Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - (Page 8) Editorial Department a Viewing the slowdown in 3-D a s we near NAB, we begin looking forward to the usual round of product launches and exciting new technologies. However, hanging over the broadcasting community are the current global economic woes. Whenever I talk to vendors, I ask their opinions. Of course, many with public companies are guarded about telling me what could be seen as “forward looking statements.” But the messages I am getting show little in the way of a pattern. Some say that large projects that were planned years ago are continuing on, as budgets were already allocated. And then some parts of the world are not suffering the same lack of funds for investment. Overall, it’s a mixed view on sales. It’s clear that vendors are being forced to focus much more on tracking markets for opportunities. - To sum it up, we are in period of ambiguity, and it is uncertain how long it is going to last. Set against this inevitable doom are many signs of continuing development. 3-D stereoscopic broadcasting is gathering pace. Trials are continuing, and on the consumer side, displays have emerged to support the technology. Mobile television continues to see increasing interest, especially in the Pacific Rim. For broadcasters, times look just as uncertain. They already had the challenge of losing advertising spending to the Web, and now the economic downturn is leading to further falls. Search engine marketing is offering targeted advertising that straight broadcasting cannot. For television to play in that space, the receiver must be able to in- teract with the operator to feed back viewing patterns. For cable and satellite providers, the back connection from the STB already exists. It is the over-the-air broadcasters that lack a reverse path. Television can still differentiate itself from the Web. Whether delivered over-the-air, via cable and satellite, or as mobile TV, television offers the appointment viewing that solo browsing does not. For news, sports and reality shows, broadcast television is hard to beat as the distribution channel of choice. The issue is how to compete in other areas, such as movies and episodic programming, where the capability to download and view on screens large or small provides alternatives to broadcasting. The obvious answer is to compete head to head with the new media entrants. Overthe-air stations should have a strong Web presence to offer their viewers complementary content from promos to program downloads. But this area is getting competitive as newspaper publishers add video news to their Web sites. User-created content also competes for eyeballs with professionally produced content. The next five years will be challenging for broadcasters who do not adapt to the continuum of digital content that is now available across all distribution channels. The future unique selling proposition of television must be live events, whether news, sports or reality shows. Recent events can only accelerate convergence of media formats, which I believe will inevitably lead to a bigger split between production and publishing/distribution, with traditional production companies feeding global media publishers. I don’t see the Web replacing television, but I do think both will morph into a new media publishing world that delivers over RF, fiber, copper and removable storage media to a multitude of screens from handheld to home theater. Mix this with file-based workflows, and only program production — with cameras, lights and switchers — will remain as classic television engineering. DaviD austerberry, eDitor Send comments to: editor@broadcastengineeringworld.com 8 broadcastengineeringworld.com | February 2009 http://www.broadcastengineeringworld.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 Contents Viewing the Slowdown in 3-D Examine Workflows Tapeless Technology Digital Audio 24p and 25p Judder Video Routing: A Look at What's Next Managing AFD The Right Connections Solid State Logic's AWS 900+ SE and More... Advertisers Index Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 (Page Cover1) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 (Page Cover2) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 (Page 3) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Contents (Page 4) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Contents (Page 5) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Contents (Page 6) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Contents (Page 7) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Viewing the Slowdown in 3-D (Page 8) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Viewing the Slowdown in 3-D (Page 9) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Examine Workflows (Page 10) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Examine Workflows (Page 11) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Examine Workflows (Page 12) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Examine Workflows (Page 13) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 14) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 15) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 16) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 17) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 18) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Tapeless Technology (Page 19) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Digital Audio (Page 20) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Digital Audio (Page 21) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Digital Audio (Page 22) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Digital Audio (Page 23) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - 24p and 25p Judder (Page 24) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - 24p and 25p Judder (Page 25) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - 24p and 25p Judder (Page 26) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - 24p and 25p Judder (Page 27) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 28) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 29) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 30) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 31) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 32) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Video Routing: A Look at What's Next (Page 33) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Managing AFD (Page 34) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Managing AFD (Page 35) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Managing AFD (Page 36) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Managing AFD (Page 37) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - The Right Connections (Page 38) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - The Right Connections (Page 39) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Solid State Logic's AWS 900+ SE and More... (Page 40) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Solid State Logic's AWS 900+ SE and More... (Page 41) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Advertisers Index (Page 42) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Advertisers Index (Page Cover3) Broadcast Engineering - February 2009 - Advertisers Index (Page Cover4)
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