Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

I'm a number not a name - so is everything else in nature - The Code, BBC2

Print
Please click here to comment
The Code, BBC Two, 9pm 27th July,




You may think of yourself as a name, but the truth is that you're a number, as is everything else in nature. Everything we do, everything we are, is governed by a hidden numerical code. In tonight's episode of The Code, Marcus du Sautoy unravels some of this mystery to reveal how this code has the power to explain everything, from the numbers and shapes we see all around us to the rules that govern our own lives. Smashing through the eye-watering dullness of text-book mathematics, he shows us how significant numbers appear throughout the natural world and how they can be as fascinating and beautiful as the things they control - beautiful mind, beautiful body, beautiful universe. From the periodical appearances of cicadas, who rely on safety in numbers and rare appearances to avoid predators, to how the nautilus uses a simple mathematical principle to build an elegant spiral shell. These numbers are part of a hidden mathematical world that contains the rules that govern everything on our planet and beyond.



Wednesday, 18 May 2011

BBC Science Looking for a Trainee TV Researcher

Print
Please click here to comment
Just a couple of days ago I told you about the new BBC Careers website. Already the BBC Science Unit in London are launching a new position - a trainee television researcher. This sort of opportunity doesn't come along very often, so if you're a recent science graduate with a passion for science television then this is a corker.

As the largest of the production genres, Factual Production which includes BBC Science, is responsible for more than 1,700 hours a year of challenging, thought-provoking and inspiring content.


Here's a quote from Albert Einstein that is particularly relevant to working in TV:

Monday, 16 May 2011

Fancy working in the BBC? New careers site is launched

Print
Please click here to comment
BBC Launches new 'Careers' website to help people find an opportunity within the BBC. 

The only reason I have had such a privileged and enjoyable career making wildlife films in the BBC is because in 2002  I applied for work experience. I was completing an MSc. at the time and looking for my break. I remember it being quite a lengthy application, not only requiring the usual self-analysis of why I want to work in the BBC, but I also had to review several programmes. I chose David Attenborough's 'Life of Mammals', a programme I was watching at the time, and one that I dreamed to work on.

Although work experience opportunities are incredibly competitive, by a stroke of luck I was selected. Fortunately it was on a production about evolution, 'Journey of Life', where I could put my palaeontology experience to use. Two weeks later I was hired as a researcher to see the series through to the end. Nine years later I'm still here and have worked on a whole range of productions including David Attenborough's 'Life in Cold Blood'.

Now it's your turn... http://www.bbc.co.uk/careers/home

And remember, as Winston Churchill once said...

"Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts." 







Friday, 18 February 2011

Zoo Quest - Madagascar - eerie indris & world's smallest chameleon

Print
Please click here to comment
Don't miss the third episode of Madagascar, BBC2 8pm, Weds 23rd February 2011.

If you've been watching the spectacular Madagascar series then, like me, you may be itching to find out more about this tantalisingly curious island of the east coast of Africa. Where better to start then with Sir David Attenboroughs first memories of the island.

I was fortunate to work with David Attenborough on 'Life in Cold Blood', and even more so to hear first hand of some of his adventures. None was more full of vigour and excitement than his tales of filming in Madagascar 50 years earlier. He had travelled there with staff from London Zoo to film Zoo Quest, a series which had already seen him trek through the thick forests of Guiana to capture a three-toed sloth for the zoos collections (accepted practice at the time). Now he was on the search for an Indri - a lemur which displays striking similarities to Marco Polo's long fabled 'dog headed man'. Little was known of them before the expedition, but David Attenborough and his team were able to attract a family of them using recordings of their 'spine-chilling unearthly howls'. They filmed them as they issued alarm calls and comforted each other in the treetops. As well as the subject of their quest, the films also featured other wildlife that the team had come across - most notably chameleons - a vast array of shapes and sizes - many of which had never been seen by the British audience before. It was gripping television.

