1. INTEGRATED APPROACH TO NEWSROOM WORKS
Newsrooms around the region are becoming increasingly modern, bravely throwing out the old in favour of sophisticated machinery that facilitates a more integrated workflow.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (November 2005)
2. NEW PLATFORMS BUOYED UP SATELLITE-BROADCAST INDUSTRY
What does the future hold for satellite broadcasting in Asia? With the demand for satellite-based broadcast delivery increasing in the region and new potential revenue streams for broadcasters, satellite service providers are optimistic that business will continue to skyrocket.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (November 2005)
3. CHANGING CHANNELS
Mobile TV has arrived, but a turf war between network operators and broadcasters is booming. Two industries (Broadcast and Mobile) are coming together and creating questions like: Who owns the customer?
TIME (November 21, 2005)
4. DOWNLOADING THE FUTURE
Soon we’ll be able to download TV programmes in the same way we can with songs and albums. So what future is there for conventional broadcasters? As far as broadband TV is concerned, it’s not a question of what or how any more – it’s a question of when.
BROADCAST (November 4, 2005)
5. MUSIC GOES MOBILE
Mobile operators want more than a device that can play back music. While cellcos search for a business model, analysts see vast opportunity beyond downloads – once operators have the billing, payment and content infrastructure in place.
WIRELSS ASIA (November 2005)
6. DOES THE WEB CONTRIBUTE TO A DIGITAL DIVIDE?
Technologies like podcasting and blogging are new words for many. Is this part of a broader digital divide between those that have access to the web/computers and know how to use them, and those who don’t? Or, is the web a social leveler?
.NET (December 2005)
Newsrooms around the region are becoming increasingly modern, bravely throwing out the old in favour of sophisticated machinery that facilitates a more integrated workflow.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (November 2005)
2. NEW PLATFORMS BUOYED UP SATELLITE-BROADCAST INDUSTRY
What does the future hold for satellite broadcasting in Asia? With the demand for satellite-based broadcast delivery increasing in the region and new potential revenue streams for broadcasters, satellite service providers are optimistic that business will continue to skyrocket.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (November 2005)
3. CHANGING CHANNELS
Mobile TV has arrived, but a turf war between network operators and broadcasters is booming. Two industries (Broadcast and Mobile) are coming together and creating questions like: Who owns the customer?
TIME (November 21, 2005)
4. DOWNLOADING THE FUTURE
Soon we’ll be able to download TV programmes in the same way we can with songs and albums. So what future is there for conventional broadcasters? As far as broadband TV is concerned, it’s not a question of what or how any more – it’s a question of when.
BROADCAST (November 4, 2005)
5. MUSIC GOES MOBILE
Mobile operators want more than a device that can play back music. While cellcos search for a business model, analysts see vast opportunity beyond downloads – once operators have the billing, payment and content infrastructure in place.
WIRELSS ASIA (November 2005)
6. DOES THE WEB CONTRIBUTE TO A DIGITAL DIVIDE?
Technologies like podcasting and blogging are new words for many. Is this part of a broader digital divide between those that have access to the web/computers and know how to use them, and those who don’t? Or, is the web a social leveler?
.NET (December 2005)