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Towers and antennas in the Fox Compound on Mt. Wilson, overlooking Los Angeles. Mouse over for more.
The tower is ASR (Antenna Structure Registration) 1013888, at the time of this shot the home of KXLA/44, which had an antenna mounted atop the tower. To my knowledge (in January 2024), all but one of the antenna systems here have been decommissioned or replaced. The directional two-bay side-mounted "penetrator" style antenna on top was KPWR/105.9, now on the KCAL/9 tower. The one below (four X antennas in directional baskets—called "cavity backed radiators") was for KNX-FM/97.1 from 2021 to 2026. It's very directional, roughly matching the shape of the metro, with the strongest signal toward the west. Both 105.9 and 97.1 moved here from their original sites on Flint Peak in Glendale, below Mt. Wilson. The other two antennas are UHF-TV ones.
Some of the towers in the central "Mt. Alta" section of the Mt. Wilson tower farm. Mouse over for details.
Broadcasting intern, Benny Gordon-Goldstein, interviews Cotuit Kettleers Field Manager Mike Roberts prior to a game at Lowell Park 2007. Photo by Rick Heath www.kettleers.org (broadcasters 2007-1.jpg)
Broadcasting House is the BBC's official UK national headquarters in London. A snap taken through the main entrance window. Broadcasting House and nearby buildings are the home to the BBC's national Radio Stations. www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/keyfacts/stories/broadcasting_h...
ABU Digital Broadcasting Symposium 2020 - 5.3.2020
Exhibition
2-5 March 2020
Hotel Istana Kuala Lumpur
Copyright Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union. Please credit accordingly.
Pete Thornton (visuals)
Public Service Broadcasting behind the scenes, The Institute, Birmingham, England.
6th May 2015
ABU Digital Broadcasting Symposium 6-9 March 2017
The Royale Chulan, Kuala Lumpur
Copyright Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union. Please credit accordingly.
Station Identification is an interactive exploration of the Twin Cities’ radio landscape, which will be broadcasting (and receiving) live radio feed from the Foshay Tower observation deck. WNYC, KNOW, KCRW, KUT, KEXP, WHYY, WWOZ, WBEZ, WOLX, WORT — these are letters that may mean nothing or everything to you depending on where you’ve lived and what you’ve listened to. As radio call signs, they can be as much a part of a city’s landscape as lakes, rivers, skyways, and freeways are.
Station Identification explores this relationship by transforming the Foshay Tower’s observation deck into a radio compass. Each radio’s placement corresponds to the direction that station is broadcasting from, providing audience members a connection between what is playing and where it is sourced. Walking through the space — an open-air deck encircling the tower’s peak — is like scanning the radio dial with your feet.
Additionally, Station Identification welcomes participants to respond to their experience using a temporary Internet radio station located on the deck. Accessible at: n.otion.co/si, we are broadcasting live throughout the night, both participants and remote listeners can tune in to this radio programming inspired by and made, in part, for its very own location.
Presented by Northern Lights.mn with support from W Minneapolis—The Foshay
Photograph Patrick Kelley, courtesy Northern Lights.mn
northernspark.org/projects/station-identification.html?org=p
There is Mr. Baseball himself doing what he does best. We was seated pretty close to the broadcast booth. Look straight ahead just above the 620 WTMJ sign and Bob Uecker is right there in a black cap and blue shirt. Baseball wouldn't be the same without Bob. He's a good man.
Opening session, Ministerial session, Session 1, 2, 3 & 4 Dolby and DRM workshops, VR and Drone masterclass
ABU DBS 2019
4-7 March 2019
Royale Chulan Kuala Lumpur
Copyright Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union. Please credit accordingly.
Joint ITU-R Study Group 6 – European Broadcasting Union (EBU) Workshop “Broadcasting in times of crisis- 2023”
Geneva, Switzerland, 9 March 2023
©ITU/D.Woldu
Chamber of Commerce, ?, Shenzhen Broadcasting Tower, ?, Duty Free Tower, ?, Central Tower, Shenzhen, China
Ronil Desai, Cam Barra, and Vishal Prasad all dressed to tens for the 2013 Webster Awards held at Hyatt Regency Hotel in Vancouver.
ABU Digital Broadcasting Symposium 6-9 March 2017
The Royale Chulan, Kuala Lumpur
Copyright Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union. Please credit accordingly.
www.phuketword.com/thailand-goes-digital/
WORD ON THAILAND: This April Thailand's National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) has begun broadcasting digital television with the aim of phasing out analog TV by the year 2020.
[caption id="attachment_21564" align="aligncenter" width="800"] Thailand plans to phase out analog TV by 2020[/caption]
So far 24 commercial channels have been granted permission to operate on the new digital broadcasting, which is being rolled out from 1 to 24 April, covering Bangkok, Nakhon Ratchasima, Chiang Mai, and Songkhla initially.
All existing channels are set to make the switch to digital TV broadcasting by April 25, including: MCOT, the National Broadcasting Services of Thailand (NBT), TV5, and Thai PBS.
In May, local residents in Ubon Ratchathani, Surat Thani, and Rayong will be able to watch digital television.
Those living in Sing Buri, Sukhothai, Khon Kaen, and Udon Thani will have the chance in June, when digital broadcasting is expected to cover 50 percent of households in Thailand, or 11.45 million families. There are about 22 million families across the country.
In the second stage, 13 provinces will have access to digital broadcast by December 2014. In 2015, the second year of the terrestrial digital television broadcasting, residents in 39 provinces will be able to watch digital television. By then, digital television broadcasting services will cover 80 percent of households in Thailand, or about 18 million families.
In the third year, the digital television operators that were granted licenses are required to set up additional stations in more provinces, so that the digital system will cover at least 90 percent of all households. In the fourth year, the system coverage will be at least 95 percent.
Viewers can get access to these new services through new digital television sets, or digital set-top boxes. In order to help consumers switch from analog to digital television broadcasting services, NBTC will use the money received from the bidding of the 24 commercial channels to give subsidy coupons for all households, about 22 million families across the country. The coupons will be used to buy new digital television sets or digital set-top boxes to convert analog to digital signals.
NBTC is expected to spend between 15 to 20 billion baht on the subsidy coupons at the initial stage. It has set a target for a full digital broadcasting system by 2017.
ASEAN Ministers Responsible for Information at the 10th Conference of the ASEAN Ministers in Vientiane, Lao PDR, in 2009 agreed that ASEAN adopted a phased approach toward the analog switch-off over a period of time from 2015 to 2020.
Source: PRD
Description: A Maryland Public Television camera crew films in the 2100 block of North Calvert Street, where MUND’s New Town Non Profit Housing Corporation had plans for residential construction.
Date:
Source: Model Urban Neighborhood Demonstration (MUND) Collection
Location: Special Collections, Langsdale Library, University of Baltimore
ABU Digital Broadcasting Symposium 2020 - 5.3.2020
Session 11 - Industry Debate
2-5 March 2020
Hotel Istana Kuala Lumpur
Copyright Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union. Please credit accordingly.