[Update (4/19/05@1350): If iPodderX is better, than of course I'll stick with it... ;) Incidentally, the iPodderX main developer (Ray Slakinski) has already contacted me to discuss my concerns (Fast huh?). This review post had barely been online for 12hrs when I got the email! Anyway, I look forward to our chat and will post as much as I can (with his consent) as soon as I can. In addition, I will post my reivew of iPodderX v3.0 when it is released.]
A few weeks back, it seemed as if everyone stopped podcasting. I knew that couldn't be true. So what happened? Well, I use iPodderX v2.2.9 for OS X, and have routinely updated to the occasional point release (and yes, I'm a registered user). Version, after version after version I seemed to have problems crop up; and when I complained (though I haven't recently), the developer actually put me in the beta testers group (where apparently the fixes were being tested). In any case, recently the iPodderX kept asking me to register every time I ran it. Since I already had, it seemed to be just another bug. After a while the software wouldn't even load. I was then forced to re-enter my registration code just to get it to run. However, it still didn't seem to be downloading the latest podcasts... and when it did, it left them in its download directory without adding them to iTunes. The log files that I looked at appeared to be devoid of any substantive errors that I could gather. Unacceptable to say the least.
iPodderX was my first podcast receiver, and I chose it because it worked, and had a brushed-metal UI. My recent problems (compounded by continuing delays for v3.0) have forced me to see what's out there.
Surprisingly there are three podcast receivers out there of note. I've downloaded all the most recent available betas, and will attempt to give my brief take. Each podcatcher is followed with a conclusion and rating. 1= Horrendous, 2=Barely Functioning, 3=Works, 4=Good, 5=Outstanding. As a baseline score I used iPodderX v2.2.9 which in my estimation scores a 2 (barely functioning).
iPodder - Podcast receiver v2.0 is an open source (GPL; donationware) brushed-metal receiver. It is commonly referred to as "Lemon", which is incidentally the apps icon. I found this UI the most confusing of the three - at least initially. Along the top are the tabs for: downloads, subscriptions, podcast directory, cleanup and logs. It definitely took a while to figure it out, but once you do it's not bad. Though, over the course of a week, switching between subscriptions and downloads got old real fast.
Each section does what you expect. Downloads shows you what's currently being downloaded (along with a progress indicator), as well as what's been downloaded. Oddly, it even has a play button on each line to allow you to play the podcast directly in iTunes - which seems cool, until you realize that you can't pause or stop it from here. Subscriptions is just plain weird. The icons barely make sense, and it took me a while just to figure out why all of my subscriptions had a red bar icon in front of them (red bar = podcast, redbar with X = delete selected podcast, etc). I really do think it's cool that you can click on a subscription and selectively download indiviual podcasts within a subscription though. Other standard functions include scheduling, catchup, and download all. The podcast directory seemed rather slow (requiring a round trip to some OPML directory somewhere), and appears to be rather short on content right now. The Cleanup section is a new feature for me, but it appears to allow you to selectively delete podcasts completely from your Mac (including iTunes). Finally, logs. iPodderX has logs, but good luck finding them - they are buried in a library folder deep in the guts of OS X. At least here they are exposed (though it shouldn't have it's own tab, but rather have it in the menu).
Conclusion [3, Works]: Functional and informative about what's going on with your downloads, and it even adds on the podcatcher idea with a tidy cleanup area. Though switching between tabs constantly was a pain. I wish most of this was on one screen.
PlayPod v1.07b by IGG Software, LLC. (the makers of iBank) is a commercial podcast receiver, also with a brushed-metal UI, that costs $17. This app appears to be the most aggressive of the three - going so far as to integrate a blog aggregator and a podcast receiver. It looks very much like an iLife app - but with folders. In the left pane you can see your podcasts & your blog subscriptions - with an at a glance number for unread/unheard items. I addition to the left pane update numbers, you also see the total number of unread/unheard items in the tray with a number superimposed over the icon (sweet).
There is also a Directory and a download item in the left pane. The directory item links to an OPML directory. Unlike iPodder this directory appears to work and is pretty snappy with it's finder-like list view (the one with the columns where you select a folder/category and it loads the next column). The downloads section gives you an at a glance view of what's being downloaded as well as their current status in bytes/percent.
Once you click on a podcast (or blog subscription) you will see the current list of podcasts that were returned by the rss feed - and you can selectively start the downloads of the ones you are interested in. Just like iPodder, PlayPod also shows your download stat (%). When you select an individual podcast in the upper right pane you see the text and/or a mini Quicktime app bar that automatically kicks off the download (whether you've hit download or not) allowing you to immidiately begin listening. This was rather erratic, but worked most of the time (yeah, it's beta).
Conclusion [4, good]: The UI gives me the feeling that they were going for an iApp experience that kept (locked) you in with the blog aggregator bit. It's a powerful idea, but I'm not sure I'm ready for it... especially since I'm currently a NewsGator user (though NewsGator has no plans to build an Entourage edition I may just switch soon - if I don't write my own NewsGator sync script for Entourage).
PoddumFeeder v1.1 by If Then Soft is a commercial podcast receiver, also with a brushed-metal UI, that cost $5. This app has the cleanest interface of the bunch. Pretty much everything can be done from here with little work to find it. Along the top you'll get an update on exactly what it's doing. No guesswork. In the left pane you have access to a podcast directory which again is not searchable and quite slow to return your selection lists. At the bottom of the directory you have buttons that allow you to load a remote subscription manager (I have no idea what this is), get info on the selected podcast, and add a new podcast to your subscription list... which is shown in the right pane. This list on the right is where you manage your subscriptions. Several buttons below the subscription manager list allow you to: enable/disable all subscriptions, save out your OPML file (a list of all your podcasts), email a link to the selected podcast feed, get more info on the selected feed, download updates from the selected feed, and download updates from all feeds. There is even a nifty little slide rule that allows you to control how many podcasts are downloaded from each feed (from only the most recent to all of them). You also have access to the activity logs through a menu (instead of in you face like with iPodder lemon). Finally, it's even ready to support iPodderX switchers with an "Convert iPodderX OPML" item under the tools menu.
Conclusion [4, good]: This one was borderline outstanding. If it wasn't for the annoyingly slow podcast directory and the lack of the nifty selectable download options (like both iPodder lemon and PodPlayer) this would be the perfect podcast receiver.
I haven't completely decided yet, and the picture below was just uploaded to the iPodderX developer blog. We should see the new version soon. However, if it isn't better than PoddumFeeder, I'll probably switch.
posted @ Monday, April 18, 2005 10:21 PM