Linus Torvalds, the creator and maintainer of the Linux kernel, joined me at the recent Open Source Summit in Vienna for an insightful conversation covering ...
Not sure what your point is? The technology and the name was popularized by Apple, not Google. If Google had done it, they could have just as well called it that and it would make no tangible difference.
And Wikipedia says video podcasts exist so I’m not sure what you’re trying to get at.
Are you aware that Wikipedia is also user-editable? I don’t care what Wikipedia says, use your brain.
Ask yourself what is a podcast? Why is it not called “radio”? Why is it not called “video”? Are all podcasts audio interviews? Apply some basic sense here. Watch the old videos from when Steve Jobs introduced it and listen to how he described it.
Then cite the sources, there’s no reason to use Wikipedia as an unnecessary middleman.
Cites dictionaries
Once again I’m going to ask you to appeal to a sense of logic and reason instead of authority. These definitions make zero sense.
For example your second source says “downloaded over the internet” and since YouTube doesn’t allow you to download videos, YT videos would be omitted from that definition.
For example your second source says “downloaded over the internet” and since YouTube doesn’t allow you to download videos, YT videos would be omitted from that definition.
Everything on the internet is “downloaded” to your device, otherwise you can’t view it. It just means receiving data from a remote server.
No, that’s “Download to file” or “Download and save”. Just because some people like to refer to downloading and saving as just “downloading”, doesn’t mean that that magically now means that. You out of all people, who likes to rail against people using wrong definitions, should realise this.
The CS definition has never directly implied that downloading must also store the received data.
You are not allowed to […] access, reproduce, download, distribute, transmit, broadcast, display, sell, license, alter, modify or otherwise use any part of the Service or any Content except: (a) as expressly authorized by the Service; or (b) with prior written permission from YouTube and, if applicable, the respective rights holders.
But it’s not called droidcast. And Wikipedia says video podcasts exist so I’m not sure what you’re trying to get at.
Not sure what your point is? The technology and the name was popularized by Apple, not Google. If Google had done it, they could have just as well called it that and it would make no tangible difference.
Are you aware that Wikipedia is also user-editable? I don’t care what Wikipedia says, use your brain.
Ask yourself what is a podcast? Why is it not called “radio”? Why is it not called “video”? Are all podcasts audio interviews? Apply some basic sense here. Watch the old videos from when Steve Jobs introduced it and listen to how he described it.
Are you aware Wikipedia has sources? And that those sources disagree with you?
Then cite the sources, there’s no reason to use Wikipedia as an unnecessary middleman.
Once again I’m going to ask you to appeal to a sense of logic and reason instead of authority. These definitions make zero sense.
For example your second source says “downloaded over the internet” and since YouTube doesn’t allow you to download videos, YT videos would be omitted from that definition.
Everything on the internet is “downloaded” to your device, otherwise you can’t view it. It just means receiving data from a remote server.
No it is not. You’re using wrong definitions to back up other wrong definitions.
“Download” means to make a copy and store it on your local device.
No, that’s “Download to file” or “Download and save”. Just because some people like to refer to downloading and saving as just “downloading”, doesn’t mean that that magically now means that. You out of all people, who likes to rail against people using wrong definitions, should realise this.
The CS definition has never directly implied that downloading must also store the received data.
No it is not.
https://www.youtube.com/static?gl=US&template=terms
I do. You do not.
Can you read?
I’ma listen to respected sources, not some rando on Lemmy.
Okay, well then, according to your own “respected sources”, this is also not a podcast, so go on with yourself.
Also https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/steve-jobs-at-the-d-all-things-digital-conference-video/id529997900
…yes? What about it?
The apple podcast website has video podcasts.
No. It does not. It has podcasts. And some of those podcasts have an optional video component.
Adding video doesn’t make it not a podcast. Not distributing it as a podcast makes it not a podcast.