journalism

Livestream shrinks the broadcast truck

by alec on September 25, 2009

The democratization of the news took another step forward yesterday when Livestream announced Livepack.  A backpack sized turnkey hardware solution that marries HD video to six load-balanced 3G modems with encoding hardware and 30 hours of uplink time per month, this solution promises to replace the ubiquitous broadcast truck with something a single person can carry.

The price?  $2500 per month, or $1500 per month on a 12 month commitment.  When compared to a $50,000 per day satellite truck, however, that’s nothing.

Perhaps more interesting to me, however, is the way in which this technology might disrupt the broadcast industry.  Think of how tiny form factor hard disks changed the computer industry, and then imagine the potential of being able to broadcast HD video from anywhere, without a crew, and without masses of equipment.  The paparazzi will have a field day, no doubt, but what will this do to political reporting, the enterprise (portable telepresence anyone?), and sports?  What new venues will we see video journalists reporting from?  And how will the citizen journalism movement adopt these technologies?

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Livestream shrinks the broadcast truck

by alec on September 25, 2009

The democratization of the news took another step forward yesterday when Livestream announced Livepack.  A backpack sized turnkey hardware solution that marries HD video to six load-balanced 3G modems with encoding hardware and 30 hours of uplink time per month, this solution promises to replace the ubiquitous broadcast truck with something a single person can carry.

The price?  $2500 per month, or $1500 per month on a 12 month commitment.  When compared to a $50,000 per day satellite truck, however, that’s nothing.

Perhaps more interesting to me, however, is the way in which this technology might disrupt the broadcast industry.  Think of how tiny form factor hard disks changed the computer industry, and then imagine the potential of being able to broadcast HD video from anywhere, without a crew, and without masses of equipment.  The paparazzi will have a field day, no doubt, but what will this do to political reporting, the enterprise (portable telepresence anyone?), and sports?  What new venues will we see video journalists reporting from?  And how will the citizen journalism movement adopt these technologies?

{ 2 comments }

Mike Arrington’s risk calculation

July 15, 2009

Over at TechCrunch Mike Arrington has had a mass of over 310 documents internal to Twitter show up in his inbox.  He’s planning on publishing some, but not all, as the bulk are uninteresting, and perhaps maybe embarrassing to some people, including senior industry folks that Twitter has been trying to recruit. There has been [...]

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Democratizing media production

April 21, 2009

Over at Skype Journal Phil Wolff has been writing about the way in which Skype is “democratizing” media production.  He grabbed a couple of the clips of Oprah’s Twitter debut, including a conversation via Skype Video with Ashton Kutcher.  His comment is that although Oprah could have flown a crew to interview Ashton’s half of [...]

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Bloggers imprisoned in Iran and USA

December 10, 2006

Internet journalists are being imprisoned in ever greater numbers, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.  For the first time, two bloggers have been imprisoned, Arash Sigarchi and Joshua Wolf. IRAN: 1 Arash Sigarchi, freelance IMPRISONED: January 26, 2006 Sigarchi, a former editor of the daily newspaper Gilan-e-Emruz and a Web blogger, was sentenced to [...]

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