euronews becomes the first international news provider on the Latvian DTT platform

euronews, the international multilingual news channel, announced an agreement with Lattelecom, the leading provider of electronic communications services in Latvia, for the broadcast of euronews on the first Latvian digital terrestrial television (DTT) platform, launched in August 2009.

euronews is offered in the economic and basic packages of Lattelecom’s DTT services, and is available in four languages: English, French, German and Russian, on channel 11. Lattelecom has also confirmed its interest in including the channel’s four other languages in the future.

Lattelecom also distributes the channel on its IPTV platform.

In the Baltic States, euronews is available on the Estonian DTT platform, Starman, since 2006 and the Lithuanian DTT Platform, TEO LT, since 2008. euronews reaches a total of 873,000 households via cable satellite, IPTV and DTT in the Baltic region.

Lattelecom is the owner of the licence to operate Latvia’s DTT platform. The first implementation phase began in August 2009 and now reaches the capital city of Riga, the local district and an area of 70 kilometres around the city, including the districts of Tukums, Bauska, and Dobele. According to Lattelecom, the DTT platform will be available to all regions in the country within the next two years.

Radio Netherlands Worldwide provides extra radio broadcasts in Sumatra

Radio Netherlands Worldwide is using extra short wave frequencies to provide victims and aid workers in Sumatra with information. RNW’s radio broadcasts in Bahasa Indonesia effectively operate as an emergency station in the region struck by the earthquake. In these live broadcasts RNW carries the latest news, up-to-date information and telephone conversations with victims and aid workers.

The extra radio broadcasts started on Friday 2 October between 13.00 and 20.00 hrs Indonesian time. The extra short wave frequencies used by RNW are 7235 kHz, 21480 kHz and 21730 kHz. The broadcasts can also be heard via the website www.ranesi.nl and local Indonesian radio stations, with which RNW is working closely.

RNW expects its extra radio broadcasts will be necessary for at least the next few days. A decision will be taken each day as to whether RNW will continue the emergency broadcasts and in what form.

Al Jazeera Launches Live Streaming Application for Symbian and Windows Mobile Phones

Al Jazeera, the world’s first global 24-hour news and current affairs television network, based in the Middle East, is today launching a mobile application called “Al Jazeera”, which gives access to the channel’s Arabic and English programs live and on-demand for all users of Symbian or Windows Mobile phones worldwide.

Developed by mobile TV specialist Mobiclip, the “Al Jazeera” mobile application provides high quality live viewing of the News Channel in English and Arabic as well as Video News Bulletin on demand. The application runs on Wi-Fi, 3G and Edge networks and can be downloaded from http://www.aljazeera.mobiclip.com/.

Phil Lawrie, Director of Global Distribution at Al Jazeera Network commented: “This is an exciting new development – the launch of a world-class application that will facilitate the viewing of Al Jazeera’s English and Arabic channels, and made-for-mobile VOD service, for users around the world. The launch of Mobiclip’s Al Jazeera app is another initiative that helps us to meet our goal of serving our audience through multiple platform technologies.”

André Pagnac, CEO of Mobiclip Inc. adds: “Al Jazeera is one of the most prominent news networks globally and we are proud to deliver to the network the highest standard of service and user experience. The Mobiclip application demonstrates the performance of our global video delivery platform. The billing system is simple and works across various platforms; such as Symbian and Windows Mobile. Through the Mobiclip application we are making Al Jazeera available to millions of mobile phone users worldwide, and this in itself is a major step in digital video distribution.”

Mongolian democracy 'puts pressure on broadcasters'

Democracy in Mongolia has put pressure on broadcasters to provide balanced, independent news and programmes, an international meeting in Ulaanbaatar heard today.

Naranbaatar Myanganbuu, General Director of Mongolia’s national broadcaster, MNB, told the ABU Programme Committee that since the democratic revolution in 1989, audiences had become open-minded and interactive, and expected fair, balanced news.

“MNB used to be a government mouthpiece to some extent,” he said. “Therefore our challenges are balanced reporting and editorial independence.”

MNB had undergone a few years of major structural change and renewal, he said. Its current challenges were the revision of programme policies and production methods.

News and current affairs programmes had to be brought to international standards. MNB needed to build its capacity in specialised reporting and commentating, and investigative journalism.

Clara Choi of RTHK-Hong Kong chaired the meeting, which reviewed a range of radio and television activities among ABU members. Participants agreed to set up an ABU TV Documentary Working Party to look at new cooperative activities. (Source: ABU website)

Swedish Parliament Chooses Vizrt Media Asset Management for Overhaul of Live and On-Demand Video Portal

Vizrt announces that the Swedish Parliament—known as Sveriges Riksdag in Stockholm, Sweden—has chosen a Vizrt digital media asset management (MAM) system to automate the workflow process as part of an overhaul of its Web portal. The portal is designed to provide live and on-demand video of speeches, debates, and other newsworthy events to the Swedish public and media. (A portal is a site that creates a single point of access to information collected from different sources.)

The portal’s newly automated workflow is based on Vizrt’s Viz Ardome—a digital media asset management system that stores video and provides identifying metadata, converts video files to other formats, and provides editing capability—along with other complementary Vizrt products.

“Because Viz Ardome automates everything from ingest to delivery, it will save the Parliament countless man-hours needed to prepare and deliver substantial amounts of video,” said Parham Azimi, sales manager, media asset management products for Vizrt’s EMEA region. “It also provides instant access to content and metadata, integrates with external information sources, and is easily scalable for future needs.”

As video arrives from the Parliament’s in-house production facility, the Viz Ardome ingests it, transcodes and transfers it to servers for Web streaming or download, and automatically updates it. Vizrt products also support a parallel content management workflow—where staff can make creative decisions about the content—such as organizing, adding metadata, and editing.

Without this new Viz Ardome-based workflow, “the Parliament might have had to scale back their Web portal expansion plans,” Azimi said. “Vizrt is very excited about this project because it clearly demonstrates how well our products can serve non-traditional environments in addition to broadcasting.”

In addition to the company’s traditional television broadcast roots, Vizrt products are in use for the display of real-time graphics on scoreboards within soccer stadiums; to drive news media web sites; store massive libraries of video and graphic data for the government and corporations; and to provide one graphical user interface on a single screen for security applications that integrate large amounts of video and graphic information. As one example of a non-broadcast environment, the New York Stock Exchange uses Vizrt’s Viz Virtual Studio for its NYSE MarkeTrac Live, a virtual set that provides financial reporters and web viewers with live market data for inclusion in financial newscasts.

The Swedish Parliament’s current portal is based upon an early version of Viz Ardome. Parliament officials chose the latest Viz Ardome because it allows them to manage more extensive live streaming, video on demand, and searchable archives of virtually unlimited amounts of content. It also lets Swedish news outlets log in, search for video, browse in low-resolution, and even request their video selections be sent directly to their broadcast servers in high resolution and ready for air.

The complementary tools in this Viz Ardome workflow include: Viz Dart and Viz Capture to ingest video feeds, files, and tapes; Viz EasyCut, Viz PreCut, Viz MediaLogger for proxy-based video editing; and Viz VideoEngine, a two-channel multiformat video server. There’s also Viz Adactus, a content delivery platform geared to new media devices.