• BroadcastAsia2002 to woo broadcasters worldwide

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 15, 2002

    BroadcastAsia2002, the broadcasting and multimedia technologies event will be held from 18 to 21 June 2002 in Singapore this year.
    The forum will have a wide range of specially-crafted events including, a 12,800 square meter exhibition, cutting-edge conferences and workshops and an incisive CEO Roundtable discussion. It is expected to provide an avenue for broadcasting professionals to showcase their capabilities, ideas and products, and ultimately provide effective solutions to the industry?s needs.

    Comprising three sub-shows - Professional Audio Technology, ComGraphics&Animation and CableSat, BroadcastAsia2002 will feature end-to-end solutions for broadcasters such as digital technology, streaming media, animation and computer graphics software, interactive television and satellite technology, among others.

    The highlights of the forum are a five day international conference, beginning 17 June, which will engage prominent industry professionals in a wide spectrum of topics that the industry faces today; and ComGraphics&Animation2002 Workshops which will have demos of 3-D application tools and game console development, while serving as a creative laboratory for participants to explore the technical and artistic challenges of creating digital art and animation.

    The CEO Roundtable will bring the top executives of the Asia Pacific broadcasting trade together for exchanging views on the industry. The topic for this year?s discussion is Digital Survival for Broadcasters. An audio technology seminar, organized by the Audio Engineering Society, Singapore, will discuss the future trends in digital audio. Topics included are upcoming digital formats, cutting edge audio technlologies, new audio standards and the latest networking techniques for digital audio.

    ComGraph2002, the third Asia Pacific Digital Art and Computer Animation Competition at the forum, will bring under one roof the region?s most talented computer animators in a battle of creativity.

  • BroadcastAsia2002 to woo broadcasters worldwide

    BroadcastAsia2002, the broadcasting and multimedia technologies event will be held from 18 to 21 June 2002 in Singap

  • ESPN to give Mumbai action buffs a dose of X Games excitement on the big screen

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 15, 2002

    ESPN‘s film Ultimate X, The Movie produced in conjunction with Touchstone Pictures will hit Mumbai shores on 24 May, through SPE IndiaThe film, which will be shown at the Imax dome theatre in Mumbai, chronicles the excitement and explosive drama of action sports shown on ESPN and takes a behind the scenes look into the channel‘s Summer X Games.

    The 2001 X Games in Philadelphia take centrestage in the film, covering the extensive preparations atheletes go through for sports like skateboarding, biking, moto X, and street luge competitions where athletes lie their backs on their boards and speed feet first on to the giant screen. In addition, the film will present the stories of the athletes themselves.

    And the state government is attempting to push through a local act at a time when the Central government has proposed an amendment of its Cable TV Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995 to incorporate conditional access systems.

    Special P.O.V. camera mounts on bikes, skateboards and motorcycles guarantee an intense experience, says the company. The film moves back and forth between action, sound bites with faithful followers of the X Games, interviews with competitiors like Bucky Lasek, Mat Hoffman, Dave Mirra. The open and frank nature of the interviews illustrates the naﶥ attitudes of both the participants and the audience, especially when it comes to the issue of injury.

    A special highlight sees coloured cycles soaring fifty feet above the ground. Riders perform aerial acrobatics with their machines. The 40 minute film written and directed by Bruce Hendricks, has a puslating soundtrack, either from the likes of Fat Boy Slim, Moby and 3rd Strike.

  • ESPN to give Mumbai action buffs a dose of X Games excitement on the big screen

    ESPN's film Ultimate X, The Movie produced in conjunction with Touchstone Pictures will hit Mumbai shores on 24 May,

  • Broadcast Worldwide initiates broad based research programme

    Rathikant Basu promoted Broadcast Worldwide which

  • Proposed Tamil Nadu Cable TV Act termed an anachronism of the Dark Ages era

    Submitted by ITV Production on May 15, 2002

    Cable TV industry professionals are aghast at the AIADMK-led Jayalalitha government‘s proposal to push through an act at the state level which basically overrides Central government legislation on cable TV.
    Says the Mumbai-based head of a large MSO: "This is basically taking television back to the dark ages...it‘s an anachronism...it‘s almost as if administrative and royal might is all that counts...neither is the individual nor enterprise important."

    According to legal experts, if the state government‘s legislation does get the governor‘s assent then it will be a constitutional violation because cable TV legislation comes under telegraphy which is a Central government subject.

    And the state government is attempting to push through a local act at a time when the Central government has proposed an amendment of its Cable TV Networks (Regulation) Act, 1995 to incorporate conditional access systems.

    There are other clauses within The Tamil Nadu Exhibition on Television Screen through Multi-System Operations, Video Cassette Recorder and Cable Television Network (Regulation) Act, 2002 which are rankling legal experts.

    The act reportedly makes it compulsory for video libraries, cable TV operators to get an annual licence from the government. It gives the government the right to decided the number of subscriber connections a cable TV operator can provide in his area of operation and the price that can be charged.

    Sources indicate that it is the intent of the Jayalalitha government to keep the limit per network at 100 subscribers, a level which is extremely unviable to run a multichannel operation. Additionally, it reportedly also seeks to disallow licensing of siblings of those who already have been licensed.

    "This is a violation of an individual‘s fundamental consitutional right of freedom," says the legal expert.

    Industry observers indicate that the Act is being introduced with the express intent of breaking the Sun Network‘s grip on the cable TV population in Tamil Nadu - it controls more than 70 per cent of the cable TV subscribers in the state. The Sun Network is backed by Kalanithi Maran - a scion of the DMK Party political leadership, which is the rival of the Jayalalitha-led AIADMK.

    In 1997-98, the AIADMK government had attempted to set up a master control room with the support of local cable TV operators but the effort failed when the government changed. The Sun Network then went on to create Sumangali Cable Vision - which in turn forged alliances with several local cable ops to end up with a 70 per share of the market.

    This is something which has irked Jayalalitha who has cable TV and satellite TV ambitions (she runs Jaya TV) and she is extremely eager to get back her piece of the cable TV action in the state and hence the new legislation.


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