844 resultados para Television broadcasting
Resumo:
Pós-graduação em Televisão Digital: Informação e Conhecimento - FAAC
Resumo:
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
Resumo:
This study proposes to present the process of implementation of Digital TV, the available resources found in the Japanese standard employed in the country and the form in which news programs will adapt to the new technology. Following the presentation of the technological tools, the current state of Brazilian television is discussed, focusing on two nationally broadcast programs, Jornal da Band on Bandeirantes channel and Jornal da Record on Record channel. As a case study, three editions of each show are evaluated with an individual and comparative analysis. Following the analyses, perspectives on the future of television journalism in the digital TV age are given. Additionally, the possibilities for interaction between the TV viewer and the channel and the forms of interaction that may exist within particular programs are discussed, thus allowing for active participation from the part of the viewer. The newly developed functions of journalists in the digital age are also broken down in the research. In order to gain a full understanding of the phases of this process of technological convergence and how programs will adapt to these tools, interviews with professionals who work in the production of televised news programs are conducted in the study
Resumo:
This paper proposes a model of educative content structuring for interactive digital television programs. Its intent was to provide references for collaborative production processes and content organization in learning networks associated with university and educative television broadcasting services. The model defines terms, actors, events, environments, as well as content categories, classes and attributes, indicating criteria for their synchronic or asynchronic association in a dynamic television schedule. The model is presented in both descriptive and visual formats, with the use of conceptual maps. The results indicate that interactive use of digital television in education requires systematic content models covering communitarian participation in both media production and distribution processes, in order to enhance learning instruments beyond vertical, hierarchical and centralized communication sustained by traditional broadcast channels.
Resumo:
Gegenstand der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die Überarbeitung der Richtlinie 89/552/EWG des Rates zur Koordinierung bestimmter Rechts- und Verwaltungsvorschriften der Mitgliedstaaten über die Ausübung der Fernsehtätigkeit, welche aus praktikablen Gründen meist als „(EG-)Fernsehrichtlinie“ bezeichnet wird. Sie bildet den Eckpfeiler der audiovisuellen Politik der EU. Seit Erlass der Fernsehrichtlinie im Jahre 1989 bewirkt der technologische Fortschritt jedoch zunehmend enorme Veränderungen nicht nur im Bereich des klassischen Fernsehens, sondern auch und vor allem im Bereich der neuen Medien. Ausgangspunkt hierfür ist die Verbesserung der Digitaltechnologie, die ihrerseits wiederum technische Konvergenzprozesse begünstigt. Diese Entwicklungen führen nicht nur zu einer Vervielfachung von Übertragungskapazitäten und –techniken, sondern ermöglichen neben neuen Formen audiovisueller Angebote auch die Entstehung neuer Dienste. Unsere Medienlandschaft steht vor „epochalen Umbrüchen“. Im Hinblick auf diese Vorgänge wird seit geraumer Zeit eine Überarbeitung der EG-Fernsehrichtlinie angestrebt, um dem technologischen Fortschritt auch „regulatorisch“ gerecht werden zu können. Diesem Überarbeitungsprozess möchte sich die vorliegende Arbeit widmen, indem sie die Fernsehrichtlinie in einem ersten Teil sowohl inhaltlich wie auch hinsichtlich ihrer Entstehungsgeschichte und der zu ihr ergangenen EuGH-Entscheidungen erläutert. Anschließend werden alle Überarbeitungsvorgänge der Fernsehrichtlinie seit 1997 dargestellt, um sodann die aktuellen Reformansätze analysieren und bewerten zu können. Aus zeitlichen Gründen (der neue Richtlinienvorschlag der Kommission vom 13. Dezember 2005 wurde ca. 2 Wochen vor dem Abgabetermin der Arbeit verabschiedet) sind die Ausführungen zum Entwurf der neuen „Richtlinie über audiovisuelle Mediendienste“ allerdings relativ knapp gehalten.
Resumo:
After 20 years of silence, two recent references from the Czech Republic (Bezpečnostní softwarová asociace, Case C-393/09) and from the English High Court (SAS Institute, Case C-406/10) touch upon several questions that are fundamental for the extent of copyright protection for software under the Computer Program Directive 91/25 (now 2009/24) and the Information Society Directive 2001/29. In Case C-393/09, the European Court of Justice held that “the object of the protection conferred by that directive is the expression in any form of a computer program which permits reproduction in different computer languages, such as the source code and the object code.” As “any form of expression of a computer program must be protected from the moment when its reproduction would engender the reproduction of the computer program itself, thus enabling the computer to perform its task,” a graphical user interface (GUI) is not protected under the Computer Program Directive, as it does “not enable the reproduction of that computer program, but merely constitutes one element of that program by means of which users make use of the features of that program.” While the definition of computer program and the exclusion of GUIs mirror earlier jurisprudence in the Member States and therefore do not come as a surprise, the main significance of Case C-393/09 lies in its interpretation of the Information Society Directive. In confirming that a GUI “can, as a work, be protected by copyright if it is its author’s own intellectual creation,” the ECJ continues the Europeanization of the definition of “work” which began in Infopaq (Case C-5/08). Moreover, the Court elaborated this concept further by excluding expressions from copyright protection which are dictated by their technical function. Even more importantly, the ECJ held that a television broadcasting of a GUI does not constitute a communication to the public, as the individuals cannot have access to the “essential element characterising the interface,” i.e., the interaction with the user. The exclusion of elements dictated by technical functions from copyright protection and the interpretation of the right of communication to the public with reference to the “essential element characterising” the work may be seen as welcome limitations of copyright protection in the interest of a free public domain which were not yet apparent in Infopaq. While Case C-393/09 has given a first definition of the computer program, the pending reference in Case C-406/10 is likely to clarify the scope of protection against nonliteral copying, namely in how far the protection extends beyond the text of the source code to the design of a computer program and where the limits of protection lie as regards the functionality of a program and mere “principles and ideas.” In light of the travaux préparatoires, it is submitted that the ECJ is also likely to grant protection for the design of a computer program, while excluding both the functionality and underlying principles and ideas from protection under the European copyright directives.
Resumo:
The digitisation of television broadcasting has facilitated an exponential growth both in the number and the diversity of programs and channels. Electronic Programme Guides (EPGs) help consumers find their way in this abundance of offerings.EPGs serve as a classical listing magazine or broadcasting guide with extensive information on television programs; like VCRs, they enable the recording of programs; as search engines, they allow users to look for content on the basis of a keyword; and finally, EPGs list the most favoured programs on the first page, either on the basis of popularity, the personal profile of the consumer or on the basis of agreements with particular broadcasting agencies. This article assesses how various European countries approach the regulation of EPGs and determines whether and how they try to reaffirm guarantees for diversity and pluralism in the digital television environment.
Resumo:
"B-240007"--p. 1.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
"February 9, 1960."
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Issued Jan. 1980-
Resumo:
Mimeographed.
Resumo:
"First published February 1995"--T.p. verso.