Podcasts (video or audio) are designed to be portable and to be watched when you are disconnected from the internet. I.e. on your phone, or your iPod, etc.
You do need to be connected to the Internet to download the podcasts and move them onto your player.
Streaming media (e.g., Hulu.com or YouTube etc) requires that you are connected to the server while you are watching the video or listening to the audio.
u can watch it on Eonline or E tv,if u are connected to Dstv.
Podcast will work with any ipod, including nanos. If you have nano 1st generation or 2nd generation, you can only use audio podcasts because you cant watch videos with these versions. The new 3rd generation, however, will allow you to watch video podcasts and listen to audio podcasts.
While your iPod is connected to your computer, click on it in the 'Devices' section of the left panel. In the main window, select the 'Podcasts' tab, and explore the options for syncing podcasts there. For more detailed information, see link below.
connected
I read by 2012, 17 billion devices will be connected to the internet
Portable Gaming, Music, Movies, Internet, Podcasts, PlayStation Network, Camera etc.
I'm pretty sure podcasts only have sound which makes it quite difficult to listen to.
The Wi-Fi that you are connected to can probably find out what you are watching on the Internet because most Internet service providers do keep some kind of record of the actual web pages that are opened. This does not mean that the provider keeps a record of every page you visit, but does mean that the company is capable of keeping this record.
Limewire has a player in it you can use to listen to music or watch videos. If you want to use it as a peer to peer program, you'll need an Internet connection or some sort of network connection.
on the links that i posted, theres the easy definition... podcast is a consistenty (daily, weekly, monthly) uploaded video to the internet by a single source. the podcast option on itunes allows you to automatically download each of the source's podcasts.
Yes. Each computer connected to the internet is assigned a unique internet protocol, or IP, address.
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