2.0 TV
It all started with 9/11, when the internatonal TV networks aired clips filmed by common people with cell phones and digital cameras. In the same year, Jimmy Wales’ Wikipedia, the first user-generated enciclopedia, made its debut. Today, user-generated media are a fact, and part of the credit goes to Current TV, the world’s first ‘democratic TV’.
What became of Al Gore’s creature? What’s left of its attempt at bringing the Internet and its (young) users to TV? Broadcasted online and on specific cable TV channels, Current TV is operated in various countries, including Italy. It features ‘pods’ created by viewers (selected by the users and the editorial staff) and short programs that give voice to personalities who rarely find space on traditional media. Through difficulties and management changes, the experiment surivives.
And – with the help of YouTube – the boundary between users and broadcasters keeps fading…
Technology
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14.03.2012
In your own voice
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30.01.2012
High definition
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24.01.2012
Making your custom IBook
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19.01.2012
Myspace strikes back
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17.01.2012
Future past
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09.01.2012
A Techrospective
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02.01.2012
Time is the new space
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22.11.2011
Google’s secret talent
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12.09.2011
Archaeology of the present
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07.09.2011
Can you live without them?
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31.08.2011
Touch the Music
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30.08.2011
Abreast with the times
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07.07.2011
Five reasons for a switch
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01.07.2011
You Are What You Like
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06.06.2011
Apple strikes again
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12.05.2011
Failed revolutions
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11.05.2011
The state of the art
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28.04.2011
A glimpse at the future
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22.04.2011
Moleskine goes app
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18.04.2011
Cold fusion coming?
