All Studio Production articles – Page 28
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Industry Trends
Blog: Building a worse mousetrap
“Good enough,” is not a phrase usually heard in the corridors of broadcasters unless it’s following the words “that’s not”, writes John Maxwell Hobbs.
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Industry Trends
RTS to stage Futures TV Careers Fair
The Royal Television Society (RTS) has launched its fourth career event to help those keen to forge a career in the television industry.
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Industry Trends
2018 Oscar nominations: Inside the technical categories
IBC365 previews the technical categories for the 90th Academy Awards in which digital acquisition dominates.
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Video
Creative & Technical Sides of VR Production
IBC2017: Panellists offer insights and ideas on fusing the creative and technical sides of VR and 360-degree video production.
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Industry Trends
Top 10 most-read Production articles
The making of the BBC’s Blue Planet 2 and the rise of virtual reality content were among IBC365’s most-read Production articles of 2017.
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Industry Trends
How big is the eSports opportunity?
All the numbers surrounding eSports tournaments seem increasingly stratospheric. Is now the time to be investing?
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Industry Trends
IBC2017 round-up: Halls 10 and 11
From SDI to IP, HEVC and the cloud, and the adoption of VR, conversations were diverse but focused on one goal: moving the industry forward with practical product releases.
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Industry Trends
Interview: David Stump, ASC, steps into the light field
Cinematographer and visual effects pro David Stump, ASC, sees light-field technology as a huge opportunity for film, TV, virtual reality and other areas of content creation.
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Industry Trends
Childrens’ TV: new audiences and new platforms
IBC2017: Despite declining viewing figures, there remains plenty of demand for childrens’ TV.
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Executive Interviews
Lost in Time with mixed reality
The use of mixed reality technology has enabled the creation of formats with levels of interactivity that have not been seen before, says FremantleMedia’s Petter Testmann Koch.
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Industry Trends
TV productions return to revamped BBC Television Centre
The iconic Television Centre in West London has reopened, with The Jonathan Ross Show the first production to use the overhauled studios that were dubbed ’the home of British television’.
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Industry Trends
It’s not just engineers that need in-depth training
Advances in technology mean that operational staff need to know more – not less – about the tools used to create TV.
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Industry Trends
Dunkirk and the return of large format film
Dunkirk is the latest release in the new and rather specialised sub-genre of war films pushing film technology in new directions.
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Industry Trends
Technology v culture: The art of making and delivering TV
The IT industry’s ‘one best way’ approach isn’t always compatible with the media industry, writes John Maxwell Hobbs.
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Industry Trends
What can broadcast learn from the music industry?
Advances in technology mean that broadcast engineers have an increasingly important role to play in aiding the creative process, says John Maxwell Hobbs.
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Industry Trends
Andrew Neil cautions British broadcasters
Broadcaster and journalist Andrew Neil spoke to delegates at the Digital TV Group (DTG) Summit in London where he delivered a stark warning to British broadcasters.
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Industry Trends
Could light field technology cut the cost of VFX?
Light field technology could help to cut the cost of creating visual effects (VFX) for film and TV productions by doing away with the need for green screens.
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Executive Interviews
Michael Zink: 'HDR provides a truly differentiated experience for viewers'
As VP of Technology, Warner Bros. Michael Zink is responsible for exploring the emerging technologies that could enhance Warner Bros.’ capabilities in production, post production and distribution. Concentrating mainly on scripted content for TV and film, his work includes assessing new technologies and assisting with the setup and integration of ...
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Technical Papers
Making audio sound better one square wave at a time
For the past three decades, FM broadcasters have been engaged in what have become known as the “loudness wars”,
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Technical Papers
Integrating non real-time software processes into real-time IP-based production
The move to all-IP production has generated a lot of interest from broadcasters as a means of both saving costs and enabling innovation in production methods.