1. DO NEWSPAPERS HAVE A FUTURE?
Are newspapers on paper on the way out? How can the newspaper industry survive the Internet? Whether newspaper companies are on the way out too depends. The fact that people won’t pay for news on the Internet isn’t as devastating for the old medium as it seems.
TIME (October 2, 2006)
2. IPTV : TALKING ABOUT A REVOLUTION
How are broadcasters rising to the challenges presented by the imminent changes in viewing and distribution brought about by IPTV? The term “revolution” is often bandied around in new media circles. After shaking up the music industry forever with illegal and then legal downloads, the Internet is about to fundamentally change the way programmes are distributed and viewed.
BROADCAST (September 15, 2006)
3. DELIVERING BROADBAND EVERYWHERE
The broadband market is undergoing a revolution but requires adaptable solutions if broadband is to become ubiquitous. The ability to deliver full service broadband demands technology leadership and an end-to-end strategy.
TELECOM ASIA (October 2006)
4. THE BRAVE NEW WORLD OF USER-GENERATED CONTENT
Broadcasters are responding to the rapid growth of social networking websites such as MySpace and Bebo by launching their own user-generated propositions. User-generated content is changing how people consume content and what kind of content they are consuming.
BROADCAST (September 8, 2006)
5. THE BUSINESS OF PODCASTING
Where other Internet trends focus on the content, podcasting is just a delivery mechanism. The technology couldn’t be simpler, or the idea easier to grasp. No wonder it has become one of the most varied sources of entertainment on the net. But if a new podcast is unlikely to draw in any numbers, why pay to entertain the world? Some had hoped podcasting would take off a bit more than it has.
.NET (October 2006)
6. 中國電視業發展環境與未來走向
中國電視業在世界新技術浪潮下,近年出現了許多新變化,直接影響未來的發展路向。本文探析箇中情況。
《南方電視學刊》 (二零零六年第四期)
Are newspapers on paper on the way out? How can the newspaper industry survive the Internet? Whether newspaper companies are on the way out too depends. The fact that people won’t pay for news on the Internet isn’t as devastating for the old medium as it seems.
TIME (October 2, 2006)
2. IPTV : TALKING ABOUT A REVOLUTION
How are broadcasters rising to the challenges presented by the imminent changes in viewing and distribution brought about by IPTV? The term “revolution” is often bandied around in new media circles. After shaking up the music industry forever with illegal and then legal downloads, the Internet is about to fundamentally change the way programmes are distributed and viewed.
BROADCAST (September 15, 2006)
3. DELIVERING BROADBAND EVERYWHERE
The broadband market is undergoing a revolution but requires adaptable solutions if broadband is to become ubiquitous. The ability to deliver full service broadband demands technology leadership and an end-to-end strategy.
TELECOM ASIA (October 2006)
4. THE BRAVE NEW WORLD OF USER-GENERATED CONTENT
Broadcasters are responding to the rapid growth of social networking websites such as MySpace and Bebo by launching their own user-generated propositions. User-generated content is changing how people consume content and what kind of content they are consuming.
BROADCAST (September 8, 2006)
5. THE BUSINESS OF PODCASTING
Where other Internet trends focus on the content, podcasting is just a delivery mechanism. The technology couldn’t be simpler, or the idea easier to grasp. No wonder it has become one of the most varied sources of entertainment on the net. But if a new podcast is unlikely to draw in any numbers, why pay to entertain the world? Some had hoped podcasting would take off a bit more than it has.
.NET (October 2006)
6. 中國電視業發展環境與未來走向
中國電視業在世界新技術浪潮下,近年出現了許多新變化,直接影響未來的發展路向。本文探析箇中情況。
《南方電視學刊》 (二零零六年第四期)