傳媒參考資料

2005-05-17
1. WI-FI'S FUTURE IN A DIFFERENT LIGHT

Doubt over Wi-Fi's viability as a moneymaker hasn't stopped telcos across the region from rolling out hotspots. In part, that's because they now see it as a single but key piece to the total broadband connectivity puzzle.

TELECOM ASIA (May 2005)


2. THE NEXT TV REVOLUTION

With increasing broadband access speeds, together with improvements in video compression, it is now possible to deliver high-quality video services over a phone line to TV. In the future, it will even be possible to deliver high-definition services in this way, opening up the TV market to telephone companies and other service providers, with lower barriers to entry than existing digital platforms.

BROADCAST (April 8, 2005)



3. ADDING VALUE WITH INTERACTIVITY

Producers are increasingly getting to grips with what interactivity can offer, from boosting revenues to promoting mobile networks to gaming. Increasingly, an interactive element is part of the programming proposal.

BROADCAST (April 15, 2005)


4. MAXIMUM DISRUPTION

IP Telephony will bring about real-time enterprise collaboration across many media. While convergence of all media on the Internet is still a tangle of competing standards, individuals and businesses are all chasing this goal. We will see an increase in the use of voice and video to reinforce the utility of collaborating through software applications.

ENTERPRISE NETWORKS ASIA (May 2005)


5. TO CREATE TRUE INOPERABILITY

The use of Connected Services Framework goes a long way toward enabling cost-effective media asset management. By creating true interoperability between equipment from different vendors without each of them having to write specific“one-off”code, this is huge news in the TV business.

BROADCASTING & CABLE (April 11, 2005)
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