Broadcast Communication Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Broadcast Communication. Here they are! All 100 of them:

Mobile phones ... they're not for communicating, they're for broadcasting. Broadcasting The Show Of Me.
Adam L.G. Nevill (Last Days)
Even if you’re not broadcasting your personal life to the universe through social media, choose your confidants wisely and with discretion. Your ability to keep your personal details close to your vest will encourage others to feel that you are trustworthy enough to be trusted with their personal details.
Susan C. Young (The Art of Connection: 8 Ways to Enrich Rapport & Kinship for Positive Impact (The Art of First Impressions for Positive Impact, #6))
Trees don't rely exclusively on dispersal in the air, for if they did, some neighbors would not get wind of the danger. Dr. Suzanne Simard of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver has discovered that they also warn each other using chemical signals sent through the fungal networks around their root tips, which operate no matter what the weather. Surprisingly, news bulletins are sent via the roots not only by means of chemical compounds but also by means of electrical impulses that travel at the speed of a third of an inch per second. In comparison with our bodies, it is, admittedly, extremely slow. However there are species in the animal kingdom, such as jellyfish and worms, whose nervous systems conduct impulses at similar speed. Once the latest news has been broadcast, all oaks int he area promptly pump tannins through their veins.
Peter Wohlleben (The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate: Discoveries from a Secret World)
Ujjwal Singh, Steve Crossan, and Abdel Karim Mardini partnered with engineers from Twitter following the Egyptian government’s shutdown of the Internet in early 2011 to create Speak2Tweet, a product that takes messages from a voice mailbox and transcribes them into Tweets broadcast around the world.35 This gave Egyptians a way to communicate en masse with the world and, by dialing into the voice mailbox, to listen to one another.
Laszlo Bock (Work Rules!: Insights from Inside Google That Will Transform How You Live and Lead)
and established a comprehensive plan for long-term broadcasting and communications convergent service quality management
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organizations on broadcasting and communications-related issues and the management of North and South exchange in broadcasting and communications
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good piece of written communication is the most effective means of broadcasting ideas and scaling yourself.
Will Larson (Staff Engineer: Leadership Beyond the Management Track)
[T]he Federal Communications Commission should reestablish two principles that formerly served this country well: the public service requirement and the fairness doctrine. Every television and radio station should once again be required to devote a meaningful percentage of its programming to public service broadcasting. The public, after all, owns the airwaves through which signals are broadcast, and the rights-of-way in which cables are strung. And every television and radio station should once again have to follow the fairness doctrine: those with opposing views should have the right to respond to viewpoints expressed on the station.
Bernie Sanders (Outsider in the White House)
One of the greatest tools you cannot do without is the media. These various means for mass communication and those involved in them must be your partners and not your enemies; you must not be afraid of them but befriend and love them. If you are going to be significant and relevant then you are going to need someone to help broadcast your voice and channel your substance to the world.
Archibald Marwizi (Making Success Deliberate)
After seeing the holy God, Isaiah then saw himself. What he knew instantly was that between him and God, only one was truly holy. In the presence of the Lord, his guilt was obvious, his sins were bright, uncovered, exposed, broadcasted without a screen. Loud without a button to mute them or a finger to shush the noise. He confessed the defilement of his tongue which communicated the pollution native to his nature.
Jackie Hill Perry (Holier Than Thou: How God’s Holiness Helps Us Trust Him)
Three kinds of mass organization predominate in contemporary Western society: the mass corporation in the economy, the mass state in government, and the mass organizations of culture and communication. The latter include not only the media of mass communication, one of the most important instruments by which the managerial elite disciplines and controls the mass population, but also all other mass organizations that disseminate, restrict, or invent information, ideas, and values advertising, publishing, journalism, film and broadcasting, entertainment, religion, education, and institutions for research and development.
Samuel T. Francis
After simmering years of censorship and repression, the masses finally throng the streets. The chants echoing off the walls to build to a roar from all directions, stoking the courage of the crowds as they march on the center of the capital. Activists inside each column maintain contact with each other via text messages; communications centers receive reports and broadcast them around the city; affinity groups plot the movements of the police via digital mapping. A rebel army of bloggers uploads video footage for all the world to see as the two hosts close for battle. Suddenly, at the moment of truth, the lines go dead. The insurgents look up from the blank screens of their cell phones to see the sun reflecting off the shields of the advancing riot police, who are still guided by close circuits of fully networked technology. The rebels will have to navigate by dead reckoning against a hyper-informed adversary. All this already happened, years ago, when President Mubarak shut down the communications grid during the Egyptian uprising of 2011. A generation hence, when the same scene recurs, we can imagine the middle-class protesters - the cybourgeoisie - will simply slump forward, blind and deaf and wracked by seizures as the microchips in their cerebra run haywire, and it will be up to the homeless and destitute to guide them to safety.
