Interesting!

What is the date on those? 2000?

When I lived in a webcam house in 2001, all housemates were required to do a
weekly "show" live and archived.  These ranged from cooking shows, to puppet
shows, to a call-in talk show.  (mine was called the 'Feel The Love' Show:
http://radio.cockybastard.com/)

good times. :)

-halcyon
www.hugmobile.com





On 6/28/07, Caleb J. Clark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>   Merry Vloggers. Caleb here, mostly a lurker. I'm building a learning
> center over at blip.tv this summer and a student at NYU's ITP program
> (BTW: I'll post a draft of the center here before we go live for your
> feedback).
>
> Anyway I was doing a little research on the history of video blogging
> and ran into an interesting historical occurrence.
>
> While video blogging seems to have started in 2000, and of course with
> with Steve in 2004. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_blog
>
> Eric, the content editor here at blip.tv, showed me 40 episodes of the
> "JENNIShow" he salvaged. This is NOT the famous JenniCam
> (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JenniCam), but the same woman doing a
> show every 14 days and posting the videos. A video blog? no RSS? It
> was a "Show." same theme, name, etc. Maybe it's just one of the first
> "web shows"???
>
> The video won't play unless you download the source:
> http://blip.tv/file/get/11178564089.40492372102202.rm
> The blip.tv page is here: http://astraldisaster.blip.tv/file/88/
> The way back machine pegs the show at 1997:
> http://web.archive.org/web/19971224180244/http://thesync.com/
>
> I watched/listened to it. Mostly an apt. tour. didn't hear a date
> mentioned, but her computer is shown, as is a cabbage patch doll. It
> is a show for sure, and she asks for emails for show ideas, building
> community and all and ends with "i'll see you in two weeks."
>
>  
>


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