• Sherita Ceasar does Scientific-Atlanta proud

    Scientific-Atlanta, a leading global supplier of digital content distribution systems, has added another feather to i

  • A 'Different Ball Game' for National Geographic

    Submitted by ITV Production on Oct 12, 2001

    This month National Geographic plays a different ball game as well as broadens viewers horizons.

    National Geographic Channel will introduce viewers to wild, outlandish sports through the adventures of British sports journalist Emma Levine. On the 17th of this month in the first episode of Different Ball Game at 10:00 p.m. she visits Turkey to see two sports which are rooted in ancient warfare.

    The first is based on wrestling which has been the country‘s national sport for over 600 years. It is called Turkish oil wrestling. Participants wearing handtooled, tight, black leather shorts soak themselves in oil, grab what they can of their opponent and wrestle. The second sport is called horseback javelin. Two teams riding on horses, chase each other and throw sharp javelins at one another. Tonight at 10:00 p.m. in the second episode you can watch how engineers are taking ideas from creatures that are unpleasant to look at to build robots who can do things which are too dangerous for human beings. Besides this rollercoaster enthusiasts are in for a treat. The man who built the Thrust Air 2000 will be interviewed. This space age thrill ride rockets passengers from standstill to eighty miles per hour in 1.8 seconds.

    Don‘t fret if you missed the first episode. On Sunday at5 :30 .m.there will be a repeat. So tune in to see how Trevor Baylis used an old instrument a wind up radio into a weapon in the war against the AIDS virus in Africa. There will also be interviews with engineers at car company Volvo who are carving a path of their own. They will describe some of the latest high-tech, life-saving cars, which will roll out soon.
     

     

  • A 'Different Ball Game' for National Geographic

    This month National Geographic plays a different ball game as well as broadens viewers horizons.

  • Mumbai peoplemeter revamp 50 per cent complete

    Thirty-eight days ago the Indian cable, satellite, and terrestrial television, advertising and market research indust

  • Mumbai peoplemeter revamp 50 per cent complete

    Submitted by ITV Production on Oct 12, 2001

    Thirty-eight days ago the Indian cable, satellite, and terrestrial television, advertising and market research industries received a body-blow with the anonymous release of peoplemeter lists in Mumbai of both the major television viewership tracking agencies AC Nielsen?s TAM Media and ORG Marg?s INTAM.

    There was a hue and cry raised with Zee Telefilms broadcasting CEO Sandeep Goyal going so far as to demand the scrapping of the ratings altogether till a countrywide revamp was instituted.

    That demand was not accepted but both agencies are currently in the middle of an excercise aimed at revamping their Mumbai lists of respondents and are half way through the exercise.

    Ashok Das, president ORG Marg says: "Half of the exercise is over. In the next four weeks the remaining work is expected to be complete. It will take another three to four weeks after that to do other related work. We can expect the new rating lists in the coming two months."

    LV Krishnan, CEO of TAM Media Research, when asked as to how far the work had proceeded, responded that the major part of it is over, but would not put a time frame on its completion. "The task is huge and is being carefully done, which requires a lot of time. It is not about just picking up the homes. A lot of research has to be done while selecting the samples."

    When asked whether TAM was going to increase the size of the people meter sample, Krishnan says: "We don‘t find any problem with the size of the sample. And adding to the sample will add to costs to a great extent." Krishnan was reluctant to reveal the investment being put in the revamping operation saying that it was an internal affair.

    Queried as to whether there would be an increase in the charges because of the heavy expenses the revamping exercise has called for, Krishnan said this "will be decided only after the whole exercise is over." But reading between the lines, it appeared as though subscribers will have to bear some of the costs in the form of revised rates. The industry body (the Indian Broadcasting Foundation) is being consulted while doing the exercise, Krishnan said.

    Das also chose to keep his lips zipped on Intam subscription rates, saying that no decision had been taken as yet. "As of now we are going ahead with the present rate cards," he says. He indicated that revisions - if any - would be contemplated only when the next rate card was being drawn up.

    Asked whether Zee had chosen to unsubscribe to the ratings reports as had been reported in the media, Das said nothing of the sort had happened. "All our old clients are very much with us and it is just a rumour that a few are going to unsubscribe ." TAM‘s Krishnan gave the same reply.

    AC Nielsen as well as ORG Marg will be scrutinising other panels in India, but that would be only as part of a regular exercise. Annually, both the agencies replace 15 to 20 per cent of their respective samples.

    INTAM has over 7,000 respondents covering 49 towns and cities while TAM has installed peoplemeters in 3,454 homes, covering 27 cities.


  • Two-way Internet services suite on television launched

    Submitted by ITV Production on Oct 12, 2001

    Canadian cable operator Vid?otron has launched its new iLLICO service. This will allow subscribers to send messages using PowerTV‘s email, surf the Internet, chat, and take advantage of Vid?otron‘s local content. This has been made possible thanks to the Scientific-Atlanta digital interactive network, its scalable network software, Explorer? digital set-tops, and PowerTV‘s operating system.

    The apparent aim of iLLICO, Scientific-Atlanta and PowerTV technology is to make television the medium through which customers can communicate with the operators. Over 100,000 subscribers of the cable operator‘s system in Quebec will be given the privilege of using the facility first. This is because they are already using Scientific-Atlanta Explorer digital interactive set-tops. The services are available across the entire system that the operator has in place in Quebec and the broadband system features will expand and touch new levels.

    Speaking on this Dr Allen Ecker, president of Subscriber Networks, Scientific-Atlanta said: "The network software and operating system are capable of handling the two-way traffic as the use of interactive services grows, with scalability that provides the operator with a high degree of flexibility as they expand their digital footprint. Together, they manage the traffic, deliver the services and enable the cable operator to provide the interactive services that subscribers want, when they want them."


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