CrimethInc. (Contradictionary)
The assumptions that propagandists are rational, in the sense that they follow their own propaganda theories in their choice of communications, and that the meanings of propagandists' communications may differ for different people reoriented the FCC* analysts from a concept of "content as shared" (Berelson would later say "manifest") to conditions that could explain the motivations of particular communicators and the interests they might serve. The notion of "preparatory propaganda" became an especially useful key for the analysts in their effort to infer the intents of broadcasts with political content. In order to ensure popular support for planned military actions, the Axis leaders had to inform; emotionally arouse, and otherwise prepare their countrymen and women to accept those actions; the FCC analysts discovered that they could learn a great deal about the enemy's intended actions by recognizing such preparatory efforts in the domestic press and broadcasts. They were able to predict several major military and political campaigns and to assess Nazi elites' perceptions of their situation, political changes within the Nazi governing group, and shifts in relations among Axis countries. Among the more outstanding predictions that British analysts were able to make was the date of deployment of German V weapons against Great Britain. The analysts monitored the speeches delivered by Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels and inferred from the content of those speeches what had interfered with the weapons' production and when. They then used this information to predict the launch date of the weapons, and their prediction was accurate within a few weeks. *FCC - Federal Communications Commission
Klaus H. Krippendorff (Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology)
Not only the media of mass communication, one of the most important instruments by which the managerial elite disciplines and control the mass population, but also all other mass organizations that disseminate, restrict, or invent information, ideas and values advertising, publishing, journalism, film and broadcasting, entertainment, religion, education, and institutions for research and development. Indeed, the mass organizations of culture and communication, which generally lack the coercive disciplines of the mass corporation and the mass state, are able to provide disciplines and control for the mass population primarily through their use of the devices and techniques of mass communication. All the mass cultural organizations, then, function as part of the media of mass communication, and they constitute a necessary element in the power base of the managerial elite.
Samuel T. Francis (Leviathan and Its Enemies: Mass Organization and Managerial Power in Twentieth-Century America)
Just as the printing press led to the appearance of a new set of possibilities for democracy, beginning five hundred years ago—and just as the emergence of electronic broadcasting reshaped those possibilities, beginning in the first quarter of the twentieth century—the Internet is presenting us with new possibilities to reestablish a healthy functioning self-government, even before it rivals television for an audience. In fact, the Internet is perhaps the greatest source of hope for reestablishing an open communications environment in which the conversation of democracy can flourish. It has extremely low entry barriers for individuals. The ideas that individuals contribute are dealt with, in the main, according to the rules of a meritocracy of ideas. It is the most interactive medium in history and the one with the greatest potential for connecting individuals to one another and to a universe of knowledge. An important distinction to make is that the Internet is not just another platform for disseminating the truth. It’s a platform for pursuing the truth, and the decentralized creation and distribution of ideas, in the same way that markets are a decentralized mechanism for the creation and distribution of goods and services. It’s a platform, in other words, for reason. But just as it is important to avoid romanticizing the printing press and the information ecosystem it created, it is also necessary to keep a clear-eyed view of the Internet’s problems and abuses. It is hard to imagine any human evil that is not somehow abundantly displayed somewhere on the Internet. Parents of young children are often horrified to learn what obscene, grotesque, and savage material is all too easily available to children whose Web-surfing habits are not supervised or electronically limited. Teen suicides, bullying, depravity, and criminal behavior of all descriptions are described and—some would argue—promoted on the Internet. As with any tool put at the disposal of humankind, it can be, and is, used for evil as well as good purposes. And as always, it is up to us—particularly those of us who live in a democracy—to make intelligent choices about how and for what we use this incredibly powerful tool.
