BBC defines creative future strategy beyond broadcast | |
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| Satellite TV Team Join Date: 25-01-2003 Location: Ireland
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My System: N/A | BBC defines creative future strategy beyond broadcast The BBC says that on-demand media will take the corporation beyond broadcasting. Its new media strategy will be organised around the concepts of Find, Play and Share, and it is asking users to contribute. The Creative Future initiative has been launched by the BBC to “build on opportunities created by new and emerging digital technologies and confront the challenges of seismic shifts in public expectations, lifestyle and behaviours”. “There’s a big shock coming,” the director general of the BBC said, delivering the Royal Television Society Fleming Memorial Lecture in London. “The second wave of digital will be far more disruptive than the first and the foundations of traditional media will be swept away, taking us beyond broadcasting.” “On-demand changes everything. It means we need to rethink the way we conceive, commission, produce, package and distribute our content.” Rather than a broadcaster with some new media on the side, he says the BBC should aim to deliver public service material in whatever media and on whatever device makes sense for users. He described ‘red button’ interactive television as a successful first wave technology, but limited in scope, speed and functionality. He now sees an interactive, on-demand future for the entire BBC. “We are less than five years from fully individualised, drag-and-drop TV and radio stations,” the BBC director general predicted. He spoke of being able select programmes from the schedules or the archive, and make a personalised channel, based on previous choices or recommendations, and share it with friends. The initial recommendations are rather more modest. They include re-launching the BBC web site to include more personalisation, with richer audio-visual and user-generated content. Initial reaction has been mixed, with concerns from commercial competitors and some politicians that the BBC is redefining its public service remit. Nevertheless, the bold strategy reflects a real engagement of a major broadcaster with the digital media revolution. The BBC is opening up its archive with an experimental online catalogue of a million programmes going back to 1937, although only the index entries, not the programmes themselves, will be available online. “Unlocking our archive is one of the biggest challenges we face and, potentially, one of the richest gifts we can give to the nation,” said Ashley Highfield, the BBC director of new media and technology, one of the driving forces in evangelising a new direction for the broadcaster. The catalogue is now available on the web at open.bbc.co.uk/catalogue. BBC iPlayer is the new name for the media player application which will be launched subject to a market impact analysis and public value test. “At any time, you’ll be able to download any programme from the eight BBC channels and then watch it on your PC and, we hope, move it across to your TV set or down to your mobile phone, to watch it when you want,” the BBC new media director said. The BBC is also planning to realign its web site around principles of what has become known as web 2.0. The philosophy of sharing is at its heart, according to Ashley Highfield. “We are looking to a world where you could share BBC programmes, your own thoughts, your own blogs and your own home videos.” Mindful of the success of user-centred sites such as MySpace, Flickr, YouTube, and Wikipedia, the corporation has announced a competition to redesign its home page. The BBC is asking its users to consider how to find their way through millions of web pages and hundreds of hours of radio and television programmes. In addition to constructive comments, the competition has also drawn some criticism from the online community, concerned that their input will be exploited. Regards Satdude. | ||
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| Super Moderator Join Date: 22-12-2003 Location: Brighton
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LOL! I nearly paid my license fee! How does this "confront the challenges of seismic shifts in public expectations, lifestyle and behaviours"? I think the BBC are paying the PR writers too much money... I could make up even more fantastic claims than that, or just pull some impressive sounding cr@p out of the National Geographic and insert the word ‘lifestyle’ somewhere. ![]() Is anyone else sick to death of this seismic corporate antiperistalsis? Do they think we're impressed by it? ![]() 'Ere Vera, did ya know that we're less than five years from fully individualised, drag-and-drop TV 'n radio stations, and thatthem there foundations of traditional media will be swept away, taking us beyond broadcasting and everyfing?' 'Ooh errr Beryl, I better get Bert's tea ready a bit early then.' The only people listening to that tripe are other tripe-writers looking for more spectacular tripe than last week's tripe. Or perhaps I'm just an old git?
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That is all well and good in theory but in practice picture is far less rosy any attempt to create some sort of walled garden service on internet is contrary to its nature and is doomed to failure and judging from statements and press releases from BBC so far that is exactly what they are trying to do. Most efficient way of distributing video on the internet is torrent p2p which means no control whatsoever once content is uploaded. If I remember correctly BBC repeatedly stated they intend to make their archives available online to UK only, just how they hope to accomplish that is yet unknown. Any attempt to limit access on centrally server based video distribution is easily circumvented and not to mention highly inefficient and prone to bottlenecks and outages. Using proprietary software is no solution either. Call me skeptical but I just don’t see BBC making their entire output freely and globally available for anyone to share . | |||
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