The Eerie Indri 



It seemed such a shame that these classic, and pioneering films were hidden away deep in the BBC archives and had not been seen for decades. So whilst producing 'Life in Cold Blood' we searched the Gormenghast of the BBC vaults and located as much of this material as possible. We were able to use some of it in our 'making-ofs' that follow each episode of the series, and we gave DVDs to a very grateful Sir David. He also hadn't seen anything of Zoo Quest since they were broadcast in the 50s and 60's. I spent many a night absorbed by these incredible adventures, from a world that seems so long ago.

Fortunately we now have the BBC Wildlife Finder and the folks there have been locating and digging through this dusty archive to thrust some of these moments back into the loving arms of the British audience.
 
Watch more classic moments on the BBC Wildlife Finder
Watch an interview with David Attenborough about Zoo Quest on the WildFilmHistory website


David Attenborough introduces us to a mysterious island  



Attenborough Returns to Madagascar

David Attenborough had not been back to Madagascar since Zoo Quest, but in 2008 our team visited for 'Life in Cold Blood'. There we managed to film a creature that David had been waiting most of his life to see, a creature so tiny that ants cast shadows over it. Brookesia - the smallest chameleon in the world. You may remember it from the first episode of the Madagascar series, but I am proud to say that we also filmed it for 'Life in Cold Blood'. It proved to be such a memorable sequence that we decided to make a 'making-of' for the end of the film, featuring some of the 'Zoo Quest' archive.

Life in Cold Blood - Smallest chameleon in the world


David Attenborough meets the smallest chameleon in the world

 (Sir David Attenborough locates Madagascar on a globe)

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

BBC unleashes its brainy content... forever!

Print
Please click here to comment
Earlier today the BBC trust (the corporations overlords who represent the license fee payers) gave the go ahead for Radio 3, Radio 4 and BBC Four to offer programmes on-demand for an unlimited time after broadcast - unleashing this wealth of content to the license-fee payers in perpetuity. That means no more 7 day black-outs on iPlayer content, no need for illegal bitorrent downloads and all in all a more widely accessible BBC...well, for some of the 'brainy' networks anyway. Its not about unleashing all content from all channels. Many of the BBC's most popular titles from BBC1 and BBC2 - such as the big Natural History series, Dr Who and Top Gear - will continue to be available on DVD, via pay-TV channels or paid downloads, and there's no plans to change that anytime soon.

Unleashing the Brainy Content

So Why Radio 3, 4 and BBC4? According to Roly Keating, Director of Archive Content, its because...
'All three are well-known to their audiences for their intelligent use of material from the archives, whether it's Radio 4's Archive Hour linking past and present with topical acuity, or BBC Four, with its smart scheduling of archive rarities alongside its highest-profile new shows."

"Today's announcement confirms that in the online age the task of making more of the wealth of its fantastic archives easily accessible to audiences is an inseparable part of the BBC's mission as a public service broadcaster. That's why the new vision for BBC Online which we announced last week put archive discovery at the heart of its design." 

A Utopian Future?

Lets jump forward a few years. We'll be living in a utopian future where the once separate entities of iPlayer, TV channel pages, programme pages and archive, will all be united in a single environment - a place that's simple to explore and enjoy. Programmes will live online without fear of termination or fading into oblivion, part of a rich community of content at the heart of BBC services. These will be discoverable through open search and linkable to by sites inside and outside of the BBC. As media becomes ever more social, individuals will find their own personal treasures in the collection, breathing new life into old content and popularising it among their friends and networks. I can't wait!

- Paul Williams

Read more



The BBC Archives in London (Photo: Ecospace)

Friday, 5 November 2010

Birds Britannia - a curiously British wildlife series

Print
Please click here to comment
Watch Episode 2, Wednesday, 9pm on BBC4.

'Two out of three of us feed wild birds in our gardens... In a sense, this simple act of kindness to our fellow creatures is the entry point into a deeper relationship with wildlife as a whole.'
- Stephen Moss, Series Producer & Wildlife Guru Read Stephens Bird Blog.

Top twitcher Stephen Moss brings us Birds Britannia, a curiously British wildlife series which looks at the birdlife that we share our islands with, and explores what our relationship to them reveals about the British psyche. Top of our affections are garden birds, including the nation's favourite, the robin. For more information & clips visit the BBC programme page.