Al Gore (The Assault on Reason)
More than anything, we have lost the cultural customs and traditions that bring extended families together, linking adults and children in caring relationships, that give the adult friends of parents a place in their children's lives. It is the role of culture to cultivate connections between the dependent and the dependable and to prevent attachment voids from occurring. Among the many reasons that culture is failing us, two bear mentioning. The first is the jarringly rapid rate of change in twentieth-century industrial societies. It requires time to develop customs and traditions that serve attachment needs, hundreds of years to create a working culture that serves a particular social and geographical environment. Our society has been changing much too rapidly for culture to evolve accordingly. There is now more change in a decade than previously in a century. When circumstances change more quickly than our culture can adapt to, customs and traditions disintegrate. It is not surprising that today's culture is failing its traditional function of supporting adult-child attachments. Part of the rapid change has been the electronic transmission of culture, allowing commercially blended and packaged culture to be broadcast into our homes and into the very minds of our children. Instant culture has replaced what used to be passed down through custom and tradition and from one generation to another. “Almost every day I find myself fighting the bubble-gum culture my children are exposed to,” said a frustrated father interviewed for this book. Not only is the content often alien to the culture of the parents but the process of transmission has taken grandparents out of the loop and made them seem sadly out of touch. Games, too, have become electronic. They have always been an instrument of culture to connect people to people, especially children to adults. Now games have become a solitary activity, watched in parallel on television sports-casts or engaged in in isolation on the computer. The most significant change in recent times has been the technology of communication — first the phone and then the Internet through e-mail and instant messaging. We are enamored of communication technology without being aware that one of its primary functions is to facilitate attachments. We have unwittingly put it into the hands of children who, of course, are using it to connect with their peers. Because of their strong attachment needs, the contact is highly addictive, often becoming a major preoccupation. Our culture has not been able to evolve the customs and traditions to contain this development, and so again we are all left to our own devices. This wonderful new technology would be a powerfully positive instrument if used to facilitate child-adult connections — as it does, for example, when it enables easy communication between students living away from home, and their parents. Left unchecked, it promotes peer orientation.
Gabor Maté (Hold On to Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers)
The photo was published in the majority of Brazilian newspapers in a full-page spread when CNN and all the television channels of the world broadcast the scene, they froze it for a few seconds. Or minutes, hours, I don't know. For me time has infinite duration--I don't know how to measure it by normal parameters. Trying doesn't even interest me. From the World Trade Center buildings, minutes, prior to their collapse--which would appear as a perfect and planned implosion--only a grayish-blue and black vertical lines can be seen. Like a modernist painting--by whom? Which artist painted lines? Mondrian? No, not Mondrian, he painted squares, rectangles. Anyway, in the picture, the man is falling head first. his body straight, one of his legs bent. Did he jump? Slip? Did he faint and then fall? He probably lost consciousness because of the height, the smoke. He fell. He disappeared from the scene, from life, from the city. A million tons of rubble buried him soon after. Nobody knows his name. Impossible for his family to have him identified. He's an unknown who entered into history at the twenty-first century's first great moment of horror--the history of the world, the United States, communications, photography. Without anyone knowing who he is. And nobody will ever know. We'll only have suppositions, families who'll swear that he was theirs. But was he Brazilian, American, Latino, Chinese, Italian, Irish--what? He could have been anything, but now he's nothing. One among thousands gone forever. And, while we're on the subject, what about the firemen who supposedly became such heroes that day--can you name a single one?
Ignácio de Loyola Brandão (Anonymous Celebrity (Brazilian Literature))
In a naive accounting, speaking seems to cost almost nothing—just the calories we expend flexing our vocal cords and firing our neurons as we turn thoughts into sentences. But this is just the tip of the iceberg. A full accounting will necessarily include two other, much larger costs: 1.The opportunity cost of monopolizing information. As Dessalles says, “If one makes a point of communicating every new thing to others, one loses the benefit of having been the first to know it.”11 If you tell people about a new berry patch, they’ll raid the berries that could have been yours. If you show them how to make a new tool, soon everyone will have a copy and yours won’t be special anymore. 2.The costs of acquiring the information in the first place. In order to have interesting things to say during a conversation, we need to spend a lot of time and energy foraging for information before the conversation.12 And sometimes this entails significant risk. Consider the explorer who ventures further than others, only to rush home and broadcast her hard-won information, rather than keeping it for herself. This requires an explanation.
Kevin Simler (The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life)
It is easy to mourn those who are no longer with us and be sorrowful,” he began. It wasn't his way to shout, everyone could hear him through the communicators they wore. “It is difficult but so much more fitting to mourn through celebration. If my time were to come tomorrow, I would want people to remember me smiling, lending a hand, or having a laugh. If my memory brings a smile or I'm part of something that is retold, then I live on in joy.
