TWiT Cottage: Difference between revisions

From DCTVpedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with 'TWiT Cottage is the nickname given to the studios and headquarters of TWiT. The TWiT Cottage is located in Petaluma, California, USA. …')
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[TWiT Cottage]] is the nickname given to the studios and headquarters of [[TWiT]]. The TWiT Cottage is located in [[wikipedia:Petaluma, California|Petaluma, California]], USA.  
[[Category:General Information]]
[[TWiT Cottage]] is the nickname given to the former home studio and headquarters of [[TWiT]]. The TWiT Cottage was located in [[wikipedia:Petaluma, California|Petaluma, California]].  


==Function==
==Function==
The TWiT cottage is comprised of offices for TWiT staff and a studio for content production. Most of the podcasts on the TWiT network are recorded at the cottage.  
The TWiT cottage was comprised of offices for TWiT staff and a studio for content production. Most of the podcasts on the [[TWiT Network|TWiT network]] were recorded at the cottage.  Although it started out in just one room, they eventually took over the entire building.  By the time they moved out in July 2001, there were 18 employees crammed in there.


==Tour==
==Tour==
In January 2010 Leo Laporte gave a tour of the Twit Cottage in preparation for a trip to CES.
In January 2010, [[Leo Laporte]] gave a tour of the TWiT Cottage in preparation for a trip to CES. Another tour was given in July 2011 immediately before moving out.
[http://www.mefeedia.com/watch/27479556 TWIT Cottage Tour]


==History==
==History==
TWiT founder [[Leo Laporte]] first rented a small room upstairs in the building as studios for his radio show, The Tech Guy. After deciding to start TWiT Live Laporte extended that area of the cottage they rented. TWiT now rents the entire building.
TWiT founder [[Leo Laporte]] first rented a small room upstairs in the building as studios for his radio show, [[The Tech Guy]]. After deciding to start TWiT Live, Leo extended that area of the cottage they rented. TWiT now rents the entire building.


On July 24, 2011, TWiT moved to the nearby [[TWiT Brickhouse]].  Leo's The Tech Guy show was the final show broadcast from the cottage.  That broadcast was followed by a live stream of a parade down the street to the TWiT Brickhouse.  The stream was switched over to the Brickhouse after a tour of the new facility and before [[This Week in Tech]].


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://leolaporte.smugmug.com/gallery/4791115_oFYHY#284541529_x67FA TWiT Cottage photos on SmugMug] - Photos of the TWiT Cottage before a lot of the equipment was moved down from upstairs.
* [http://leolaporte.smugmug.com/gallery/4791115_oFYHY#284541529_x67FA TWiT Cottage photos on SmugMug] - Photos of the TWiT Cottage before a lot of the equipment was moved down from upstairs.
*[http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=30136 GigaPan of the main studio] - a 360° view by Ron Schott.
* [http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=30136 GigaPan of the main studio] - a 360° view by Ron Schott
*[http://www.mefeedia.com/watch/27479556 TWIT Cottage Tour] - A tour of the TWIT Cottage conducted by Leo
* [http://www.mefeedia.com/watch/27479556 TWIT Cottage Tour] - A tour of the TWIT Cottage conducted by Leo

Latest revision as of 10:49, 2 August 2011

TWiT Cottage is the nickname given to the former home studio and headquarters of TWiT. The TWiT Cottage was located in Petaluma, California.

Function

The TWiT cottage was comprised of offices for TWiT staff and a studio for content production. Most of the podcasts on the TWiT network were recorded at the cottage. Although it started out in just one room, they eventually took over the entire building. By the time they moved out in July 2001, there were 18 employees crammed in there.

Tour

In January 2010, Leo Laporte gave a tour of the TWiT Cottage in preparation for a trip to CES. Another tour was given in July 2011 immediately before moving out.

History

TWiT founder Leo Laporte first rented a small room upstairs in the building as studios for his radio show, The Tech Guy. After deciding to start TWiT Live, Leo extended that area of the cottage they rented. TWiT now rents the entire building.

On July 24, 2011, TWiT moved to the nearby TWiT Brickhouse. Leo's The Tech Guy show was the final show broadcast from the cottage. That broadcast was followed by a live stream of a parade down the street to the TWiT Brickhouse. The stream was switched over to the Brickhouse after a tour of the new facility and before This Week in Tech.

External Links