Tag: digital technologies

  • Make the internet accessible, open and safe for all Indians to close the digital divides

    Make the internet accessible, open and safe for all Indians to close the digital divides

    NEW DELHI: At least 8 in 10 individuals in India own a mobile phone and digital technologies are spreading rapidly but with nearly a billion people still not connected to the internet, the opportunities for increasing access to digital technology for creating higher growth, more jobs, and better public services are significant for India.

    The `World Development Report 2016: Digital Dividends,’ launched in India today, the aggregate impact of digital technologies has fallen short and is unevenly distributed. Therefore, greater efforts must be made by countries across the world to connect more people to the internet to create an environment that unleashes the benefits of digital technologies for everyone.

    The report recognizes India’s early success in digital technology when it became a global powerhouse for information services. India is currently the largest exporter of ICT services and skilled manpower in the developing world.

    Even while having the largest number of offline population in the world, India has the third highest number of internet users by absolute number, only behind China and the United States. Moreover, adoption of digital technologies shows great variation within the country: very high for government and relatively low for businesses, especially among small and medium enterprises. 

    The Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) industry today employs more than 3.1 million workers, 30 percent of them are women. In rural India, a three-year awareness program on opportunities in the BPO industry increased women’s enrollment in relevant training programs, as well as school enrollment among young girls, by 3–5 percentage points.

    Biometric registration, authentication, and payments in India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, the world’s largest workfare program, reduced the time for paying beneficiaries by 29 percent.

  • Make the internet accessible, open and safe for all Indians to close the digital divides

    Make the internet accessible, open and safe for all Indians to close the digital divides

    NEW DELHI: At least 8 in 10 individuals in India own a mobile phone and digital technologies are spreading rapidly but with nearly a billion people still not connected to the internet, the opportunities for increasing access to digital technology for creating higher growth, more jobs, and better public services are significant for India.

    The `World Development Report 2016: Digital Dividends,’ launched in India today, the aggregate impact of digital technologies has fallen short and is unevenly distributed. Therefore, greater efforts must be made by countries across the world to connect more people to the internet to create an environment that unleashes the benefits of digital technologies for everyone.

    The report recognizes India’s early success in digital technology when it became a global powerhouse for information services. India is currently the largest exporter of ICT services and skilled manpower in the developing world.

    Even while having the largest number of offline population in the world, India has the third highest number of internet users by absolute number, only behind China and the United States. Moreover, adoption of digital technologies shows great variation within the country: very high for government and relatively low for businesses, especially among small and medium enterprises. 

    The Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) industry today employs more than 3.1 million workers, 30 percent of them are women. In rural India, a three-year awareness program on opportunities in the BPO industry increased women’s enrollment in relevant training programs, as well as school enrollment among young girls, by 3–5 percentage points.

    Biometric registration, authentication, and payments in India’s National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme, the world’s largest workfare program, reduced the time for paying beneficiaries by 29 percent.

  • Live events boost viewing of TV, but need newer digital technologies

    Live events boost viewing of TV, but need newer digital technologies

    NEW DELHI: It is the live events covered by television that boost ratings and help encourage innovation and establish new services, despite the popularity of on-demand content and the proliferation of over-the-top services.

     

    In fact, television viewership has remained near record levels in part because of the popularity of coverage of big events, said panelists in the session “Cisco Presents: The Transition from Live to Event TV” on the concluding day of the National Association of Broadcasters Show in Las Vegas. 

     

    “The broadband world is growing and people are watching more programmes on demand,” said Globo, CTO & general director of ENG Fernando Bittencourt.

     

    “But in the world of broadcasting, I think the future is live programming. I do not think movies will be in primetime broadcast in the next five or 10 years. People will watch those on demand. … There will be more news, more sports and live content like our tele-novelas that are designed to be watched at a specific time.”

     

    “They drive a lot of viewer and social interaction, but they have also been an important driver for the development of TV Everywhere and authenticated services,” said IDC research manager of consumer markets, video Greg Ireland.

     

    He noted that big events like the Olympic Games have encouraged consumers to set up authenticated apps, making it more likely that they would later use the apps for regular programming.

     

    Cisco Systems, VP & GM of ESBI Charles Stucki said, “Big live events have bigger budgets, so you can have a lot of innovation.” He mentioned the recent Summer and Winter Olympics, from which NBC streamed a record amount of coverage to online and mobile platforms.

     

    This innovation also helped boost the popularity of the linear live broadcast, with NBC posting record ratings for its summer games coverage. During the Winter Olympics, viewers who watched content online tended to watch more live games programming on TV.

     

    But finding the right technologies for the digital applications that viewers increasingly demand with big live events can be challenging.

     

    Globo’s Bittencourt said popular programmes on the Brazilian broadcaster regularly pull in 30 million to 40 million viewers. “If only half of those go to the second screen, it is very difficult for the network to support it.”

     

    Such concerns were highlighted right before the NAB Show, when the HBO Go app went down during the season premiere of its hit series Game of Thrones.