(Photo: Robin on a snowy table Paul Williams) 

As programme one reveals Bird Tables also give a helping hand to one of our most common urban raptors... Sparrowhawks



Wednesday, 20 October 2010

Stand up for the BBC

Print
Please click here to comment


It's about time people started standing up for the BBC. This is a great example of Pro-BBC support from comedian Mitch Ben (watch his music video here http://t.co/Mxf3WDH). Come on people. Stand up for democracy, independent broadcasting, creativity and a proud world-leading institution that belongs to all British People. Think of all the great television and radio programmes that you love - think of all that would be lost without the BBC.

I am proud to work for an organisation that is respected and admired the world over - a shining ambassador for our nation since 1922. I am proud to work at the BBC Natural History Unit, a department of the BBC that has spread the wonder, beauty and importance of the planets life and ecology since 1957. Our programmes reach people from the remotest pacific islands to communities in distant deserts. Without the BBC so much of our global communications life-line would be lost.

Without the BBC we would fail to see so many wonders of the world, if we don't know what we have how can we ever hope to protect it? You know what the BBC is, think of all that it does, think of it as one of those wonders and be proud.

- Paul

Monday, 27 September 2010

Filming Tigers - a BBC Insight

Print
Please click here to comment
Tigers are a real hot topic for the BBC Natural History Unit, especially with the current success of 'Lost Land of the Tiger' a BBC expedition that discovered a lost population living in the remote Bhutan Mountains (Earth News). Having tracked Tigers myself to film (Poo, Pee & Pugmarks)  I know just how difficult it is to catch even a glimpse of this fascinating feline! But here is an exclusive insight into the BBC's perspective on the thrill and frustration of filming tigers in the wild. From BBC Wildlife Finder. 

- Paul



http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/species/tiger#p00b6wzf

Thursday, 6 August 2009

David Attenborough: Bristol and Wildlife TV - more than an accident of History.

Print
Please click here to comment
From: Made in the UK online essays at the BBC
www.bbc.co.uk/madeintheuk
(Image from Aerial online)

THE NATURAL history unit in Bristol is a rare constant in an evolving broadcast world. Whereas other specialist centres of excellence have come and gone, the NHU has always been there, or so it seems. What happy combination of circumstances and talents made Bristol the ideal habitat for the unit, enabling it to grow into the most enduringly successful out-of- London production department in the history of the BBC?
You might argue that there has always been a strong interest in natural history in the West Country, and a long tradition there of self-educated, amateur naturalists. But the truth is that the NHU would not exist in Bristol, had it not been for the enthusiasm and passion of one man, and his belief in the public service ideals of the BBC. Desmond Hawkins was not himself a trained naturalist, nor a West Countryman. He moved as a radio producer to the BBC in Bristol after WW2 and started natural history production in Bristol with radio programmes such as The Naturalist and Birds In Britain, long before the arrival of television in the area. As a boy, I listened to those programmes, and I dare say my own passion was stoked by them.
Desmond Hawkins interviewing Sir Peter Scott
(Image from WildFilmHistory)
Global reputation In 1952 I began my career with the BBC in London, at the tv talks department in Alexandra Palace. I worked on anything from political broadcasts to archaeological quizzes. But before long I launched Zoo Quest, a series which took me all over the world and helped to determine the future course of my life. Meanwhile, in Bristol, Desmond Hawkins had decided that as soon as it was physically possible to make television programmes in the West Country, his team of natural history specialists would show these upstarts in London how it was really done. Hardly was Zoo Quest on the air in 1954 than Desmond had decided to launch his own series Look, with Peter Scott, whose bird sanctuary at Slimbridge was only 20 miles away. The fact that there was still no actual tv studio in the city, or for that matter any transmitter or tv sets in the region, did not deter him. He brought in an outside broadcast unit, ran cables and cameras into the large radio studio and piped the programme by landline up to London. So natural history tv programmes were being made in Bristol even before anyone in the region could watch them. Enthusiasm is infectious, and Desmond gathered about him a core of people whose passion for natural history equalled his own, so that by 1957 it was officially recognised as a production specialism in Bristol, and he set up the NHU proper there.
When I became controller of BBC Two in 1965, I naturally wanted to indulge my own passion for natural history. When BBC launched colour tv in Britain, I could think of no subject better suited to showing off the new technology. I commissioned from the NHU The World About Us, initially a series of 26x50 minute programmes that turned into a long-running strand, and helped to establish a global reputation for the unit. Bristol also produced Life, a magazine programme that covered natural history news stories. Productions like these, building on the foundation of its existing BBC One output, secured the future of the unit and bound natural history production ever more closely with its Bristol roots.
David Attenborough outside a cave entrance during filming of Life on Earth
(Image from WildFilmHistory)

