Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

  • The DTH Wannabes

    Star TV
  • Broadcast India symposium concludes in Mumbai

    Submitted by ITV Production on Oct 31

    Professionals of broadcast, film and multimedia industries from all over the city converged at the Y B Chavan auditorium to participate in the 11th Broadcast India 2001 Technical Symposium that culminated on Wednesday evening.

    The penultimate talk of the two-day symposium centered on media asset management, a topic that offers vast potential in the burgeoning broadcasting industry in India. Dinesh Sawhney, the Hong Kong based manager with Sony Corporation, dwelt on the company‘s product offerings, which help convert analog video archives into digital tapes that are easily catalogued, accessible and secure.

    According to Sawhney, CNN has already used Sony software in a two-year-old project to convert 50,000 hours of video archives in this fashion. Analog tapes, the conventional method of storing data, suffer from quality deterioration as well as outmoded methods of searching for particular files. The Peta site mass storage system and the Peta serve HSM system, patented by Sony, allows search and re-purposing of content, enables news broadcasters to provide comprehensive information, as well as allows them to prepare for video on demand (VOD) services that may enter India in the near future.

    Archive migration in digital mode thus allows organizations to create a multi media repository, which will allow local as well as remote access using web browsers to trawl for data. Sony‘s HSM system also enables partial retrieval of files, making broadcasting newsrooms more efficient while searching archives, Sawhney said.

    Citing another example, Sawhney said that HBO too has used the Peta serve system for video archive storage, and uses its automated facility for pre-programming up to 48 hours of its promos, so that no manual intervention is necessary to play them on the channel during that period.

    The symposium‘s other sessions focused on interactive TV, routing technology, content management, digital cinema, screen writing and film editing, among other topics. The symposium will be followed by a three-day exhibition on broadcasting equipment at the World Trade Centre, Mumbai.

    Sony and Panasonic are to exhibit the equipment and technology used by George Lucas to digitally shoot the latest episode of Star Wars. Brand names like JVC, SGI, Discreet, Thomson Broadcast and Seagate will present their wares at the exhibition, covering the trades of TV, radio, video, film, cable, satellite, multimedia, transmission, computer graphics, animation and broadband.

    For the first time the annual trade event will present the Seagate Technical awards for excellence in digital technology for films and television. The awards will be presented on 2 November 2, in conjunction with the Radio Advertisers and TV Practitioners Association of India and the Federation of Western India Cine Employees.

  • Broadcast India symposium concludes in Mumbai

    Professionals of broadcast, film and multimedia industries from all over the city converged at the Y B Chavan auditor

  • DesiTV launched in America

    Submitted by ITV Production on Oct 31

    From today NRI‘s and other Asians in America who feast on television programming that they can identify with have a new channel to look forward to. TV 36, which is America?s first and only all South Asian Terrestrial TV channel, has signed an agreement with Ethnic Media Group Inc. Under the agreement EMG will run a new channel Desi TV and the content will be drawn from the channels belonging to the Reminiscent Television Network. EMG is under license from RTV (UK) Ltd.

    The Reminiscent Network which started operations in 1998 operates 8 channels in Asia and the United Kingdom where it claims a reach of 200,000 Asian homes. In India, the company which started operating in 1999 claims that its Lashkara and Gurjari channels draw high ratings. Desi TV is a part of Reminiscent‘s strategy to break new ground in ethnic television entertainment. The company is trying to fill the market gap in all the ethnic communities in America who thirst for quality entertainment in their mother tongues.

    Desi TV programmes will cover six languages: Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati, Tamil, Telegu and Urdu. DesiTV will produce programmes in these languages which will give the youth from the Indian diaspora a chance to display their talent.

    Channel highlights include serials like Sea Hawks, Deewar, Shanti and movies. Keeping in mind the fanatical interest Asians maintain in cricket the channel will devote coverage to the sport as well.

    Anil Srivatsa COO of Reminiscent Television (USA) Ltd. (RTV) and EMG is in charge of managing Desi TV. He also hosts and produces America?s largest syndicated South Asian Radio show Anil-ki-Awaaz.

    Talking on the role Desi TV will play in the television landscape Srivatsa said: Within the current scenario of Pay television, we are launching our channel in the free-to-air mode. Our goal is to expand this service to other cities through similar distribution channels. Our strength is language and we at RTV believe in reaching the grass root South Asian population by giving them something in a language that truly takes them back to a world they can reminisce about.

  • DesiTV launched in America

    From today NRI's and other Asians in America who feast on television programming that they can identify with have a n

  • Big players in fray for live cricket coverage on DD

    DD has sought bids from Indian and fore

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