Randolph Lalonde (Spinward Fringe Broadcast 3: Triton)
These communications can be conversations or one-way testimonials. They can be live or recorded. They can be in person, by telephone, by email, on a blog, or by any other means of communication. They can be one-to-one, one-to-many (broadcast), or group discussions. But, the essential element is that they are from or among people who are perceived to have little commercial vested interest in persuading someone else to use the product—and therefore no particular incentive to distort the truth in favor of the product or service.
George Silverman (The Secrets of Word-of-Mouth Marketing: How to Trigger Exponential Sales Through Runaway Word of Mouth)
All the principals are dead now. Arthur Q. Bryan died Nov. 30, 1959. Harlow Wilcox died Sept. 24, 1960. Marian Jordan died April 7, 1961. Bill Thompson died July 15, 1971. Billy Mills died Oct. 20, 1971. Don Quinn died Jan. 11, 1973. Harold Peary died March 30, 1985. Jim Jordan married Gretchen Stewart after Marian’s death and lived in semi-retirement for almost 30 years. He died April 1, 1988, at 91. After Jordan’s death, his widow and children donated the bound volumes of Smackout and Fibber scripts to the Museum of Broadcast Communications in Chicago, where they may be read by students of comedy. The museum also has a Fibber closet exhibit.
John Dunning (On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio)
He also explained Operation Trojan, where Mossad relayed disinformation to be received by the US and Britain. They planted the Trojan, a communication device, deep inside the enemy territory. The device would rebroadcast prerecorded digital transmissions, which would be able to be picked up by Americans and the British. On the night of February 17th, two Israeli missile boats headed through the Mediterranean, letting four submarines and two speedboats disembark just outside the territorial waters of Libya. The submarines headed for shore and the agents headed inland with the Trojan device. They were picked up by a Mossad combatant who was already there, then they headed to the city, where they went to an apartment building less than three blocks away from the Bab al Azizia barracks known to house Qadhafi’s headquarters. They brought the device to the top floor of the building, activated it, then headed back to the beach. The combatant monitored the unit in the apartment for the next few weeks. The Trojan broadcasted messages during heavy communication traffic hours. They appeared as long series of terrorist orders to Libyan embassies around the world. The Americans began to perceive the Libyans as active sponsors of terrorism, while the French and Spanish were suspicious. The Mossad used America’s promise to retaliate against support for terrorism, to manipulate them into the ploy. Their intention was to get a country with better weapons to attack Libya. They succeeded. On April 14th, 1986, one hundred and sixty American aircrafts dropped over sixty tons of bombs on Libya. A deal for the release of American hostages in Lebanon was cut, forty Libyan civilians died, and an American pilot and his weapons officer died. For the Mossad, this mission was incredibly successful. However, it doesn’t highlight the intelligence agency in the same ways as other stories of operations. It showed deceit toward the Americans, who they would normally try to cooperate with. It “by ingenious sleight of hand, had prodded the United States to do what was right.” It showed the world what side the US was on in the Arab-Israeli conflict.
Mike Livingston (Mossad: The Untold Stories of Israel’s Most Effective Secret Service)
Because I follow Jesus, then, I am bound to Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, agnostics, atheists, New Agers, everyone (even religious broadcasters, I was just reminded by a still, small voice). Not only am I bound to them in love, but I am also actually called to, in some real sense (please don’t minimize this before you qualify it), become one of them, to enter their world and be with them in it.
Brian D. McLaren (A Generous Orthodoxy: By celebrating strengths of many traditions in the church (and beyond), this book will seek to communicate a “generous orthodoxy.” (emergentYS))
In August 2015, three months after the release of THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MOMENT IN LIFE PT. 1, V Live, which offered a variety of Korean idol content directly to fans, had been running a beta version on Naver. On V Live, artists could communicate instantly with fans through online live broadcasting, which they could initiate spontaneously or prearrange for a specified time, and reply to fans’ comments there and then. This was the start of the “self-produced content” era.