At BBC Two, I also launched a style of documentary which would now be described as the ‘landmark’ series, taking a big subject and devoting 13 onehour programmes to it. The first of these was Kenneth Clark’s Civilisation, followed by Jacob Bronowski’s The Ascent of Man. An obvious contender for the same treatment had to be the history of all life on earth, but that was a subject I hankered after tackling myself. As soon as I resigned from my management job, I suggested the idea to one of the most experienced producers at the NHU, Chris Parsons, who would later himself head the unit. This was without doubt at the time the most ambitious series to be produced in Bristol. We started work on it in the mid-1970s, and the ground-breaking Life on Earth was transmitted in 1979 to huge audiences, selling around the globe so that eventually it was estimated that 500m people watched it. There is a great deal of trial and error in producing natural history programmes, and the people who make them have built up extraordinary levels of knowledge and expertise. Waiting patiently week after week in freezing temperatures for a snow leopard to creep across a mountainside, or understanding precisely when and how to film the annual hatch of turtles on a starlit beach, requires special skills. So too does the post- production of natural history series, and once a commissioning momentum was established, over the years the NHU in Bristol attracted many satellite businesses and freelancers. The city has accumulated a unique set of trades and talents.
Cultural identity At the same time the cultural life of Bristol has benefited from the existence of the NHU. The world’s first wildlife film festival, Wildscreen, was held in the city, attracting visitors from all over the world. The University of Bristol would probably tell you that its zoology department gains greatly from the fact that the best natural history television unit in the world is within walking distance, and a close and symbiotic relationship has sprung up between the two. Producers and academics drink in the same pubs and exchange ideas, and many a promising young graduate has found employment at BBC Bristol. It may have been historical accident that the NHU was founded in Bristol, rather than London, but instinct tells me that when Desmond Hawkins produced the first natural history radio programmes there in 1946, he already saw far further than the wildlife that was on his West Country doorstep. Natural history programme making has become as much a part of Bristol’s cultural identity as seafaring or the wine trade. The skills it takes to make such programmes are now woven into the fabric of the city, and long may it remain so.
Read David Attenborough’s full article and the other Made in the UK online essays at the BBC

Tuesday, 28 July 2009

BBC Natural History Archive launched

Print
Please click here to comment
Following the recent launches of Earth News and Out of the Wild the BBC Natural History Unit have just launch the archive clip section of 'Earth'. This provides unprecedented access to the BBC's natural history assets combines with 3rd party data, to create media-rich pages about species, behaviour and habitat and forms the foundation of the new Nature offering on bbc.co.uk.

There aren't yet any 'homepages' to aid navigation, but if you fancy a browse here are some entry level pages to showcase the different areas of interest:


Still to come on the archive section are radio programmes, plants, season, timelapse and other special capture pages and lots more behaviour..

Monday, 6 July 2009

Andrew Jackson appointed as new Head of the BBC Natural History Unit

Print
Please click here to comment
Andrew Jackson has today been appointed as the new Head of the BBC Natural History Unit.

Currently Managing Director of the independent production company Tigress, Andrew will replace Neil Nightingale, who is standing down after six years in the role to return to programme making.

