Following this thread, it is not altogether obvious if you can watch TVNZ, or just TV3. Has the TVNZ problem been fixed (and by whom)? Is it likely to get fixed? Is it a good idea to get an Apple TV with the express purpose of watching TVNZ Ondemand?

Hi Andrew,

 Have got the zip file downloaded to ATV but when i go to install from zip file I get the NZ on demand plug in but nothing that says update, if I click on tehe zip file I get a language file come up. What am i doing wrong?

 Cheers


How Do I Download Tvnz On Demand


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Hi Andrew thanks for the notes/info. Here is one you may get asked regularly, how do I achieve the same results with an Apple TV 3. Is there anyway of getting on demand from my phone or ipad onto my TV that you know off?

Palapa This Indonesian-owned satellite network originally intended and long used for domestic broadcasting has been a de facto transnational satellite platform. On its B2R satellite, which now carries the Indonesian national broadcaster TVRI, it also carried previously Malaysia, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea domestic public television. On its later satellite B2P it carried Indonesian commercial channels as well as transnational channels such as CNNI, ESPN, Discovery, HBO, ABN, Channel 9 Australia, TVBI and MTV Asia. The high-power commercial Palapa C1 and C2 were to supercede Palapa B2P in the late 1990s. Satelindo, the private operator of Indonesia's third-generation satellites, has opted for wider coverage and higher capacity for its Palapa C3 in order to meet commercial broadcaster demand (Via Satellite 1994b). Meanwhile Indosat, the government satellite telecommunications monopoly responsible for the earlier Palapas and Indonesia's international telephony, offered a quarter of its shares on the New York stock exchange in 1994 (Asiaweek 1994:46) thus not only privatizing but globalizing its ownership.

So the present reality in Asia is admittedly one of growing domination of cultural industries by commercial interests, often multinational, regional or even subnational, rather than by public interests which tend to be largely national in focus. Domestic commercial broadcasters, even public broadcasters, have had to mimic the transnational broadcasters in programming practices in order to compete for audiences and advertisers. There is no doubt that global media corporations are not driven by nationalistic agendas but by market imperatives which transcend borders. However, due to consumer demand for culturally contextualized programming, transnational broadcasters in Asia have become dependent on domestic production houses for some of their programming. Production operations for both domestic and transnational consumption tend to be geographically clustered as in the case of Bombay and Hong Kong to enjoy business synergies and economies. These industries are then protected by their national governments, less as developers of subregional or geo-linguistic cultural identities, but more as contributors to the domestic economies through jobs, technology, industry expertise and export income. Thus the increasing commercialization of television in Asia has resulted in convergence of interests between satellite platform providers, transnational and domestic television broadcasters, and between public and commercial sectors in related cultural industries.

Scene shifts

That the skies above Asia are certainly congested with satellites is amply illustrated by incidents of jockeying for orbital slots by rival platforms. As of 1996 there were 34 satellites serving Asia with an additional 21 satellites providing trans-Pacific and trans-Indian Ocean coverage. The growing number of satellite platforms in West and Central Asia, and Oceania often sharing footprints with North Africa, Europe and Australasia, are beyond the scope of this paper. With demand for transponder capacity outstripping supply in the Asian satellite market, early estimates suggested an increase in the number of transponders to as many as a thousand by the turn of the century, up from about three hundred in 1992. Yet the outlook for both pan-Asian and sub-regional satellite television industry is not altogether positive. Firstly, the concurrent deregulation and growth of domestic commercial television channels in Asia has spawned stiff competition among all broadcasters for the same or overlapping audiences. Secondly, after the massive expansion in the early to mid-1990s, the resultant glut of television supply has caused a slow-down of the hectic launching of satellite platforms. Finally the economic downturn in the region in the late 1990s is precipitating a dramatic fall in consumer demand for satellite/cable television and thus a shake-out of channels. Still, it may be too early yet to discern what this next stage in the development of the satellite television industry in Asia will shape up to be. ff782bc1db

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