BTS (Beyond The Story: 10-Year Record of BTS)
Somehow (and I am not sure the full story of how it happened ever became public) the three networks—CBS, ABC and NBC—wound up donating their weekly half-hour public affairs interview programs to the two candidates. "Meet the Press", "Face the Nation", and "Issues and Answers" were all stretched to an hour and rescheduled to provide, in effect, three one-hour debates between Humphrey and McGovern during the last full week before the California primary. Tom Asher filed a protest on my behalf with the Federal Communications Commission, citing section 315 of the Federal Communication Act, which says that if any broadcasting station permits itself to be used by any legally qualified candidate for an office, it must permit equal opportunities to all other candidates. The networks claimed that the three programs were regular interview shows, and exempt from the rule. The Federal Communications Commission upheld the networks, and Asher went to the U.S. Court of Appeals. Within hours after the FCC ruling, the court issued an order reversing the commission and ordering ABC and CBS each to provide me with one half-hour of prime air time. NBC had conceded earlier and scheduled me on one half-hour of its morning program, "Today.
Shirley Chisholm (The Good Fight)
the craft was already within the Moon’s gravitational sphere of influence making it harder to ‘reverse’. The engine could also have been damaged in the explosion and restarting might cause an even worse disaster. So Mission Control opted for a ‘free return’, essentially using the Moon’s gravity to hitch a ride and slingshot them back towards Earth. First, Apollo 13 needed to be realigned; it had left its initial free return trajectory earlier in the mission as it lined up for its planned lunar landing. Using a small burn of the Lunar Module’s descent propulsion system, the crew got the spacecraft back on track for its return journey. Now they started their nerve-shredding journey round the dark side of the Moon. It was a trip that would demand incredible ingenuity under extreme pressure from the crew, flight controllers, and ground crew if the men were to make it back alive. More problems The Lunar Module ‘lifeboat’ only had enough battery power to sustain two people for two days, not three people for the four days it would take the men to return to Earth. The life support and communication systems had to be powered down to the lowest levels possible. Everything that wasn’t essential was turned off. The drama was being shown on TV but no more live broadcasts were made.
Collins Maps (Extreme Survivors: 60 of the World’s Most Extreme Survival Stories)
Facebook’s ranking work was sloppy—there was no other way to put it. The company altered its recommendation systems on the basis of A/B tests that ran for just a few weeks, months less than the period Netflix considered necessary to observe longer-term shifts in user behavior. Facebook was more cavalier in shaping a global communications and broadcasting platform than Netflix was about deciding to steer users toward The Great British Bake Off. (A company spokeswoman disputed Gomez-Uribe’s recollection of hasty and inadequate testing of ranking changes, calling the company’s experiments rigorous and focused on improving user experience.)
Jeff Horwitz (Broken Code: Inside Facebook and the Fight to Expose Its Harmful Secrets)
At the time of my visit, Finnish evolutionary ecologist Aino Kalske, Japanese chemical ecologist Kaori Shiojiri, and Cornell chemical ecologist André Kessler had recently found that goldenrods that live in peaceful areas without much threat from predators will issue chemical alarm calls that are incredibly specific—decipherable only to their close kin—on the rare occasion they are attacked. But goldenrods in more hostile territory signal to their neighbors using chemical phrases easily understood by all the goldenrod in the area, not just their biological kin. Instead of using coded whisper networks, these goldenrod broadcast the threat over loudspeaker, so to speak. It is the first time research has confirmed that these sort of chemical communications are beneficial not only to the plant receiving them but also to the sender.* When times are truly tough, you don’t want to be left standing in a field alone when it’s over, if you’re a plant. There’ll be no one to mate with, no one to help bring in pollinators. It’s the closest scientists have come to showing intentionality in plant communication: these are signals meant to be heard. And as we know, by some measures, intention is an indicator of intelligent behavior.
Zoë Schlanger (The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth)
then I did something that probably had not ever been done before, because it hadn’t needed to be done before, which is to literally look at all the work that we had produced for all our clients. Not necessarily from the standpoint of what does the work look like and is it creative, but more about how much time does it take us to actually get to a piece of communication that we can sell to a client, and how many bits of television are we making, how many bits of Internet work are we creating. And I looked at it to a certain extent more like a factory, to work out whether we have the right machinery in place to make the factory work properly. As we went through, it changed almost at a level that would be staggering in our industry. We went from 17.5 percent of our work within new media to 50 percent in the first year. Now, our digital production department is as big as our broadcast production department. And our output is now 60/40 in favor of nontraditional interactive work. That’s a massive change. Not just in what we produce, but also, you’ve got to try and mirror that change with the resources you have. And you’ve either got to shed some resources and get some new resources in, or you’ve got to reskill people on the move. And that is a more complicated task, but that’s one of the things that we’ve managed to do very successfully.
