All Thought leadership articles – Page 10
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Thought Leadership
Building a next-generation set-top box
From faster channel change to in-home streaming, Freesat’s next set-top box will be equipped with the latest technology to address the most pressing consumer demands, says Matthew Huntington.
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Thought Leadership
Latest 3GPP release is a boost for broadcasters
Release 14 of the 3GPP mobile specification is a landmark update for the broadcast industry, writes Darko Ratkaj.
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Thought Leadership
Drones: a saturated market?
Drones have become as much of a mainstream accessory product as tripods or batteries, writes Douglas I. Sheer.
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Thought Leadership
4K and IP in Europe: What is the state of play?
While UHD remains largely a niche pay-TV offering, investment in IP appears to be a greater priority for end-users, writes Lorenzo Zanni.
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Thought Leadership
It’s time for the industry to protect against grey market geo-piracy
Consumers today have grown used to accessing TV and film content on their terms at the time they want.
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Thought Leadership
Q&A: Eurovision Media Services’ Graham Warren
Eurovision Media Services is involved production and broadcast services through to content distribution. Chief Operating Officer Graham Warren explains more about the business.
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Thought Leadership
The semantic answer to data simplification
Semantic technologies can do what traditional data techniques failed to do, writes Jean-Pierre Evain.
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Thought Leadership
The perfect time to validate your virtualisation strategy
The media industry needs more agile, cost effective, far-reaching video infrastructures appropriate for the change in consumer consumption writes Eric Bolten, SVP Business Development, Zixi
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Thought Leadership
TV must "innovate or die"
The relaunch of DTT services in Germany based on DVB-T2 and HbbTV could be the shape of things to come, writes the EBU’s Peter MacAvock.
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Thought Leadership
Moving beyond the broadcast Vs on-demand debate
The rise of OTT services have led many to question the definition of broadcast, but the focus should be on the needs of end-users, says Stan Moote.
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Thought Leadership
Putting the multiscreen OTT puzzle pieces together
By the end of 2017 OTT revenue is forecast to surpass $50 billion, driven by the proliferation of broadband and connected devices writes Robert Guest, Global Director at Access.
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Thought Leadership
Joining forces to move faster
With viewers deciding what they watch, when and how, broadcasters need to be more agile and responsive than ever before, writes Peter White.
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Thought Leadership
EBU set to prove multi-CDN advantages
The EBU’s multi-CDN project will help its members deliver content reliably over the internet in a cost-effective manner, writes Bram Tullemans.
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Thought Leadership
Cyber security – it’s serious now
With cyber attacks on the rise, those in the media and broadcast industry need to be prepared and not playing catch up, says IABM Research Analyst Lorenzo Zanni.
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Thought Leadership
Helping broadcasters to embrace targetted advertising
Targetted advertising is a necessary evolution within the TV broadcast ecosystem, writes Thierry Fautier and Vincent Grivet.
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Thought Leadership
IBC2017 Platform Futures explained
The Platform Futures stream will provide insight into the impact of new methods of distribution of content and the changing face of the pay TV industry, writes Bill Scott.
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Thought Leadership
Radio user interfaces in a multi-platform world
The radio user interface has remained largely unchanged for years, but that could be set to change, writes Ben Poor.
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Thought Leadership
The next century of SMPTE
As SMPTE embarks on its second century, it continues to address the evolution of the media business through standards work and collaboration with other industry organisations, writes Barbara Lange.
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Thought Leadership
IABM Index shows industry in flux
Should broadcasters continue to invest in linear, or focus instead on online? By Lorenzo Zanni.
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Thought Leadership
The potential of object-based audio for broadcasters
Object-based audio allows for greater personalisation of content but the underlying technology needs to be open to allow for interoperability, writes Roger Miles.