Xerox signs with Inmedia for training content production

Xerox will once again use Inmedia to provide studio, editing and distribution facilities for the production of its pan-European training content. In a four-year extension to its contract, the global document management company will use Inmedia’s 3D virtual-reality studio and post production facility to create content and translate it into five languages for distribution to Xerox Concessionaires Europe, with production services from Tympani.

“Xerox enjoys global success and it is essential that Xerox and Concessionaire staff across Europe receive consistent training and brand messages,” says Xerox’s European manager of Learning Support Services Ian Sellars. “Inmedia plays a central role in this by helping to create a professional look and feel to our digital audio/visual training content.”

“Video content is the most efficient and cost-effective means of delivering messages to employees across multi-national organisations,” says Inmedia’s commercial director Barrie Woolston. “With Xerox, Inmedia is demonstrating the simplicity of creating valuable instructional materials to ensure all staff have the right skills for their jobs.”

Inmedia Communications Limited is an independent broadcast and media services company, using a combination of satellite and terrestrial solutions to deliver services to the broadcast and enterprise markets. With operational bases in London, Gerrards Cross and Bedford, a diverse range of international customers trust Inmedia to develop and deliver high quality and flexible solutions that include permanent and occasional broadcast services as well as IP, voice, data and digital media networks.

OSCE media watchdog concerned about prison sentence for journalist in Russia

The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Miklos Haraszti, expressed his concern regarding the combined five year prison sentence handed down to a Russian journalist by a Smolensk court. Nikolay Goshko, deputy editor-in-chief of Odintsovskaya Nedelya, was found guilty of libeling three Smolensk officials in 2000. As a result of this conviction, his previous suspended prison term for an unrelated offence nine years ago came into force.

“It would be alarming to see both the severity of the sentence, and the possibility to combine speech offences with crimes totally unrelated to journalism, become a precedent for the future, and thus amplify the chilling effect on journalism,” Mr. Haraszti wrote in a letter to the Russian Minister of Justice. “Criminal libel laws have been rarely used in democratic Russia,” said Haraszti. “However, this sentence proves that if a country’s laws criminalize speech offences, there will always be a court that will apply those provisions”.

Mr. Haraszti invited the Russian authorities to join international efforts in decriminalizing defamation and handle the offences of libel and insult only in civil courts. The Representative suggested an interim remedy – before full decriminalization was achieved – could be a moratorium. He also said that he would closely follow Mr. Goshko’s appeal to a higher court and expressed his hope that his prison sentence for libel would be reviewed.

VOA correspondent wins human rights press award

Luis Ramirez, Beijing correspondent for the Voice of America (VOA), has received a Human Rights Press Award, one of Asia’s top annual journalism award programs.

Ramirez was recognized for his report on the residents of Hanyuan County in Sichuan Province who were protesting against the Chinese government’s decision to place a hydroelectric dam in their area without properly compensating the farmers for their land. Ramirez also reported on the government’s crackdown against the protestors. In his report, Ramirez described how he evaded possible detention and expulsion by Chinese authorities by slipping past heavily armed soldiers and police when he went to “catch a glimpse of the gigantic dam project and the towns and villages that are to be flooded.”

The Awards are sponsored by Amnesty International Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Journalists Association and the Foreign Correspondents’ Club-Hong Kong for reporting in Asia. Amnesty International presents the awards to journalists to recognize excellence in human rights journalism that has made a significant contribution to the public’s greater awareness and understanding of human rights issues. The competition included a record number of nominations from news organizations including the Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, CNN and BBC.

Ramirez, 37, has been VOA’s Beijing bureau chief since August 2003. He formerly served as VOA’s West Africa correspondent in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where he covered West and Central Africa. Along with providing news on coup attempts, political assassinations, child labor, and ethnic and religious unrest, he covered elections in nations including Ghana, Mali, and Nigeria and was on the scene to bring news of the difficult return to peace in Sierra Leone. Ramirez joined VOA in 1999 after spending six years reporting for an all-news radio station in his hometown of Los Angeles, California, where he won several awards for his news coverage.

