Hi all, You can view some newly launched Australian mobile content prototypes at <http://www.dlux.org.au/mobilejourneys/> ...and yes they do clearly remediate the logics of genre, form etc. As is the nature of developing media. In his Introductory History of British Broadcasting Andrew Crisell says in the first 8-10 years of television broadcasting the BBC had little conception of the medium's potential. Not surprising really, given our need to build new creative logics through processual or performative understandings. It's interesting for example to track Flash aesthetics developing (see Anna Munster <hypertext.rmit.edu.au/dac/papers/Munster.pdf>) There is a tendency, as Jeremy suggested, for productive relationships to be shaped by the political conditions of remediation - that is, we approach producing within the old team structures, with a previously useful skill set and suite of practices (budgets, deadlines, ethics etc) only to find that we need more money, more time, new code, more bandwidth, and better lawyers. A few experiments later, things start to get interesting... In answer to Anxo's question - and this is somewhat unformed thought - I'd like to see current affairs content where users can post multimedia responses to local events/issues and pose challenges to politicians or bureaucrats, and games with a quest or participatory/collaborative focus rather than vote and dismiss. best, Fiona
Hi,
As you probably know, several network operators in Europe are working hard to provide soon TV broadcast across mobile phones.
I'd like to have your personal view (or just intuition) about the future of mobile or pervasive iTV from the user experience point of view: how do you imagine it should be and how you'd like to it be (applications, content, interaction modalities...).
Thanks in advance,
Anxo
---------------------------------------------------- Dr. Anxo Cereijo Roibás, School of Computing, Mathematical & Information Sciences Faculty of Management & Information Sciences University of Brighton Watts Building, Moulsecoomb Brighton BN2 4GJ United Kingdom t +44(0)1273 64 2458 f +44(0)1273 64 2405 m +44(0)7814 491790 http://www.it.bton.ac.uk/staff/anxo/
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-- Fiona Martin Lecturer in Journalism & Media Production Southern Cross University P.O. Box 157 Lismore NSW 2480 Australia ph: +61 2 6620 3126 fx: +61 2 6622 1683 e: fmartin@scu.edu.au