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Theresa de los Santos

Mobile DTV Brings TV to New Devices and Smartphones - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Who has time to sit on the couch and watch TV anymore? In the last 10 years, broadcasters have lost 25 percent of their audience. So to win back some viewers, the industry has a plan to grab their attention while they are on the move. Beginning in April, eight television stations in Washington, D.C., will broadcast a signal for a new class of devices that can show programming, even in a car at high speed. In all, 30 stations in Atlanta, Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle and Washington have installed the necessary equipment, at a cost of $75,000 to $150,000
Rebekah Pure

TV-News Staff Cuts Signal Leaner Approach - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    Because of staff cuts, ABC and CBS are relying on journalists who can use digital equipment to produce stories themselves, or just use smaller teams.
anonymous

News: Fighting a Copyright Charge - Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    The University of California at Los Angeles on Wednesday announced that it will continue streaming copyrighted videos in online "virtual classrooms" despite legal objections from an educational media trade group. The university's decision is the latest development in a copyright dispute with the Association for Information and Media Equipment over whether it is legal for the university to convert DVDs from its libraries into a digital format that students can stream from password-protected course Web sites. UCLA considers the practice "essential," since it allows students to watch the videos on their own computers and on their own time, rather than having to gather in a classroom. Many educators at other colleges have watched the case with intent, waiting to see what implications, if any, the spat might have on their own institutions' use of streaming video.
scwalton

California Chronicle | Jonathan Takiff: Cutting the cord with traditional TVs - 0 views

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    "Just 30 or so of the nation's 1,600 digital TV stations are equipped to broadcast M-DTV. The upgrade requires a "relatively modest," $100,000 investment, said Arland. He believes 2010 will see 'many stations jumping on board . . . It's been a 'chicken or egg' thing. They're just waiting for the hardware to come out.'"
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