MEDIA REFERENCE
March 2006
1. HD DELIVERY GETS A LEG UP
With more broadcasters heading towards HD, solution providers are challenged to help create infrastructure that delivers best-possible playout.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (March 2006)
2. BROADCASTERS CREATE WAVES WITH DIGITAL MICROWAVE
Digital microwave offers broadcasters the opportunity to produce programming remotely. But what are the challenges broadcasters must face before acquiring this capability?
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (March 2006)
3. STEP-BY-STEP TO HIGH DEFINITION
High definition on the high seas? Let’s take a look at how cable networks in US conquer production challenges to launch HD channels.
BROADCASTING AND CABLE (February 27, 2006)
4. SWITCHING ON MOBILE TV
TV will inevitably — like voice, music and text — migrate to the world掇 most popular electronic device. Some predict it to become a mass market service somewhere between 2010 and 2015.
WIRELESS ASIA (February 2006)
5. DIGITAL REVOLUTION ARRIVES
After years of planning and billions of dollars in investment, telecom carriers around the world have made a massive bet that the digital revolution has finally arrived and bet billions on new fiber services.
TELECOM ASIA (March 2006)
6. PROTECT YOUR DIGITAL RIGHTS
While the government wants to track what we do and where we do it, the creative industries want to stop us doing it at all in the first place. This article explains how digital rights can be abused and what you can do to stop it.
.NET (March 2006)
7. TV ON THE NET : READY FOR PRIME TIME?
Every once in a while, a technological development switches into fast-forward mode without warning. All of a sudden, seems that “legal TV downloads” was no longer an oxymoron.
PC World (February 16, 2006)
March 2006
1. HD DELIVERY GETS A LEG UP
With more broadcasters heading towards HD, solution providers are challenged to help create infrastructure that delivers best-possible playout.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (March 2006)
2. BROADCASTERS CREATE WAVES WITH DIGITAL MICROWAVE
Digital microwave offers broadcasters the opportunity to produce programming remotely. But what are the challenges broadcasters must face before acquiring this capability?
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (March 2006)
3. STEP-BY-STEP TO HIGH DEFINITION
High definition on the high seas? Let’s take a look at how cable networks in US conquer production challenges to launch HD channels.
BROADCASTING AND CABLE (February 27, 2006)
4. SWITCHING ON MOBILE TV
TV will inevitably — like voice, music and text — migrate to the world掇 most popular electronic device. Some predict it to become a mass market service somewhere between 2010 and 2015.
WIRELESS ASIA (February 2006)
5. DIGITAL REVOLUTION ARRIVES
After years of planning and billions of dollars in investment, telecom carriers around the world have made a massive bet that the digital revolution has finally arrived and bet billions on new fiber services.
TELECOM ASIA (March 2006)
6. PROTECT YOUR DIGITAL RIGHTS
While the government wants to track what we do and where we do it, the creative industries want to stop us doing it at all in the first place. This article explains how digital rights can be abused and what you can do to stop it.
.NET (March 2006)
7. TV ON THE NET : READY FOR PRIME TIME?
Every once in a while, a technological development switches into fast-forward mode without warning. All of a sudden, seems that “legal TV downloads” was no longer an oxymoron.
PC World (February 16, 2006)