Celebrating a Hundred Years of Broadcasting – An Introduction and Timeline
TLDR
In this paper, the authors celebrated one hundred years of broadcasting without names, dates, and places, and presented a timeline of the broadcasting history without naming, dates and places. This issue broadens the meaning of broadcasting.Abstract:
What’s a celebration of a hundred years of history without names, dates, and places, perhaps a timeline? This symposium celebrates one hundred years of broadcasting. This issue broadens the meaning...read more
Citations
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Radio and audio in 2020
Devin Stroink,Elizabeth Edwards +1 more
TL;DR: Adeyeye et al. as discussed by the authors presented a SWOT analysis of indigenous language use in agricultural radio programming in Nigeria and found that Oyesomi and Ogwuche, P. O. used indigenous language in investigative journalism in Nigeria.
Modernity, intimacy and early Australian commercial radio
TL;DR: The Sydney Daily Telegraph as discussed by the authors declared itself "thoroughly modern" and as modern as television, wireless, and airmail, and was the quintessence of modernity.
References
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Institutional Change and the Transformation of Interorganizational Fields: An Organizational History of the U.S. Radio Broadcasting Industry
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how institutional practices change over time in an interorganizational field, in the historical context of the U.S. radio broadcasting industry, and identify three endogenous mechanisms of change: analogies that are used to make sense of and manage new phenomena, private agreements between identifiable parties, and conventions, the practices adopted by some constituents to solve coordination problems.
Journal ArticleDOI
Digital sound broadcasting to mobile receivers
TL;DR: The authors describe a system that combines the orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing technique and a coding strategy associated with diversity in the frequency domain that is suitable for digital broadcasting through a particularly hostile urban radio channel.
Book
Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935
TL;DR: The authors examines a critical point in US broadcasting in the late 1920s and early 1930s -the only period in which a strong opposition emerged to network-dominated, advertising-supported media such as radio.