     

    “Consumers now have the expectation that a big event will have a live streaming component, but the experience is not always optimal,” Ireland said.

     

    “A lot of extra engineering has to go into creating and surviving big events that require a lot of additional resources beyond those needed to simply produce live programming,” Stucki explained.

     

    He said Cisco sees a growing number of broadcasters building staff to manage CDNs used for big events, in order to assure the best architecture and redundancy.

     

    The general trend toward IT and IP infrastructures raises additional issues of reliability.

     

    Bittencourt revealed while Globo’s viewers would not tolerate the network going off the air, the quality of online streaming can be quite variable. In addition, the lag between the live broadcast and the mobile stream causes complaints. “During the World Cup, viewers will want to watch the Brazilian games on a TV,” he said. “If they watch on the Internet, they will see the goal 30 seconds after it happens” – after their neighbors have already started celebrating.

     

    But for 4K production, he said that IT and IP technologies would be necessary. “You can’t do that with traditional technologies,” said Bittencourt, adding that Globo planned a test 4K broadcast during the World Cup.

     

    Stucki argued that the growing importance of video on digital platforms, where video traffic now accounts for half of all mobile traffic, is forcing the IT and IP worlds to become more reliable.

     

    “They are starting to figure this out,” Bittencourt agreed. “Right now we have very specific vendors for broadcast and different ones for IT and IP. We have to create a third world where there is a combination of IT and broadcast that would be specific for broadcast to get the high reliability we are used to.”

  • FICCI – MEBC 2013 to kick off on 29 October at Bengaluru

    FICCI – MEBC 2013 to kick off on 29 October at Bengaluru

    BENGALURU: The Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) annual Media and Entertainment Business Conclave (MEBC) will be held at the Garden City this year on 29 and 30 October. Previous editions of the conclave have been held in Chennai and Hyderabad.

     

    Some of the key sessions of MEBC 2013 include (1) Formulating and Implementing a viable Media and Entertainment policy for a State: The panel comprising of state government representatives and industry stake holders will discuss various scopes to develop infrastructure, local skills, technology and explore possibilities on how to develop the media & entertainment eco system for a State.

     

     (2) Emerging Technologies and the impact on Indian Cinema? The Indian film industry enters its next phase of production and distribution where digital technologies are taking very important roles. In this session we bring in experts from the field of creative industry and technology to understand what the future lies for Indian cinema.

     

    (3) The Broadcasting Ecosystem in the Digital Era: What are the experts thinking after the implementation of Digitization of Cable TV in India? In the era of convergence with integrated Apps, Broadband, wireless, VOD, pay TV and Multiplatform distribution how will the ecosystem look like. Let’s discuss.  

     

    (4) Session on Visual Effects (5) Emerging Trends of Indian IP in Animation & its exploitation (6) The War for News: Defining No. 1 in The Dizzying Newscape: Are there any winners in the plethora of news be it TV or Print, despite the TAM, NRS/IRS figures? Is it all the same content packaged in different formats which finally just confuses the viewer? What are our news media’s aiming for – Ratings or Pure Journalism? Can we learn anything from the international newsgathering model in content and standards?

     

    (7)  Reshaping Mobile entertainment in the era of Digital Revolution:  A session on display of the upcoming latest Apps in Mobile Entertainment, the transformation from 3G to 4G redefining mobile entertainment (8) Changing Trends in Regional TV: Ratings, Content, Formats: Regional TV programming are constantly evolving in terms of contents and formats keeping in mind the audience tastes and the cut throat competition with national televisions channels. In this session let’s listen to the stalwarts giving their perspectives from GEC to news following a peek into the state of the much-debated ratings systems.  

     

    (8) Marketing & Distribution of films in Multiplatform Ecosystem (9) Making movie through Crowd funding – The case study of Lucia:  A case study on the Kannada Film Lucia will be conducted by Film Director Pawan Kumar. Lucia is the first crowd funded film in India. The case study will emphasise on how best new script and ideas can receive funds through social networking sites without depending on producers for fund (11) The Emerging Gaming Industry in southern India.

    Among the speakers  at the concvlave include Kamal Haasan, Chairman, Media & Entertainment Business Conclave, FICCI; Biren Ghose , Convener  MEBC & President ABAI & Country Head- Technicolor India; Srivatsa Krishna , Secretary , Department of IT , Bt and S&T , Govt. Of Karnataka;  Kumud Srinivasan , President , Intel India; Ashish Kulkarni ,Co  Chairman , FICCI AVGC Forum & CEO, Big Animation; Neeraj Roy , CEO , Hungama Digital Media;  Anup Chandrashekar , Business Head , Asianet & Star Suvarna ; Shruthi Naidu , Director TV serials; LV Krishnan , CEO , TAM India; Jawhar Sircar, CEO, Prasar Bharti; Preet Dhupar, COO India , BBC World News; Ravi Hegde , Group Editor, Udayvani among others