Day 2 at the Portable Media Expo was great too. I met and spoke with creative people like Stacy Bond and Deepthi Welaratna of AudioLuxe, a company that offers "Content Crash Courses" for making your podcasts compelling and professional quality, Matthew Selznick a "do it yourself" advocate, Rob Sample, a Portland podcaster who taught a session for Doug Kaye at the podcasting academy, and Bill Flitter of pheedo, an "RSS+weblog maketing" company.
Also, thanks to a guy named Chris with the BBC -- whose bcard I failed to extract (gasp!) -- I also did a short interview with Podcast Paul in the UK, which was especially fun because I'm going to be in London next month giving two lectures at the London School of Economics in copyright courses that my fellow fellow Elizabeth Townsend Gard is teaching. I am psyched to connect with people in the UK interested in podcasting and its legal ramifications when I'm there too. Anyone interested, please email me to connect up (or comment here).
I have to say that perhaps the highlight of the weekend for me was meeting (and being interviewed by!) JD Lassica of Our Media of . It was my first ever film interview as a lawyer, and that made me a little talkative (which is what happens when I'm nervous).
OK, now back to the real world. I'll post a follow up soon on the Podcasting and the Law panel discussion and additional information about the forthcoming legal guide for podcasters.