Rick Mathieson (The On-Demand Brand: 10 Rules for Digital Marketing Success in an Anytime, Everywhere World)
This closing chapter takes up three problems about authoritative reason giving that earlier chapters have raised but not resolved: what makes reasons credible, how people who work with specialized sorts of reason giving can make their reasons accessible to people outside their specialties, and what particular problems social scientists face when it comes to communicating their reasons, and reconciling them with the reasons that we as ordinary people give for our actions. Governmental commissions, we will see, offer just one of many ways to broadcast reasons. We will also see that the credibility of reasons always depends on the relation between speaker and audience, in part because giving of reasons always says something about the relation itself.
Charles Tilly (Why?: What Happens When People Give Reasons . . . and Why)
the areas of broadcasting, communications, and convergence, and to identify solutions. Presenters at the seminar discussed ex
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broadcasting and communications policies presented by the KCC at the 2nd Green
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Broadcasting and Communications Conference included a cloud service promotion scheme, a trial low-carbon green city project
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to present to broadcasting and communications service providers with ways to set target power-consumption levels and to reduce
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also discussed the possibility of the communications market's integration with the Internet Multimedia Broadcasting Business
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the broadcasting and communications convergent market, and the viewer/user definition and protection measures in the convergent
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Promotion of Fair Competition in the Broadcasting Market 1) Broadcast/Communications Product Package Discount Regulations
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of a 100M ultra broadband subscriber network capable of providing broadcasting and communications convergent service to 10
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and nScreen service were provided and a Broadcasting and Communications Network Information Guide System was established to
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Network Advancement for the Provision of Broadcasting and Communications Convergent Services In 2010, the KCC achieved the following for
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In July 2010, the KCC came up with new quality standards for cable and wireless broadcasting and communications services
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Development of broadcasting and communications technology promotion-related policy and manpower development ○Green IT plans for the broadcasting and communications field
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The KCC endeavored to promptly review key pending issues in broadcasting and communications and come up with effective solutions
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reached a communications friends' agreement in relation to the WTO DDA 1) and reviewing the broadcasting and commu
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Turkey took place successfully and the influence on broadcasting and communications from the FTA that had been settled with co
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global marketing of Korea's competitive broadcasting and communications products such as WiBro, DMB, IPTV, and broadcast
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Northeast Asia. New media contents and broadcasting and communications convergent content technologies were showcased at
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increased. Online consultation was provided to companies seeking to engage in broadcasting and communications business activities
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policies with the international community. In 2010, various broadcasting and communications promotional materials (videos and p
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Korea's image as a broadcasting and communications powerhouse by sharing its meritorious broadcasting and communications
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As part of an effort to promote regional broadcasting, the Broadcasting and Communications
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promote the use of giga internet. 3) Comprehensive Plan for Broadcasting and Communications Convergent Service Quality Management
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Issues related to the establishment, management and operation of broadcasting and communications funds
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A. Areas of Responsibility (pursuant to Article 11 of the Act on the Establishment and Operation of the Korea Communications Commission) 1. Broadcasting regulation 2. Telecommunications regulation
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The KCC created a broadcasting and communications market monitoring system to promptly adapt to market changes such as
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Policy development in the areas of fair use of spectrum and viewing support technology for hearing-impaired viewers ○Radio station-licensing and inspection policies and broadcasting and communications and information device certification policy
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Issues related to international cooperation and trade in broadcasting and communications 16. Issues related to North-South Korea cooperation and exchange in broadcasting and communications
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Relations with international organizations involved in broadcasting and communications -related activities ○Operation of broadcasting and communications-related international organizations and policy development
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Development of broadcasting-telecom convergence policy, and the development and evaluation of medium and longterm broadcasting and communications service policy
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Developing plans for the promotion of converged digital services ○Formulation of a national vision and growth strategy based on broadcasting and communications and digital convergence
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Issues related to ensuring fair business practices in the distribution of broadcasting programs 7. Issues related to upgrading the quality of broadcasting and communications services and universal services
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Issues related to the processing of viewer complaints, protection of broadcasting and communications users and ensuring their welfare
