|
Showing 1 - 10 of
10 matches in All Departments
Internet TV is the quintessential digital convergence medium,
linking television, telecommunications, the Internet, computer
applications, games, and more. Soon, venturing beyond the
convenience of viewer choice and control, Internet TV will enable
and encourage new types of entertainment, education, and games that
take advantage of the Internet's interactive capabilities. What
Internet TV is today and can be in the future forms the context for
this book.
Arising from collaboration between the Columbia Institute for
Tele-Information (CITI) and the European Institute for the Media
(EIM), this volume investigates the advent of widely available
individual broadband Internet communications and their impact on
the development of Internet TV. Editors Eli Noam, Jo Groebel, and
Darcy Gerbarg have collected seminal papers by leaders from the
U.S. and European media and technology industries that offer a
critical look at the impact of interactivity on television content,
and address the need for media organizations to create interactive
programming in this untapped realm with unclear consumer interest
and desires.
Each section of the volume fleshes out key issues and concepts of
television and the Internet:
*Part I, "Infrastructure Implications of Internet TV," discusses
questions about the required network capacity for various quality
grades to deliver individualized broadband to homes.
*Part II, "Network Business Models and Strategies," addresses the
business challenges of making Internet TV a financial success.
*Part III, "Policy," examines policy issues, including copyright
and regulation.
*Part IV, "Content and Culture," reviews available content,
thosecreating it, and how consumers view Internet TV content.
*Part V, "Future Impacts," considers future global prospects for
Internet TV content creation and distribution.
"Internet Television" is an essential resource for professionals
and scholars in new technology and media studies, media policy,
telecommunication, broadcasting, and related areas. It is also
appropriate for graduate seminars in telecommunications, media and
new technologies, and broadcasting and the Internet.
The proliferation of mobile media in recent years is an
international phenomenon, with billions of devices sold annually.
Mobile communications are now moving beyond individualized voice to
mass media content--text, voice, sound, images, and even video.
This will create new types of content that allow media companies
and users to interact in new ways. There is a strong interest from
the media and telecom industries in what manner of applications and
content can be distributed in that fashion, and at what cost. To
answer these questions, the book provides 18 chapters from
internationally renowned authors. They identify likely types of
content such as news, entertainment, peer-to-peer, and
location-specific information; evaluate the economics, business
models, and payment mechanisms necessary to support these media;
and cover policy dimensions such as copyright, competitiveness, and
access rights for content providers. This volume takes the reader
through the various elements that need to be considered in the
development of third generation (3G) content, and explains pitfalls
and barriers. The result is a volume of interest to business
professionals, academics, and policy makers. The book is
international in focus and a glossary of terms is provided. There
are few publications available which give an overview of this
rapidly changing field.
An increasing number of people accept competitiveness as a basis
for living. However, while competitiveness may have its place,
cooperation is more important in many contexts, and interpersonal
relationships are the most important elements in our lives. This is
true not only of individuals, but also of groups and nations. In
this book, prominent authors have come together to consider the
nature of cooperation and prosocial behaviour at levels of social
complexity ranging from the individual to the international.
Successive sections cover key topics such as the relations between
cooperation in animals and humans; the development of prosocial
propensities in humans; aspects of the situation and of personality
that increase the probability that individuals will behave
prosocially; the relationships between trust, cooperation and
commitment; and cooperation between groups and nations. Case
studies illustrating the important issue of international
cooperation are also included. The chapters are integrated by a
series of useful editorials which emphasise that a full
understanding of cooperation and prosocial behaviour requires us to
move between different levels of social complexity.
Derived from a meeting of natural and social scientists, this
interdisciplinary book aims to summarize the main issues regarding
the problem of human aggression, as well as human beliefs about the
subject. This study brings together internationally known
authorities and presents their recent contributions which range in
complexity from the physiological to individual aggression, group
conflict, and international war. The study concludes with a
multilevel approach to the problems of aggression and war. In
nontechnical language suitable for general science readers, the
book provides a valuable framework for the development of ideas and
new attitudies in a field rife with misconceptions.
