[1st paragraph] 'New technology is transforming the TV industry', Mark Thompson, BBC Director General told the newspaper The Observer. The classic notion of TV being a set in the living room with finite channels and linear programming is already gone: TV has moved into the world of Internet and mobile technology and content is growing exponentially in terms of number and diversity. The notion of channels is being replaced by individual choice and on-demand programming. Distinctions between TV and other streaming content are blurred: both live in a shared connected online world. We expect that as the Future Internet develops, TV will complete this disruptive paradigm shift into becoming ubiquituous, always-available, and increasingly persona...
A written submission to A Future for Public Service Television: Content and Platforms in a Digital W...
The first phase of the government’s plan for local TV envisions broadcasts via digital terrestrial t...
This article examines the ways in which the on-demand service BBC iPlayer became a site for navigati...
Australia and New Zealand, like other countries, have unique TV systems and practices that shape the...
Television was born analogue, almost 100 years ago: first broadcast across airwaves, then delivered ...
By offering three visions of the future of television through 2015, this article aims to highlight s...
The Inquiry, launched in November 2015, has focused on the purposes of television in an era characte...
With the steadily growing amount of TV channels, content selection has become a challenge to many us...
Television has served as the most influential medium in the 20th century. Its popularity soared as p...
The UK television industry operates in a highly turbulent environment characterised by the rapid cha...
The Australian National Broadband Network (NBN) is the largest infrastructure project ever proposed ...
The TV is dead motto of just a few years ago has been replaced by the prospect of Internet Protocol ...
According to recent European estimates, the life expectancy of broadcasting as a free-to-air televis...
It is argued that today’s world is marked by competition that negatively impacts the television indu...
The rapid development of new media technologies challenges traditional models for producing and dist...
A written submission to A Future for Public Service Television: Content and Platforms in a Digital W...
The first phase of the government’s plan for local TV envisions broadcasts via digital terrestrial t...
This article examines the ways in which the on-demand service BBC iPlayer became a site for navigati...
Australia and New Zealand, like other countries, have unique TV systems and practices that shape the...
Television was born analogue, almost 100 years ago: first broadcast across airwaves, then delivered ...
By offering three visions of the future of television through 2015, this article aims to highlight s...
The Inquiry, launched in November 2015, has focused on the purposes of television in an era characte...
With the steadily growing amount of TV channels, content selection has become a challenge to many us...
Television has served as the most influential medium in the 20th century. Its popularity soared as p...
The UK television industry operates in a highly turbulent environment characterised by the rapid cha...
The Australian National Broadband Network (NBN) is the largest infrastructure project ever proposed ...
The TV is dead motto of just a few years ago has been replaced by the prospect of Internet Protocol ...
According to recent European estimates, the life expectancy of broadcasting as a free-to-air televis...
It is argued that today’s world is marked by competition that negatively impacts the television indu...
The rapid development of new media technologies challenges traditional models for producing and dist...
A written submission to A Future for Public Service Television: Content and Platforms in a Digital W...
The first phase of the government’s plan for local TV envisions broadcasts via digital terrestrial t...
This article examines the ways in which the on-demand service BBC iPlayer became a site for navigati...