Thanks so much! The timing is marvellous, as I'm just about to start teaching myself Punjabi and Urdu, so you've made the process significantly cheaper.
Posted by Stuart at June 18, 2009 09:44 PMVery nice. Thank you John Wesley (but how could you go wrong with a name like that) and thank you Hat. The ones I looked at were really free, very interesting, and you can subscribe to them. I haven't looked at the English/ESL ones yet, but if they're as nice as the ones I looked at, my students will be interested.
The only thing that made me think twice was the program wanted to download the latest version of itunes and quicktime. The last time I did that it set itself as the default player and messed up my photo software so that I had to reinstall it. I guess I can just use the older version though.
Posted by Nijma at June 19, 2009 12:37 AMNijma, I got a similar message but aborted and used Apple Update to just update my QuickTime player to 7.6.2 for the security fix. I have no need for the bloated mostrosity that is iTunes since I don't have an iPod. With Apple software, one simply has to match them in cunning and ruthlessness to ensure that one can use their products as one wishes, not as they wish.
Posted by Stuart at June 19, 2009 12:44 AMGreat timing for me as well, as listening to this song - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nPj5iBELuXc - has gotten me interested in Brazilian Portuguese again! I first heard it on the radio performed by Badi Assad, but I have yet to find her version of it on-line.
Posted by Artifex Amando at June 19, 2009 06:00 AMThere's also this massively useful site:
http://soyouwanttolearnalanguage.googlepages.com/home
which is especially useful for lots of lesser studied languages.
Posted by Michael Farris at June 19, 2009 07:38 AMThanks, Michael, I'll add it to the post, and I'm glad people find this useful.
Posted by language hat at June 19, 2009 09:15 AMThanks, languagehat! This is very useful: my students often ask about online resources to supplement my materials and classes.
Posted by Lisa at June 19, 2009 11:24 AMThe Master List even contains Malayalam.
The other site says: "If you are looking for authentic material in your chosen L2..." I'm sure many readers here have moved beyond L2, L3, ...
Dutch is on both lists, so that eliminates another excuse for not learning it :-)
Posted by Christophe Strobbe at June 19, 2009 01:56 PMI have yet to find her version of it on-line.
Yahoo! Music was happy to play some for me. Maybe it depends on where you're coming from? Or maybe it's just a preview.
Posted by MMcM at June 21, 2009 09:39 AMIt's right up my lane, thanks, Katiba.
Posted by Rethabile at June 24, 2009 02:03 PMOoooooh.
Now I have no excuse but my own laziness.
I've actually downloaded some podcasts attempting to teach German. The first one was annoying and the second one is a bit too cutesy. I think I need to find something real and listen to for complete immersion. Of course I won't understand half of it, but hopefully that'll change. If I could find some that discuss the same subjects I listen to in English, I might help.
Guess I should go ask the skeptics and astronomy buffs. (Hmmm - I wonder if there're any chemistry and maths podcasts ...)
Posted by Sili at June 26, 2009 06:00 PM