An increasing number of people accept competitiveness as a basis
for living. However, while competitiveness may have its place,
cooperation is more important in many contexts, and interpersonal
relationships are the most important elements in our lives. This is
true not only of individuals, but also of groups and nations. In
this book, prominent authors have come together to consider the
nature of cooperation and prosocial behaviour at levels of social
complexity ranging from the individual to the international.
Successive sections cover key topics such as the relations between
cooperation in animals and humans; the development of prosocial
propensities in humans; aspects of the situation and of personality
that increase the probability that individuals will behave
prosocially; the relationships between trust, cooperation and
commitment; and cooperation between groups and nations. Case
studies illustrating the important issue of international
cooperation are also included. The chapters are integrated by a
series of useful editorials which emphasise that a full
understanding of cooperation and prosocial behaviour requires us to
move between different levels of social complexity.
Diese fur Deutschland und das Bundesland Nordrhein-Westfalen
reprasentative Internet-Studie analysiert im globalen Zusammenhang
die Profile und Verhaltensweisen von Nutzern und Nichtnutzern und
die gesellschaftlichen Wirkungen, die die Durchsetzung des
Internets und dessen Nutzung mit sich brachte."
Das Buch untersucht die Bedeutung von Privatheit fur moderne
Gesellschaften, Privatheit im Fernsehen, Formen der
Selbstdarstellung im Internet."
Die Studie behandelt das Fernsehen im Digitalzeitalter. Basierend
auf einer Reprasentativbefragung wird das aktuelle
Bildschirmverhalten der Burger, insbesondere in der
Wechselbeziehung TV, Pay-TV, Internet behandelt. Es lassen sich
kunftige Nutzertypen identifizieren, die flexibel Web und TV je
nach Situation einsetzen unddabei besonderen Wert auf qualitativ
hochwertige Unterhaltung legen. Ferner geht die Publikation
ausfuhrlich auf neue TV-Formate und besonders digitale Plattformen
ein und beleuchtet zudem die Rolle der Social Media fur
Fernsehvorlieben ."
Internet TV is the quintessential digital convergence medium,
linking television, telecommunications, the Internet, computer
applications, games, and more. Soon, venturing beyond the
convenience of viewer choice and control, Internet TV will enable
and encourage new types of entertainment, education, and games that
take advantage of the Internet's interactive capabilities. What
Internet TV is today and can be in the future forms the context for
this book.
Arising from collaboration between the Columbia Institute for
Tele-Information (CITI) and the European Institute for the Media
(EIM), this volume investigates the advent of widely available
individual broadband Internet communications and their impact on
the development of Internet TV. Editors Eli Noam, Jo Groebel, and
Darcy Gerbarg have collected seminal papers by leaders from the
U.S. and European media and technology industries that offer a
critical look at the impact of interactivity on television content,
and address the need for media organizations to create interactive
programming in this untapped realm with unclear consumer interest
and desires.
Each section of the volume fleshes out key issues and concepts of
television and the Internet:
*Part I, "Infrastructure Implications of Internet TV," discusses
questions about the required network capacity for various quality
grades to deliver individualized broadband to homes.
*Part II, "Network Business Models and Strategies," addresses the
business challenges of making Internet TV a financial success.
*Part III, "Policy," examines policy issues, including copyright
and regulation.
*Part IV, "Content and Culture," reviews available content,
thosecreating it, and how consumers view Internet TV content.
*Part V, "Future Impacts," considers future global prospects for
Internet TV content creation and distribution.
"Internet Television" is an essential resource for professionals
and scholars in new technology and media studies, media policy,
telecommunication, broadcasting, and related areas. It is also
appropriate for graduate seminars in telecommunications, media and
new technologies, and broadcasting and the Internet.
|
|