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by service providers is notified on broadcasting and communications user web portals for users to search and view inform
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quality of cable high-speed internet services (All-IP broadcasting and communications
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broadcasting and communications service providers' business reports and cross-connection cost statements. Universal service
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Increased Satisfaction with Customer Service The KCC was active in processing broadcasting and communications civil appeals
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Improvement of Broadcasting and Communications Dispute Mediation Systems The KCC improved broadcasting and communications dispute mediation systems to
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Committee was reformed into the Broadcasting and Communications Dispute Mediation Committee to form policies for
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communications finances and broadcasting dispute mediation. Second, financial matters processing period
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Lastly, quarterly broadcasting and communications service provider meetings will be held to analyze user complains through
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diverse channels. Solutions to disputes are identified and the Broadcasting and Communications Dispute Issues Report is
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Enhanced Cooperation between International Dispute Mediators The KCC held the 2nd International Broadcasting and Communications Dispute Forum to examine domestic and international
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broadcasting and communication dispute management and to develop ways to handle disputes mode effectively in a changing
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convergent services. Based on the Long-term Broadcasting and Communications Network Development Plan established
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broadcast service providers stipulates assessments of competition in the broadcasting and communications market
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In September 2010, the Energy-saving Guidelines for the Broadcasting and Communications Industry (draft) were established
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the KCC held the 1st Broadcasting and Communications Ex Post Seminar in June 2010 to analyze ex post regulation issues in
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communications product packages as they reduce the income from broadcasting
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The KCC hosted the 2010 Korea Communications Commission Broadcasting Awards to select and award programs that were b
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In April 2010, the Committee on Culture, Sports, Tourism, Broadcasting & Communications combined a bill submitted by itself
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Creation of an Environment for Intelligent Object Communications in 2010 Advancement of broadcasting and communications infrastructures and the advent of
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MVNO market and promote mobile content transactions. 3) Broadcasting and Communications Market Investigation System and Enhanced Investigator Capacity
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Issues related to broadcast advertising and its programming 12. Issues related to broadcasting and communications research and support therefor
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Expansion of the High-speed Information Communications Building Approval System for Application in Digital Broadcasting
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and carried out expert investigations of policy issues that must be addressed to improve broadcasting and communications
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broadcasting accounting systems. 2) Broadcasting and Communications Service Quality Assessment a) 3G Service Quality Assessment
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Assessment outcome was notified on broadcasting and communications user web
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conducted on digital cable TV and digital satellite broadcasting. 3) Policy Support through Communications Accounting Systems
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number of civil appeals regarding communications increased in 2010 from the previous year. In June 2010, broadcasting and communi
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disrupted by the electromagnetic pulse of a nuclear weapon. If Green Pine was knocked out, SAC brought online in October 1967 the first of twelve Emergency Rocket Communication Systems (ERCS) at Missouri’s Whiteman Air Force Base. Instead of a warhead, the special ERCS Minuteman missiles contained a powerful UHF transmitter that would broadcast launch orders to U.S. forces along the missile’s trajectory, creating, in effect, a high-flying radio broadcasting tower. The launch capsules of the 510th were retrofitted with large, floor-mounted telephone consoles that the crews quickly dubbed “knee knockers,” since they hit their knees on it whenever turning their chairs. With the arrival of ERCS, the very last remnants of the U.S. government in a nuclear war would have likely been the voices of the missileers of Whiteman’s 510th Missile Squadron. In an emergency, the crews would use the console to record launch orders onto the ERCS transmitter (the airborne command posts could record an Emergency Action Message remotely). Then either the capsule crew or an airborne command post would have launched the missiles, each set on a different trajectory to blast in a different direction. For thirty minutes after launch, ERCS-equipped Minutemans would broadcast “go codes” to any bomber, submarine, or missile silo along its path, the last communication of a destroyed
Garrett M. Graff (Raven Rock: The Story of the U.S. Government's Secret Plan to Save Itself--While the Rest of Us Die)
It cannot be thought that any single person or group shall ever have the right to determine what communication may be made to the American people… We cannot allow any single person or group to place themselves in the position where they can censor the material which shall be broadcasted to the public.”17
Vivek Ramaswamy (Woke, Inc.: Inside Corporate America's Social Justice Scam)
Verse was humanity's first memory and broadcast technology—a technology originally transmitted only by the human body.
Dana Gioia (Poetry as Enchantment)
An audacious proposition is designed to interrupt the regularly scheduled broadcast to deliver some new information.
