To avoid a term suggestive of "iPod", some use the term netcast instead of podcast, such as the TWiT.tv podcaster Leo Laporte (though the older term is also used in the broader sense of any internet-delivered realtime media transmission). Although netcaster sounds like someone who works on a fishing trawler. Which of real time, real-time and realtime is correct when you are talking about seeing something as it happens?
@realtime I suppose so, but it really depends which of the two you'd like answered! So, say for example, if your question is what's in the body, I might title it 'Do the words "I feel misled" imply a feeling of intent, with respect to the speaker's point of view?' But then again, only you know what you mean to ask. I hope you're not taking the tongue-in-cheek pun as rude, by the way. If so, I ...
realtime media llc, because it took a fraction of a second for the early radios to wake-up That still pretty much happens today in realtime voice-detection computer systems, such as Teamspeak and others. In any case the term's use has always been weak for your purposes due to its apt application to those who have never seen action, but who imagine nonetheless that they are masters of realtime strategy and tactics. I want to express in a description of personalized language instruction that some activities are synchronous, i.e. require a person-to-person meeting in realtime (e.g. in person, telephone, video-c...