Who needs it?Three-dimensional television is coming, whether you want it or not 3-D before it was respectable PEERING through special glasses at a stereoscopic photograph in 1859, Oliver Wendell Holmes experienced “a surprise such as no painting ever produced”. The illusion of depth was extraordinary. The branches of a tree reached towards him as though to scratch his eyes out. 3-D photographs wer
Changing the channelTelevision is adapting better to technological change than any other media business, says Joel Budd (interviewed here) ONE evening last year Steve Purdham noticed something odd. The flow of data into and out of We7, a British music-streaming website he runs, had abruptly slowed. An hour later it returned to normal. Such a sharp fluctuation usually means a server is malfunctioni
The great survivorTV has coped well with technological change. Other media can learn from it NEWSPAPERS are dying; the music industry is still yelping about iTunes; book publishers think they are next. Yet one bit of old media seems to be doing rather well. In the final quarter of 2009 the average American spent almost 37 hours a week watching television. Earlier this year 116m of them saw the Sup
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