GlobeCast delivers MTV Europe via satellite to cable and DTH viewers on HOT BIRD 6

GlobeCast announced on 21 June that it is delivering MTV Networks’ European channels on the HOT BIRD satellite platform to cable and satellite television providers across Europe, with an MTV-dedicated transponder aboard the HOT BIRD 6 satellite. The channels include music and entertainment brands such as MTV European, MTV France, MTV Netherlands, MTV Portugal, Nickelodeon Europe, Game One and VH1 Europe.

GlobeCast’s solution for MTV Networks includes connectivity from the broadcaster’s UK facility in Camden to GlobeCast’s London gateway at Brookman’s Park, as well as uplink and space capacity on HOT BIRD 6 for downlink at control rooms throughout Europe. HOT BIRD 6, located at 13ºE, provides ideal European coverage and reaches millions of homes via cable operators and DTH operators such as TPS (France).

GlobeCast CEO Christian Pinon said, “GlobeCast is pleased to be providing MTV Networks Europe with a transponder on HOT BIRD 6. GlobeCast has a longstanding relationship with MTV and is proud to be delivering this leading broadcaster’s programming to millions of households across Europe.”

Cordillera television group selects Harris for centralization and automation projects

Harris Corporation announced on 21 June that Cordillera Communications, the owner of 11 television stations throughout the United States, has selected Harris automation solutions for a centralization project in Montana and for stations in California and Colorado. Among reasons Harris was selected, Cordillera Communications cited Harris’ strong after-sales support and its ability to provide scalable and cost-effective systems that can meet the needs of medium- to smaller-market broadcasters.

To increase operational efficiency among three Montana stations, Cordillera is establishing a central “hub” at KXLF, a full-power station in Butte. At the hub, content will be ingested, prepared and distributed to another full-power station, KBZK in Bozeman, and a low-power station, KXLH in Helena. Harris will provide ADC playout automation, digital ingest and satellite ingest solutions. At KOAA in Colorado Springs, Harris will upgrade an existing ADC system to automate playout of an independent weather channel that is operated by the station as well as regular programming. The upgraded ADC system is being configured so that Cordillera can add new revenue streams in the future. At KSBY in San Luis Obispo, California, Cordillera has selected Harris to provide a new ADC-100 system to replace an antiquated manual system. Harris also will provide on-site installation and training.

“Cordillera works in very small to medium-size markets, and because budgets are not what they are in larger markets, we are forced to stretch our dollars and require that new products, such as our automation system, work with legacy systems,” said Andy Suk, Cordillera’s director of broadcast engineering. “With Harris, that is possible. It is proven technology, and we know going in that the support we’ll need is available. Harris’ innovation with digital ingest is also very important to our operations. We looked at other suppliers and found Harris was willing to tailor a solution for smaller markets and make it cost-effective for us. It is an exceptional system architecture.”

The relationship between Harris Corporation and Cordillera Communications dates back several decades and has included the purchase and installation of transmitters and other broadcast products. Suk views the strength of Harris as its willingness to take responsibility for seeing system issues through to resolution. “I like having a single point of accountability as there is with Harris,” he said. “If there is an issue, I know Harris will be an active part of the solution.”

Harris is the world’s leader in playout automation, with its systems controlling more than 7,000 channels. Among other benefits, Harris automation gives broadcasters a smooth and cost-effective path to total content delivery systems – the key to being able to deliver multiple channels of programming over any network to any type of receiver with maximum efficiency in the future.

Britons watch most TV in Europe

People in Britain watch more television and read fewer books than in any other European country. A poll of 30,000 people found that the typical Briton spends 18 hours in front of the television set every week. He or she spends only 5.3 hours reading books, magazines or newspapers.

The French watch just over 17 hours of television but read for nearly seven hours a week, while Swedes watch for 12 hours and read for 6.9 hours. The Spanish watch 15.9 hours of television, the Germans 15.2 hours and Italians 14.9 hours.

These are some of the results of a survey of 30 countries conducted by research company NOP World.