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Television Goes Digital [electronic resource] / edited by Darcy Gerbarg.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: The Economics of Information, Communication, and Entertainment, The Impacts of Digital Technology in the 21st CenturyPublisher: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2009Edition: 1st ed. 2009Description: XIV, 246 p. 35 illus. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780387799780
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 658
LOC classification:
  • HD28-70
Online resources:
Contents:
The Changing Television Business -- Introduction: The Digital Evolution of Television -- TV or Not TV: Where Video Is Going -- The New Screen for Video -- The End of Advertising As We Know It -- From the Marketers' Perspective: The Interactive Media Situation in Japan -- Technology: Content Creation and Distribution -- Adopting Mobile TV: Technologies Seeking Consumers Seeking Content and Cool -- Television Via Satellite -- Creation and Distribution of 4 K Content -- Content -- Is TV Dead? Consumer Behavior in the Digital TV Environment and Beyond -- Video on the Internet: The Content Question -- YouTube Changes Everything: The Online Video Revolution -- Digital Archiving in the Entertainment and Professional Media Market -- Content -- Spectrum Policy and the Public Interest -- Cognitive Radios in Television White Spaces -- Digital Rights and Digital Television.
In: Springer Nature eBookSummary: Television has become a ubiquitous part of our lives, and yet its impact continues to evolve at an extraordinary pace. The evolution of television from analog to digital technology has been underway for more than half a century. Today's digital technology is enabling a myriad of new entertainment possibilities. From jumbotrons in cyberspace to multi-dimensional viewing experiences, digital technology is changing television. Consequently, new advertising metrics that reflect the new viewer habits are emerging. The ability to capture a viewer's interactions changes the advertising proposition. Telephone and wireless companies are challenging the traditional mass media providers-broadcasters, cable and satellite companies-and they're all finding ways to deliver TV programming, video content and Internet offerings to large and small screens in the home and on the go. This volume showcases insights from industry insiders and researchers from a variety of disciplines. It explores the economic, cultural, technical, and policy implications of digital television, addressing such questions as: How will content be monetized in the future? What programming opportunities become possible with the advent of going digital? Will content still be king or will the conduits gain the upper hand? This book analyzes the digital television evolution: its impacts on the economics of the TV industry, its significance for content creation from Hollywood blockbusters to You Tube, the changing role of the consumer, and what's coming next to a theatre near you.
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The Changing Television Business -- Introduction: The Digital Evolution of Television -- TV or Not TV: Where Video Is Going -- The New Screen for Video -- The End of Advertising As We Know It -- From the Marketers' Perspective: The Interactive Media Situation in Japan -- Technology: Content Creation and Distribution -- Adopting Mobile TV: Technologies Seeking Consumers Seeking Content and Cool -- Television Via Satellite -- Creation and Distribution of 4 K Content -- Content -- Is TV Dead? Consumer Behavior in the Digital TV Environment and Beyond -- Video on the Internet: The Content Question -- YouTube Changes Everything: The Online Video Revolution -- Digital Archiving in the Entertainment and Professional Media Market -- Content -- Spectrum Policy and the Public Interest -- Cognitive Radios in Television White Spaces -- Digital Rights and Digital Television.

Television has become a ubiquitous part of our lives, and yet its impact continues to evolve at an extraordinary pace. The evolution of television from analog to digital technology has been underway for more than half a century. Today's digital technology is enabling a myriad of new entertainment possibilities. From jumbotrons in cyberspace to multi-dimensional viewing experiences, digital technology is changing television. Consequently, new advertising metrics that reflect the new viewer habits are emerging. The ability to capture a viewer's interactions changes the advertising proposition. Telephone and wireless companies are challenging the traditional mass media providers-broadcasters, cable and satellite companies-and they're all finding ways to deliver TV programming, video content and Internet offerings to large and small screens in the home and on the go. This volume showcases insights from industry insiders and researchers from a variety of disciplines. It explores the economic, cultural, technical, and policy implications of digital television, addressing such questions as: How will content be monetized in the future? What programming opportunities become possible with the advent of going digital? Will content still be king or will the conduits gain the upper hand? This book analyzes the digital television evolution: its impacts on the economics of the TV industry, its significance for content creation from Hollywood blockbusters to You Tube, the changing role of the consumer, and what's coming next to a theatre near you.

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