MEDIA REFERENCE
April 2006
1. FIBER AT ANY COST
With the need for IPTV and ongoing quest for triple-play services driving higher bandwidth requirements in the local access loop, industry analysts are becoming bullish on the prospects of fiber access deployments.
TELECOM ASIA (March 2006)
2. MOBILE TELEVISION – KILLER APPLICATION?
Will a mobile TV that also happens to act as a mobile phone and mobile text-messenger become the TV screen of choice for ordinary consumers as they move around the house?
INTER-MEDIA (February 2006)
3. NAVIGATING THE NEW FRONTIER
With mobile technology ubiquitous, the big question facing broadcasters is how to position themselves in this new world.
BROADCAST (March 2006)
4. NET FILM DISTRIBUTION COUP
The web has already become a major medium for delivering TV, video content and movies, but costs and long download time have loomed as problems.
PC MAGAZINE (April 11, 2006)
5. NAVIGATING THE MANAGED SERVICES GLUT
Enterprises spoilt for choice as telcos and IT providers are all pitched into an emerging converged ICT services market.
COMPUTER WORLD (March 2006)
6. NEWSROOMS SIZE UP THE ACQUISITION BATTLEFIELD
File-based workflow, High Definition are key factors as stations switch out cameras. But broadcasters?choices today are far broader than picking one tape format over another.
BROADCASTING & CABLE (March 27, 2006)
7. TIME RIPE FOR NEWSROOMS TO GO DIGITAL
It is a reality that economics, more than technology, drives the broadcast industry, where the return on investment is key. Greater system choices and lower prices leave broadcasters with little reason to delay going digital.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (February 2006)
8. 2006中國電視產業大解碼
中國電視產業政策風雲變幻,本文詳盡分析國內電視產業近年的最新形勢。
《南方電視學刊》(二零零六年第一期)
April 2006
1. FIBER AT ANY COST
With the need for IPTV and ongoing quest for triple-play services driving higher bandwidth requirements in the local access loop, industry analysts are becoming bullish on the prospects of fiber access deployments.
TELECOM ASIA (March 2006)
2. MOBILE TELEVISION – KILLER APPLICATION?
Will a mobile TV that also happens to act as a mobile phone and mobile text-messenger become the TV screen of choice for ordinary consumers as they move around the house?
INTER-MEDIA (February 2006)
3. NAVIGATING THE NEW FRONTIER
With mobile technology ubiquitous, the big question facing broadcasters is how to position themselves in this new world.
BROADCAST (March 2006)
4. NET FILM DISTRIBUTION COUP
The web has already become a major medium for delivering TV, video content and movies, but costs and long download time have loomed as problems.
PC MAGAZINE (April 11, 2006)
5. NAVIGATING THE MANAGED SERVICES GLUT
Enterprises spoilt for choice as telcos and IT providers are all pitched into an emerging converged ICT services market.
COMPUTER WORLD (March 2006)
6. NEWSROOMS SIZE UP THE ACQUISITION BATTLEFIELD
File-based workflow, High Definition are key factors as stations switch out cameras. But broadcasters?choices today are far broader than picking one tape format over another.
BROADCASTING & CABLE (March 27, 2006)
7. TIME RIPE FOR NEWSROOMS TO GO DIGITAL
It is a reality that economics, more than technology, drives the broadcast industry, where the return on investment is key. Greater system choices and lower prices leave broadcasters with little reason to delay going digital.
ASIA-PACIFIC BROADCASTING (February 2006)
8. 2006中國電視產業大解碼
中國電視產業政策風雲變幻,本文詳盡分析國內電視產業近年的最新形勢。
《南方電視學刊》(二零零六年第一期)