GlobeCast broadcasts entertainment channel W9 on French TPS

GlobeCast has begun broadcasting the French music and entertainment channel W9 on its channel distribution platform on HOT BIRD. The platform is operated in partnership with satellite television provider TPS and gives W9 access to a potential audience of 1.3 million digital TPS subscribers throughout France.

GlobeCast’s solution for W9 includes fiber connectivity from the broadcaster’s control room to GlobeCast and TPS’ platform gateway outside Paris, as well as uplink, encryption and space capacity on the HOT BIRD Satellite at 13ºE. In joining this coveted platform, W9 is joining other prestigious channels distributed by GlobeCast on its platform with TPS, such as EuroNews, Pink TV, cartoon channel Boomerang, Russian broadcaster RTR Planeta and Chinese channel CCTV9.

Part of French entertainment group M6, the channel today known as W9 was launched in March 1998 under the name M6 Music. W9 is a French-language entertainment channel where music, fiction, cinema and general entertainment come together.

CNN award for Radio Netherlands

The Radio Netherlands television report Drug Trafficking has won the CNN World Report Award in the category Best Personal Profile. The item was broadcast worldwide in CNN’s World Report in July of last year. The Prize was awarded to Pieter Landman (Head TV) during the CNN’s 25th anniversary celebrations of at the news channel’s headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia. The other nominees were Venezuela’s Venevision TV and Switzerland’s ILO TV.

The item was made by reporter Annette Posthumus and tells the story of Dutch cab driver Pedro Ruijzing (46) who was arrested in Thailand on drug trafficking charges ten years ago. He was pardoned by the Thai government on the occasion of Queen Beatrix’s visit to the country in 2004. He now educates schoolchildren about the dangers of smuggling drugs.

Radio Netherlands Television (RNTV) has been the Dutch contributor to CNN’s World Report since 1990. More than one hundred countries make regular contributions to World Report which is broadcast worldwide by CNN on a daily basis.

Harris names Cheng Fan for new international channel development position

Harris Corporation has announced the promotion of Cheng Fan to the new position of director, international channel development for the Broadcast Communications Division (BCD).

“This position is an important part of Harris Broadcast’s initiative to increase international business growth through a world-class distribution channel,” said Debra Huttenburg, vice president/general manager of BCD’s Radio Broadcast Systems business unit and head of international sales. “Cheng has the experience and the expertise Harris needs to broaden its worldwide presence in broadcast applications and software solutions. Among other things, he will spearhead programs that increase assistance to Harris’ regional sales organizations and support growth plans for every BCD product line.”

Root Capital buys Autocue

Autocue has announced that it has sold its business in the UK and US, including QTV, to Root Capital, a London-based venture capital firm specialising in the technology sector.

Simon Philips, partner of Root Capital and Autocue’s new chairman, says about their investment: “We are delighted to be investing in Autocue’s future and are excited about the prospects for the business. The leading-edge technology, combined with a strong brand and customer base all provide an excellent platform for growth.”

Autocue’s strategy going forward will be to provide leading products and excellent service to its customers, and to grow through increased geographic coverage around the world.

Autocue has been serving the broadcast industry since the mid-1950s when Autocue in London and QTV in New York produced and patented the very first prompters. The two companies merged in 1984 and, with the introduction of the QSeries family of software, Autocue became the only company to offer the television industry a single solution for all transmission, newsroom, scripting and prompting requirements and unlike its competitors is the only company to work directly with its customers to optimise newsroom workflow. In the United States, QTV is part of the Autocue group and forms the US division of Autocue’s prompting services. Autocue is known worldwide for its service and dependability, serving such prestigious clients as Bloomberg, the BBC and MTV Europe. Autocue’s prompting solutions are compatible with all newsroom systems on the market and are used all over the world by broadcasters, production professionals, government facilities and corporate producers requiring excellence in prompting and newsroom automation solutions. For further information, please visit

RadioScape announces world’s first DRM module

RadioScape, the world leader in Software Defined Digital Radio solutions, has launched the RadioScape RS500™ module that can receive DRM™ (Digital Radio Mondiale™) as well as DAB (Digital Audio Broadcast), FM with RDS, LW, MW and SW to form the basis of the world’s first affordable, integrated, multi-standard, digital radio receivers. The RS500 is based on RadioScape’s innovative radiOS™ architecture, enabling re-use of existing applications and features previously developed for the RS300L™ DAB/FM module. Many of the innovative features available on the RS300L have been directly implemented on this module, accelerating time to market for a fully featured receiver design. The RS500, for example, immediately supports capabilities such as the highly popular Pause, Rewind and Record to MMC card features as well as the ability to display and use Electronic Programme Guide (EPG) data.

“Because we create our modules using radiOS — our own advanced Software Defined radio architecture,” explained Andrew Moloney, Marketing Manager for Receivers at RadioScape, “it has been possible for us to add DRM in an affordable and user friendly form to our existing range of receiver capabilities. The RS500 is size and pin compatible with our very successful RS300L enabling radio manufacturers to migrate existing designs to the RS500, rapidly bringing to market ranges of receivers, which include DRM-capable designs, in time to catch the pre Christmas 2005 sales.”

The RS500 is based on the Texas Instruments TMS320DRM350 digital signal processor-based (DSP) baseband, the first integrated digital baseband that supports both DRM and DAB standards, for which RadioScape designed the DRM baseband stack. The radiOS architecture, which is only available on RadioScape modules, extends the DSP’s basic capabilities, and seamlessly manages uploads of the appropriate RadioScape software stack and/or applications to change functionality to suit the requirements of the moment. This significantly improves the user experience, masking transitions between different broadcast standards by automatically listing all services alphabetically regardless of transmission type so that users select by content and avoiding the need for manual band switching.

Modules will be sampling in August of 2005, with volume production following shortly thereafter. RadioScape forecasts that multi-standard, multi-band receivers based on the RS500 could have end user prices below $250 — almost a quarter the price of existing DRM receivers in the market.

“This is the breakthrough that DRM has been waiting for,” said Peter Senger, DRM Chairman and Deutsche Welle COO. “Until now there have only been a limited number of DRM receivers available. This new module from RadioScape will open up the market with easy to use, consumer priced, multi-standard receivers in the same way that the company helped open up the DAB market. The broadcasts are already in place with dozens of broadcasters currently transmitting around the world.” “WorldDAB and DRM have been co-operating for sometime,” added Annika Nyberg, President of WorldDAB. “There are synergies between DAB and DRM business models. These synergies will provide an added boost in many countries as multi-standard digital radios bought for DRM will also receive DAB providing broadcasters with large potential audiences.”