From Catholic News Service
Vatican Radio employees give Pope iPod nano
By Carol Glatz - Catholic News Service
VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- A group of Vatican Radio
employees gave Pope Benedict XVI a brand new
iPod nano loaded with special Vatican Radio
programming and classical music.
To honor the Pope's first visit to the radio's
broadcasting headquarters, the radio's technical
staff decided the pencil-thin, state-of-the-art
audio player would make the perfect gift.
Now that Vatican Radio offers podcasts in eight
different languages, the Pope has the
technological capability to plug in and import
the radio's audio files.
Pope Benedict visited the programming and
broadcasting hub of "the Pope's radio" March 3
to mark the station's 75th anniversary.
Hundreds of radio journalists, sound engineers
and support staff lined the radio's hallways to
greet the Pope and present him with gifts,
mostly special in-house productions such as CDs
and books on the church, religion and the Pope.
"We don't have a huge gift to give to the Pope,
but we do have small signs of our work" to give
him, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, Vatican
Radio's general director, told Catholic News
Service.
Though the white iPod nano is tiny, it still
made an impression on the Pope. When the head of
the radio's technical and computer support
department, Mauro Milita, identified himself and
handed the Pope the boxed iPod, the Pope was
said to have replied, "Computer technology is
the future."
The Pope's new 2-gigabyte digital audio player
already was loaded with a sampling of the
radio's programming in English, Italian and
German and musical compositions by Ludwig van
Beethoven, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Frederic
Chopin, Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky and Igor
Stravinsky. The stainless steel back was
engraved with the words "To His Holiness,
Benedict XVI" in Italian.
Once the Pope, who is also a pianist, gets the
hang of the device's trademark click wheel, he
will be able to listen to a special 20-minute
feature produced by the radio's English program
that highlights Mozart's life and music to
commemorate the 250th anniversary of his birth.
The iPod also contains an English-language radio
drama on the life of St. Thomas a Becket and a
10-minute feature on the creation of Vatican
Radio, with original sound clips of the inventor
of the radio, Guglielmo Marconi, and Vatican
Radio's founder, Pope Pius XI.
The Pope also can relive the historical Papal
transition of April 2005. On the player, the
radio's German program included a mix of news
and interviews done during the death of Pope
John Paul II, the conclave and the election of
Pope Benedict.
With his new iPod, the Pope can access the
radio's daily podcasts, as well as download
music and audio books from the Internet.
Copyright (c) 2003 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The CNS news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed, including but not limited to such means as framing or any other digital copying or distribution method, in whole or in part without the prior written authority of Catholic News Service.
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