Jana Bennett, Director, BBC Vision, says: "I am delighted that Andrew is joining the BBC in this important role leading the Natural History Unit, the centre of the best natural history film-making in the world.

"Andrew's own track record demonstrates his enthusiasm and dedication to programmes about the natural world.

"I am confident that Andrew will support the NHU in delivering ever more ambitious projects which deepen our appreciation of natural history and amaze us with the beauty of the world about us."

Andrew will report to Tom Archer, Controller, Factual Production.

Tom Archer says: "I am delighted that Andrew is joining the BBC leading the Natural History Unit. Andrew is a hugely experienced and talented programme maker.

"He is taking over at an exciting time for the department with a number of important projects forthcoming, including Life and Frozen Planet, and I believe he is ideally suited to take the NHU forward to new successes."

Andrew Jackson says: "I'm delighted and hugely honoured to be taking on this prestigious role.

"It has been an incredibly tough decision to leave a company that I've helped build over the last 17 years but opportunities like this come along so rarely.

"It's a huge, exciting job and I'm really looking forward to getting started."

During Andrew's time at Tigress, the company built a worldwide reputation for making outstanding science, wildlife and adventure programmes.

He joined the company 17 years ago to produce and direct the ITV and PBS specials In The Wild, working with, among others, Julia Roberts, Goldie Hawn and Bob Hoskins.

He has been directly involved in producing or directing more than 100 hours of TV and has overseen many more in his role as MD.

He began his TV career in BBC News and Current Affairs before joining the Natural History Unit in 1986.

He worked as a producer-director on several award-winning series for BBC One and Two.

Based in Bristol, the BBC's Natural History Unit delivers a diverse range of natural history programmes on TV, radio, online and for the cinema.

The unit has constantly excelled and created a world-class reputation for ambitious and groundbreaking factual programmes that inform and entertain audiences.

Recent output from the Natural History Unit on TV includes Nature's Great Events, Life In Cold Blood, Planet Earth, the Saving Planet Earth season, Wild China, Big Cat Live, The Secret Life Of Elephants, Lost Land Of The Jaguar, Expedition Borneo, Springwatch, Autumnwatch, Galapagos and Natural World.

On radio, recent series include Nature, Living World, Soundscapes and a major live event, World On The Move.

Andrew will begin his new role in the autumn of 2009.

Monday, 8 June 2009

Mike Gunton and Chris Cole to lead BBC Natural History

Print
Please click here to comment
Neil Nightingale is due to stand down as Head of the BBC Natural History Unit on June 26th and while the NHU search for a new leader, the BBCs controller of Factual Tom Archer has announced that he is appointing Mike Gunton (left) and Chris Cole as Joint Acting Heads.

"Mike and Chris have great complimentary skills and have of course worked very effectively together running development." Says Archer

"Together they can make sure we nail the outstanding deals we are pursuing, continue the push for new commissions and new ideas, and establish the NHU's relationship with the new commissioner Kim Shillinglaw"

Friday, 8 May 2009

Amazing new underwater slow motion footage from the BBC

Print
Please click here to comment
The BBC have done it again. This incredible footage shows big wave surfer Dylan Longbottom in a 12 foot monster barrel, these are the first shots of their kind ever recorded. Spectacular!



The BBC Natural History Unit specially modified a TyphoonHD4, apparently the most advanced HD camera ever, costing $100,00. While the exact modifications appear to be a closely-kept secret, we do know that it was outfitted with a special underwater housing designed by German high-speed camera expert Rudi Diesel, and the camera itself is able to shoot in HD at 20 times the speed of a normal high definition camera. 'Planet Earth' eat your heart out!

Monday, 12 May 2008

Video: Stephen Fry discusses the Future of Public Service Broadcasting

Print
Please click here to comment


Stephen Fry has delivered the second of the BBC's creative lectures on the future of public service broadcasting in the UK.

