The Hobson & Holtz Report - Podcast #223: March 15, 2007
The Hobson & Holtz Report - Podcast #223: March 15, 2007
Content summary: Shel’s in Brazil, Neville’s off to Belgium; Business Week on corporate wikis: the examples of Nokia and Dresdner Kleinwort; Shel reports from Sao Paulo; Dan York reports on FolderShare and Talkshoe; Max Hansen does Lee Hopkins; listeners’ comments discussion; the music; and more.
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Show notes for March 15, 2007
Welcome to For Immediate Release: The Hobson & Holtz Report, a 37-minute podcast recorded live from Wokingham, Berkshire, England, and almost live from Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Download the file here (MP3, 17MB), or sign up for the RSS feed to get it and future shows automatically. (For automatic synchronization with your iPod or other digital player, you’ll also need a podcatcher such as Juice, DopplerRadio, iTunes or Yahoo! Podcasts, or an RSS aggregator that supports podcasts such as FeedDemon).
Listen to this podcast now:
In This Edition:

Links for the blogs, individuals, companies and organizations we discussed or mentioned in the show are posted to the FIR Show Links pages at The New PR Wiki. You can contribute - see the home page for info.
If you have comments or questions about this show, or suggestions for our future shows, email us at fircomments@gmail.com; or call the Comment Line at +1 206 222 2803 (North America) or +44 20 8133 9844 (Europe); or Skype: fircomments. You can email your comments, questions and suggestions as MP3 file attachments, if you wish (max. 3 minutes / 5Mb attachment, please!). We’ll be happy to see how we can include your audio contribution in a show.
So, until Monday March 19…
Max - you were hilllllarrrious :-)
And Dan York - here is another file sharing service -
Posted by Karin Høgh on 03/15 at 04:25 AMI’m still using FTP, myself. My web host (like most web hosts) provides multi-user FTP, so whenever the Ur-Guru has a large file to send me, he puts it onto my FTP server.
Of course, the pathetic excuse for high-speed internet that we have in the US limits the size of files we can reasonably transmit over the Internet, and I’m not at all sure how to get around *that* problem.
Posted by Sallie Goetsch (rhymes with "sketch") on 03/16 at 04:41 PMI use senduit.com. It has a limit of 100MB which works for me.
Enjoy the podcast. Thanx for the fresh ideas.
Posted by Peter A. Mello, Sea-Fever Consulting LLC on 03/16 at 06:06 PM@Dan
I guess this will do the job for you. Store and share up to 1GB with the free account.
http://www.box.net/Posted by Nicolai on 03/17 at 04:23 AMDan…
http://www.dropsend.com is a file sharing service that offers a free account with 250MB of storage. Additional plans run from $5 to $19 per month and 1 to 25 GB of online storage.
Posted by Doug Minor on 03/17 at 03:33 PMI was going to put the Business Week link in the show notes but the wiki calls for a password. If anyone has the time and the inclination to tell me how I get it, I’d appreciate it. Thanks :)
In the meantime, here’s the link http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2007/tc20070312_476504.htm
Posted by Steven Lewis on 03/18 at 02:58 PMGreat story, thanks. A rare web jewel:)Always search the web for smth interesting, including cool music mp3 music download is a site where one can compile perfect playlists. A cushy spot for a music addict!
Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) on 03/26 at 03:51 AM
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