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New Video Technology magazine launches at NAB
New Video Technology, a technology-focused magazine covering video delivery across multiple networks, has been launched to coincide with the NAB 2006 broadcast exhibition in Las Vegas. Press 'read more' below to learn about the magazine, download the main stories from issue one in PDF format today, and find out how you can subscribe free.
Advanced encoding developments at NAB - preview.pdf (51.45 KB)
Alcatel developing satellite based mobile phone TV - analysis.pdf (173.19 KB)
Cable & DSL hybrid networks - feature.pdf (361.88 KB)
Cable preparing for all-IP - feature.pdf (929.50 KB)
Countering over-the-top video - analysis.pdf (292.60 KB)
European cable in bullish mood at ECCA - report.pdf (44.59 KB)
HDTV home networking over standard WiFi - news.pdf (52.03 KB)
IBM predicts end of television as we know it - opinion.pdf (358.29 KB)
IPTV middleware at the crossroads - feature.pdf (1.01 MB)
Middleware vendors ready for hybrid networks - analysis.pdf (111.38 KB)
Mobile TV spectrum boost for UK - news.pdf (100.24 KB)
Multi-play is hard but necessary - opinion.pdf (171.92 KB)
NTL to trial ultra-fast broadband - news.pdf (55.50 KB)
PayTV operators becoming platform-agnostic - analysis.pdf (116.64 KB)
Progress towards DRM interoperability and standards - feature.pdf (116.57 KB)
Video headend and encoding update - news.pdf (50.20 KB)
New Video Technology is published quarterly and is free to qualifying readers. To subscribe, please click here.
New Video Technology reports on the consumer services, business models, network and access technologies and reception equipment that will help shape this marketplace over the next decade. It focuses on video aggregation, delivery and consumption across IPTV, digital cable, DTH, mobile TV and public Internet-based video infrastructure and will seek to identify key technology and service trends as media companies become more network agnostic and migrate towards triple-play or quad-play offers on two-way networks populated by large volumes of on-demand video.
Our first issue contains in-depth analysis of over-the-top video, multiple-platform delivery and advanced encoding. There are major features on IPTV middleware, how cable can migrate to switched all-IP networks, Digital Rights Management interoperability progress and the practical implementation of hybrid cable/DSL networks. Issue one also reports on UK cable operator NTL's DOCSIS 3.0 ambitions (and trial), new UK spectrum allocation that could boost mobile TV, and a WiFi-based wireless home networking system that can deliver HDTV around the house reliably.
The magazine will be available free to qualifying readers and you can subscribe for the printed issue and our accompanying email newsletter, (which will launch this spring) on this website. If you have not done so already, it takes about two minutes. Simply click here.
New Video Technology follows the extension of the video delivery chain from the home gateway device onto home video networks and beyond onto trusted mobile devices and even into peer-to-peer distribution on Consumer Electronics devices. The title will also follow the proliferation of digital TV platforms used to reach consumers in the first place, including the continued development of IPTV, mobile and public broadband Internet.
The magazine monitors the strategies of satellite operators as they seek to introduce VOD and full triple-play services, and the growth of content-on-demand across all networks. It reports on how established Pay TV operators can adapt their existing core delivery platforms, whether satellite or HFC, for example, to address perceived weaknesses in their overall service offer. Advanced video services including HDTV, Digital Video Recorder, network-DVR (Replay-TV) and multi-room will all feature highly in the new title’s editorial coverage. So too will the content protection solutions (and standards) needed to support a range of new business models including super-distribution.
With large media organisations becoming increasingly network-agnostic, New Video Technology will report on the development of hybrid access network and multiple network architectures and the technology challenges they present. The new title is edited by John Moulding, who joined Digital Media Publishing in January after six years as editor of Cable & Satellite International.
For more information about other titles owned by Digital Media Publishing please visit: www.digitalmediapublishing.co.uk |