Jerod
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And because the master version only has a couple things added to it, it's the same file size. Now, once those changes go in, I'm going to produce that right after the show or after this recording that we're literally talking into right now. I'm going to go do that work in the master file. And that file size will grow probably to at most three megabytes.
And because the master version only has a couple things added to it, it's the same file size. Now, once those changes go in, I'm going to produce that right after the show or after this recording that we're literally talking into right now. I'm going to go do that work in the master file. And that file size will grow probably to at most three megabytes.
So like these session files are very small and are supported by the local file system, which has... Recorded sessions in their imported files, all these different things that are sort of like file system stuff that Adobe Audition uses.
So like these session files are very small and are supported by the local file system, which has... Recorded sessions in their imported files, all these different things that are sort of like file system stuff that Adobe Audition uses.
Adobe Audition has been really good to use, I would say, over the years because it moves from person to person pretty easily as an independent file system or an independent directory that you can copy and do whatever you need to do with it. And so we've been very happy on that front.
Adobe Audition has been really good to use, I would say, over the years because it moves from person to person pretty easily as an independent file system or an independent directory that you can copy and do whatever you need to do with it. And so we've been very happy on that front.
And even chaptering within in the WAV file, when we do that, there's a span that you can put like a marker and another marker and join those together and make them a chapter or a two-point marker. I'm not even sure what they call those things, honestly. Merged markers, something like that. And let's turn it into chapters.
And even chaptering within in the WAV file, when we do that, there's a span that you can put like a marker and another marker and join those together and make them a chapter or a two-point marker. I'm not even sure what they call those things, honestly. Merged markers, something like that. And let's turn it into chapters.
Range marker, I think. Yeah. Been very easy to do that. And I think it's important probably, Jared, for you to talk about some of the stuff you're doing with the WAV file. Can I interview you a little bit on this process? I feel like maybe they might get more mileage on an interview version versus a monologue version of it. Absolutely. So I know what we do. We mix down a WAV file. Right.
Range marker, I think. Yeah. Been very easy to do that. And I think it's important probably, Jared, for you to talk about some of the stuff you're doing with the WAV file. Can I interview you a little bit on this process? I feel like maybe they might get more mileage on an interview version versus a monologue version of it. Absolutely. So I know what we do. We mix down a WAV file. Right.
And then we mix down through a process called match loudness to get to the MP3 because there's some things that happen in this match loudness process that make it broadcast worthy. It kind of pulls levels up inside the MP3 file to make it, you know, the levels normalized and stuff like that for production audio out in the world. And so the WAV file has chapters in it. It's larger than the MP3.
And then we mix down through a process called match loudness to get to the MP3 because there's some things that happen in this match loudness process that make it broadcast worthy. It kind of pulls levels up inside the MP3 file to make it, you know, the levels normalized and stuff like that for production audio out in the world. And so the WAV file has chapters in it. It's larger than the MP3.
We then drag that WAV file into match loudness and push go essentially, or run I think is the word for the process. And then a minute or two later, depending upon the machine you're using it on. Out comes this MP3, right? Right. And so we upload the MP3 into our CMS, our website, our application. And then before that, though, we also sort of drag and drop this WAV file.
We then drag that WAV file into match loudness and push go essentially, or run I think is the word for the process. And then a minute or two later, depending upon the machine you're using it on. Out comes this MP3, right? Right. And so we upload the MP3 into our CMS, our website, our application. And then before that, though, we also sort of drag and drop this WAV file.
Can you talk about what you do to introspect that WAV file to pull out the chapters, to pull it into the CMS process? And then some things that happen with the MP3 when it comes to like date changes or title changes or slug changes, how those things permeate into the final CDN that actually goes out to the world. Right.
Can you talk about what you do to introspect that WAV file to pull out the chapters, to pull it into the CMS process? And then some things that happen with the MP3 when it comes to like date changes or title changes or slug changes, how those things permeate into the final CDN that actually goes out to the world. Right.
So there's really two sources of truth for any piece of information about an episode, right? And those two sources are the RSS feed, or feeds in our case, in which the episode lives, and then the ID3 tags inside of the MP3, the final artifact. And those two sources of truth should be synchronized and match.
So there's really two sources of truth for any piece of information about an episode, right? And those two sources are the RSS feed, or feeds in our case, in which the episode lives, and then the ID3 tags inside of the MP3, the final artifact. And those two sources of truth should be synchronized and match.
And so the obvious place to do that work is in our admin, because our admin is where we author a lot of that information, including the title, the date published, the duration. We pull that out of the MP3, but all the information is stored in our CMS.
And so the obvious place to do that work is in our admin, because our admin is where we author a lot of that information, including the title, the date published, the duration. We pull that out of the MP3, but all the information is stored in our CMS.