"Before I can even think to presume to dare to begin to expatiate on what sort of an organism I think the British Broadcasting Corporation should be, where I think the BBC should be going, how I think it and other British networks should be funded, what sort of programmes it should make, develop and screen and what range of pastries should be made available in its cafés and how much to the last penny it should pay its talent, before any of that, I ought I think in justice to run around the games field a couple of times puffing out a kind of “The BBC and Me” mini-biography, for like many of my age, weight and shoe size, the BBC is deeply stitched into my being and it is important for me as well as for you, to understand just how much. Only then can we judge the sense, value or otherwise of my thoughts."

Video: David Attenborough discusses the Future of Public Service Broadcasting

Print
Please click here to comment
Sir David Attenborough has given the first in a short series of creative lectures by leading figures from the world of broadcasting. Recorded in London on 30 April, Sir David gave his views on the future role of public service broadcasting in the UK.

Watch the video

"This lecture is about the future of public service broadcasting or, to give it today's fashionable acronym, PSB. I am saved the need to define PSB because OFCOM, in the person of its Chief Executive, Ed Richards, has defined it for us. He says it is broadcasting that aims to do four things: to increase our understanding of the world; to stimulate knowledge and learning; to reflect the cultural identity of the United Kingdom; and to ensure diversity and alternative viewpoints..."

Saturday, 23 February 2008

BBC iPlayer: 500,000 programmes viewed every day

Print
Please click here to comment
The BBC press office are not releasing specific viewing figures but they have said that "Life in Cold Blood" is somewhere in the top 15 of programmes viewed since Christmas.
clipped from www.bbc.co.uk
The BBC iPlayer home page
BBC iPlayer growth continues as bbc.co.uk records 29% increase

Number of programmes downloaded or streamed on demand via BBC
iPlayer reaches 17 million, up to 500,000 a day

BBC-branded entertainment channels showing clips on Yahoo! with
Blinkx and MSN to follow soon

There was an average of 20 million UK visitors weekly to bbc.co.uk across January, marking an increase of 29% on the corresponding period in 2007, driven chiefly by BBC iPlayer (accounting for up to 1.3 million unique visitors weekly), news, sport and weather.
Programmes which performed particularly well on BBC iPlayer include Ashes To Ashes, coverage of the Six Nations clash between England and Wales and Life In Cold Blood.

Surround Video

Print
Please click here to comment
clipped from www.bbc.co.uk
Surround video
Surround Video is a means of visually immersing the viewer into a TV programme.
It is like surround sound, an optional extra that enhances viewing on a normal display. The idea is to use a wide angle (or fisheye) camera fixed rigidly alongside the normal camera shooting the programme, and to project the image onto the walls, ceiling and floor of the viewer's room.
The image is scaled and positioned to ensure that it aligns up with the existing TV, and warped to compensate for the distortion effects that come from the wide-angle lens and projection system. Although the projected image will be dimmer and of lower resolution than the main image, it nevertheless gives a strong feeling of immersion, particularly with motion cues being visible in the viewer's peripheral vision.

Surround video is mentioned in this recent article about the work of BBC R&I from The Independent. There's also more information in this PDF from the BBC Technology Festival.

surround_video_camera.png
 blog it

Friday, 16 November 2007

My Britain: Video clips from across Britain (BETA)

Print
Please click here to comment

















Being developed (Beta version) not for general release: http://extdev.bbc.co.uk/mybritain

My Britain is a location-based video clip player that dives in to the BBC archive.The service allows users to explore on an individual clip bases or take journeys across the country by theme, drawing connections between BBC programmes past and present. This prototype contains 400 clips.

It's a location-based service the places clips on a map. Categorised in to topics you can find BBC clips by place. But they have also created new narratives that allow you to watch clips in 'journeys' across the country. 'Extreme British Sports' for example looks at the curious British pastimes from Bog Snorkling to Coal Carrying, taken from programmes broadcast over the last 30 years.

Tuesday, 16 October 2007

YouTube and the Great Copyright Challenge

Print
Please click here to comment
Where there's a will there's a way! Like with the DRM of the BBC iPlayer (the code which causes iPlayer programmes to self-destruct after 30 days), which was cracked recently - you can pay people loads'a money to write code to protect your content, but there will always be the techies who are much more willing to spend longer trying to hack it, simply for the pleasure of beating the big boys (and besides it's much easier to break code than to write it). What's more the continued rise in the use of Peer-2-Peer means that anything can be shared with anyone, irrespective of the legality, and this seems to be particularly ubiquitous amongst University students. Nether-the-less organisations such as Google and the BBC must be "seen" to be making an effort and today Google announced its latest strategy...

In Broadcast today:
Google has unveiled widely-anticipated technology to stop illicit access to copyrighted material on its YouTube video-sharing service. The technology identifies content owned by media companies and can dictate its usage on YouTube.

However, it cannot pre-empt the posting of content, leaving the work of identifying it up to content owners. Google has been dogged by copyright issues since it acquired YouTube for $1.65 billion in October 2006. MTV parent company Viacom launched a lawsuit against Google earlier this year for what it called "massive" copyright infringement.

The technology requires copyright owners to first upload their content to a Google database before it is broken down into data points and analyzed. Any matching versions that get posted will then be automatically flagged. Viacom general counsel Michael Fricklas said the company was "delighted that Google appears to be stepping up to its responsibility".
However, it is unclear whether Viacom will still pursue Google for damages related to past infringements.

Google's $1 billion lawsuit includes actions brought from the English Premier League, Rugby Football League, the Finnish Football League Association, author Daniel Quinn and music publisher Bourne & Co.

BBC joins forces with Adobe

Print
Please click here to comment
Iv'e been editing graphics and video for years using Adobe products and I must say that I find them as robust and adaptable as any apple product. Editing with Premiere offers as much functionality as FCP (for my needs at least).

Earlier today Adobe issued a press release that "New Adobe Video Tools Selected for Creative Desktop Initiative" and on the front page of the BBC intranet "Gateway" we read "Adobe and Cloud deals set to enhance iPlayer".

Adobe to enhance iPlayer
BBC iPlayer will be available on Mac and Linux computers for the first time by the end of the year after the BBC announced an agreement with Adobe to use its Flash player software. The BBC is also set to become the first UK broadcaster to have all of its online content made freely available via Wi-Fi, after agreeing a non-exclusive venture with The Cloud, the UK’s largest provider of ‘hotspots’.

The iPlayer enables viewers to download and view around 400 hours of tv content from the last seven days and store them for up to 30 days. Following a ‘soft launch’ in July it generated some half a million downloads from a quarter of a million registered users in its first five weeks. With user numbers rising steadily, FM&T director Ashley Highfield has set up a full consumer marketing launch in December to coincide with the arrival of streaming. Mac and Linux users, however, will not be able to download programmes and Highfield said he did not yet know whether there would be sufficient users to justify investing in the functionality.

The iPlayer’s growth will continue next month when it will be embedded into the Daily Telegraph’s website allowing users to click on any BBC programmes mentioned and be taken to the iPlayer to download them. Highfield said it would be the first of a host of ‘deep embedded relationships’ with listings providers and tv and radio sites. The BBC also hopes to set up an iPlayer trial in a small number of Virgin Media homes before the end of the year with a view to launching a full cable service early next year.


New Adobe Video Tools selected for BBC Creative Desktop
"Adobe Systems Incorporated today announced that the BBC, through its technology partner Siemens, has selected Adobe® Creative Suite® 3 Production Premium as its preferred solution for PC-based non-linear editing and post-production. Production Premium CS3 is Adobes complete integrated post-production solution for video, audio, graphics and Web publishing that will be used to edit and deliver content across the Corporations broadcast channels and Web sites."

The move will support the BBCs Creative Desktop Initiative, in which the BBC aims to standardize on leading tools in an effort to improve workflow efficiency, create a tapeless environment and reduce costs. Beginning in April 2007, it will start rolling out Adobe Premiere® Pro CS2 to PC users within the organization, allowing them to take advantage of the powerful non-linear editing tool...The BBC will implement a phased approach over the coming year, with an expected initial deployment of 150 workstations.

Read the full Adobe press release here
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Follow Me on Twitter