Anaik Alcasas (Sending Signals: Amplify the Reach, Resonance and Results of Your Ideas)
If our transmission is too garbled due to an unwittingly arrogant tone, the idea we broadcast isn’t necessarily the idea that will be received in the minds and hearts of the hearers.
Anaik Alcasas (Sending Signals: Amplify the Reach, Resonance and Results of Your Ideas)
Pop fiction falls between the private and personal world of the home and the outside world of the publishers, studios, record labels and broadcasters, massive corporations which threaten to turn the most fundamental quality of human beings – our unending love of communication – into big business and, at its worst, propaganda.
Ziauddin Sardar (Introducing Media Studies: A Graphic Guide (Graphic Guides))
That is a simple matter of objective observation,” CHET notes matter-of-factly. “Since you asked for my observations, I will share what I have seen. Humans reveal a universal insight in millions of interactions in news reports, broadcasts, entertainment, books, and all of the planet’s communications. “Without realizing it, people constantly refer to a common standard. It is often called fairness, or simply ‘doing what is right.’ They say things like: “I was here first, that’s my place,” — “Leave him alone, he’s not hurting you,”—“How’d you like it if someone did that to you?”——“Do this thing for me, you owe me the favor”—“You gave your word, you promised.” People say things like this every day. Both educated people as well as uneducated, and children as well as adults. When making these statements, they are appealing to a universal standard of behavior that they expect everyone to know about and agree with. “It logically reveals that all people have in mind some internal compass of fair play or rule of law or morality about which they unquestioningly agree. But who told them about these rules? No one at all; they are predisposed to believe them. The weight of statistical evidence demonstrates that this is within them from the earliest years of life. “The existence of such a universal moral law, therefore, requires that there be a moral lawgiver. Someone outside of themselves who decided what is right and hardwired it into human beings — a trait that clearly separates your fellow man from animals.”1
D.I. Hennessey (Quest (Niergel Chronicles #2))
As John Pierce later explained, “The laser is to ordinary light as a broadcast signal is to static.” Ordinary light radiates in a chaotic and scattershot manner. The laser does not. From the perspective of a communications engineer, it is coherent—meaning it is intense and ordered and nearly all one frequency, which are important qualities for carrying information. “In principle it makes it possible to do everything with light that one does with radio waves,” Pierce added. What’s more, the great advantage is that the “bandwidth” of such light—which is related to its capacity—“is hundreds or thousands of times greater than we now have.” The very title of the Townes and Schawlow patent suggested a clear direction.9 Bell Labs’ claim for the laser was that it was a new method for communication.
Jon Gertner (The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation)
All forms of electronic communication use electromagnetic waves. And all electromagnetic waves have a place, classified by their length, on the electromagnetic spectrum. On one end are long waves—signals like the ones broadcast from huge antennas that project songs onto AM and FM radio stations. These undulating waves might measure several meters, or even hundreds of meters. Next come shorter waves whose lengths might only be measured in centimeters or millimeters. These wavelengths are commonly used for TV signals and radar. Generally speaking, the shorter the wavelength, the higher its frequency, and the more information it can carry. By the early 1960s, Bell Labs executives had concluded that millimeter waves would serve as the communications medium of the future. The idea at Bell Labs was to send information through such waves not by wires or broadcast towers but by means of the circular waveguide,
Jon Gertner (The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation)
First, we don’t know how to deal with rumors. Rumors that confirm people’s biases are now believed and spread among millions of people. Second,… we tend to only communicate with people that we agree with, and thanks to social media, we can mute, un-follow, and block everybody else. Third, online discussions quickly descend into angry mobs.… It’s as if we forget that the people behind screens are actually real people and not just avatars. And fourth, it became really hard to change our opinions. Because of the speed and brevity of social media, we are forced to jump to conclusions and write sharp opinions in 140 characters about complex world affairs. And once we do that, it lives forever on the Internet.… Fifth—and in my point of view, this is the most critical—today, our social media experiences are designed in a way that favors broadcasting over engagements, posts over discussions, shallow comments over deep conversations. It’s as if we agreed that we are here to talk at each other instead of talking with each other.
Jonathan Taplin (Move Fast and Break Things: How Facebook, Google, and Amazon Cornered Culture and Undermined Democracy)
Our ideas are like living entities, swimming in an ocean of other ideas. Every idea is being broadcast on a different frequency and has varying levels of resonance with those who respond to that frequency.
Anaik Alcasas (Sending Signals: Amplify the Reach, Resonance and Results of Your Ideas)