Archive for the 'Interactive Video' Category
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
To garyhayes.tv We hope linear programme producers will find this site useful as they dip their toes into interactive film or TV over broadcast, IP or cable. This is quite a dated site with irregular updates – but still contains much relevant insight. “Gary Hayes is undoubtedly one of the outstanding pioneers of interactive TV, [...]
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Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
A presentation given at a LAMP ‘State of Play’ Seminar – given on 25 March 2009. TV is in major transition. Where are the opportunities across on-demand platforms? Is the old advertising model broken? Will broadband to set top box comfortably co-exist with video on the web? TV 2.0: Socialised & Participatory TV Online View [...]
Posted in Community, Future Services, Interactive Video, Platforms, Tools | No Comments »
Saturday, February 17th, 2007
© Gary Hayes 2004 The chart below represents a non-exhaustive list of the formats that one would find across a range of interactive tv platforms. These are very high level descriptions but give the reader some sense of the scope of interactive TV, particularly the differences between synchronised, dynamic and video led services. Service types [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
© Gary Hayes 2004 The simple diagrams below hopefully help the linear producer understand in visual terms the extra elements that can exist alongside their linear program. The common formats below are of course non-exhaustive but serve as introduction to a viewer perspective on a service – tthe white arrows indicate suggested routes a viewer [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
Below is a non-exhaustive collection of services either designed or produced by Gary Hayes while Senior Development Producer at the BBC © Gary Hayes 2004
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
By the end of 2006 half of the USA will be receiving digital television, nearly 55 million households. Whether PayTV digital satellite, free-view digital terrestrial or digital cable never before have broadcasters and media companies been able to have such a direct and interactive relationship with their TV viewers. Interactive TV often refers to the [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
Some say that true interactive TV is only enabled when the viewers can communicate with both the content providers and each other – rather than simply navigate and filter a range of pre-prepared content (video, text etc). The Interactive TV broadcasters role in the iTV future will be as a facilitator of the US conversation [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
It is perhaps obvious from all the above that there are many exciting possibilities on the horizon for the iTV audience. Screening process: The PC (whether as a central server or online conduit) will begin to play a more central role in how content is managed for the viewer. Key to this is the fact [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
Synchronisation and Automation Engage: The most compelling part of traditional TV is the fact that most of the time it tells you a story – it is linear and carries you along with it. In the best TV – you feel part of the narrative. Connect: One of the great benefits of interactive TV applications [...]
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Wednesday, February 14th, 2007
These are most commonly PC based software packages that allow developers, designers and even producers to create services ready for transmission on a range of target interactive TV platforms – often two or more platforms from the same, single build. Most separate the presentation from the content itself and each tool has a specific type [...]
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