out if they're so inclined.

    Thanks again!
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: