Topic: Annotation

5 chapters across the catalog

Tactile Nukes
Episode 1128 2:09:00 - 2:12:36

1128: Tactile Nukes

No Agenda Meetups, Player Annotations, AMAC Magazine

The show highlights upcoming listener meetups in Atlanta, Seattle, and Zurich. They also promote the "No Agenda Player" for its new user-generated annotation features and joke about a host being subscribed to the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC) magazine.

Service Burro
Episode 998 1:14:05 - 1:14:52

998: Service Burro

No Agenda Player, Community Annotation Project

A call for help is issued for the "No Agenda Player" website, which requires assistance with coding and annotations. The goal is to allow producers to add time-stamped comments and metadata to show archives, similar to the functionality found on SoundCloud.

Clip Job
Episode 985 1:02:46 - 1:04:42

985: Clip Job

No Agenda Player and Crowdsourced Annotations

The hosts promote the No Agenda Player and the searchable show notes database. They explain how these tools, built by independent producers, allow listeners to find specific topics within episodes. They encourage the "global producer pool" to continue contributing annotations to improve the resource for researchers and students.

Fifth Column
Episode 686 1:12:13 - 1:13:48

686: Fifth Column

No Agenda Player, Crowdsourced Annotations and SoundCloud Parallel

The "No Agenda Player" is praised as a premier resource for the show, offering SoundCloud-style annotations and topic-based navigation. The hosts highlight that the tool allows users to tweet specific timestamps and is maintained entirely by the producer community. This crowdsourced effort is contrasted with previous transcript projects that often failed due to the high volume of work required.

Bad Actors
Episode 443 57:38 - 1:03:36

443: Bad Actors

No Agenda Community, Eclipse Curry Annotation Tool

A new community-developed tool at eclipsecurry.com allows users to annotate and skip to specific segments of podcast episodes, fulfilling a long-standing request for better navigation. Meanwhile, news reports indicate that protests against U.S. interests are spreading to Yemen and Iran. Media outlets like CNN are criticized for using pre-prepared graphics and "lower thirds" that anticipate official government narratives.