释义 |
Definition of narrowcast in English: narrowcastverbnarrowcasted ˈnarə(ʊ)kɑːstˈnɛroʊˌkæst [no object]Transmit a television programme, especially by cable, or otherwise disseminate information, to a comparatively localized or specialist audience. (尤指通过电缆为有特殊兴趣或一定区域观众的)小范围播送,以有线电视播放 the channel narrowcasts to over 5,800 pubs and clubs 这个频道为5,800多酒吧和俱乐部进行小范围有线播送。 Example sentencesExamples - In the near future, candidates will face the ultimate narrowcasting society.
- We're narrowcasting; there's any number of simultaneous streams we can send out to homes.
- Cable television and the prospects of its narrowcasting have also played an important role, making the three networks truly dinosaurs and largely the buffoons of fettered broadcasting.
- The set-up is one of the longest-running examples of an in-store media network, sometimes referred to as narrowcasting, or digital advertising networks.
- Now there are hundreds of channels narrowcasting to every conceivable interest.
- Apparently the implications for broadcasting and narrowcasting, for social glue and public ethos, are enormous.
- Some people call it niche retailing while others refer to it more colourfully as narrowcasting.
- For some Canadian independent labels, narrowcasting - by genre and even by locale - has taken them right around the world.
- That means developing contact lists of the public, broken down per marginal electorate; broken down per issue - so that they can narrowcast.
- And advertisers might be able to narrowcast commercials made specifically for a particular type of viewer.
- Some banks narrowcast ads for other products on their ATM screens while you wait for your cash.
- It doesn't just understand one of the fundamental of that what the web is incredibly good at, narrowcasting.
- But there's an alternative role for Internet Protocol television, or IPTV: narrowcasting.
- In this sense, it is closer to narrowcasting than to broadcasting even while maintaining the possibility of broadcasting.
- I feel like I've had a college course education in narrowcasting and building a Web presence.
- Most important, direct-mail consultants are in the business of narrowcasting rather than broadcasting.
- Broadcasting has turned into narrowcasting now, especially in the context of FM.
- When I was a kid, the big, bold promise of cable TV was that there would be narrowcasting.
- The company has an almost fetishistic attachment to narrowcasting.
- If there was an emerging trend it was about narrowcasting to specific audiences based on particular issues or demographics relevant to these audiences.
noun ˈnarə(ʊ)kɑːstˈnɛroʊˌkæst mass nounTransmission by narrowcasting. as modifier dozens of narrowcast niche channels 许多进行小范围有线电视播送的特定对象频道。 Example sentencesExamples - It can also use existing broadcast infrastructure, so it needs neither the infrastructure of narrowcast nor the construction of new broadcast infrastructure.
- Here, the news isn't just partisan but gleefully partisan: conservative, red-in-the-face news narrowcast to the red states.
- One of the significant cultural aspects of the Internet is that, given its narrowcast properties, it's been able to open up the discussion.
- ‘Although cable can't hit this narrowcast level it can complement the message by providing more details via television,’ he added.
- With sufficient bandwidth could IP spell the end of traditional broadcast video delivery and become strictly videostreaming or mediastreaming to the end goal of personal narrowcasts?
Derivativesnoun He was a broadcaster, not a narrowcaster. Example sentencesExamples - The Internet is the first communication tool that allows every user to be a sender, receiver, narrowcaster and broadcaster in a global sphere.
- As a narrowcaster, you can spread the information and create more critical mass.
- We describe several scenarios where a system based on the model enables novel interaction between the narrowcaster and consumer.
- So the TV advertising folks are literally broadcasters, and the direct mail folks are narrowcasters.
Origin1930s: back-formation from narrowcasting, on the pattern of broadcasting. Definition of narrowcast in US English: narrowcastverbˈnerōˌkastˈnɛroʊˌkæst [no object]Transmit a television program, especially by cable, or otherwise disseminate information, to a comparatively small audience defined by special interest or geographical location. (尤指通过电缆为有特殊兴趣或一定区域观众的)小范围播送,以有线电视播放 the channel is licensed to narrowcast only to nondomestic outlets Example sentencesExamples - The company has an almost fetishistic attachment to narrowcasting.
- Broadcasting has turned into narrowcasting now, especially in the context of FM.
- That means developing contact lists of the public, broken down per marginal electorate; broken down per issue - so that they can narrowcast.
- For some Canadian independent labels, narrowcasting - by genre and even by locale - has taken them right around the world.
- I feel like I've had a college course education in narrowcasting and building a Web presence.
- Some people call it niche retailing while others refer to it more colourfully as narrowcasting.
- If there was an emerging trend it was about narrowcasting to specific audiences based on particular issues or demographics relevant to these audiences.
- Apparently the implications for broadcasting and narrowcasting, for social glue and public ethos, are enormous.
- In this sense, it is closer to narrowcasting than to broadcasting even while maintaining the possibility of broadcasting.
- But there's an alternative role for Internet Protocol television, or IPTV: narrowcasting.
- We're narrowcasting; there's any number of simultaneous streams we can send out to homes.
- Most important, direct-mail consultants are in the business of narrowcasting rather than broadcasting.
- Now there are hundreds of channels narrowcasting to every conceivable interest.
- The set-up is one of the longest-running examples of an in-store media network, sometimes referred to as narrowcasting, or digital advertising networks.
- In the near future, candidates will face the ultimate narrowcasting society.
- When I was a kid, the big, bold promise of cable TV was that there would be narrowcasting.
- Some banks narrowcast ads for other products on their ATM screens while you wait for your cash.
- And advertisers might be able to narrowcast commercials made specifically for a particular type of viewer.
- Cable television and the prospects of its narrowcasting have also played an important role, making the three networks truly dinosaurs and largely the buffoons of fettered broadcasting.
- It doesn't just understand one of the fundamental of that what the web is incredibly good at, narrowcasting.
nounˈnerōˌkastˈnɛroʊˌkæst Transmission by narrowcasting. Colorado women's volleyball narrowcasts as modifier narrowcast specialty channels Example sentencesExamples - It can also use existing broadcast infrastructure, so it needs neither the infrastructure of narrowcast nor the construction of new broadcast infrastructure.
- Here, the news isn't just partisan but gleefully partisan: conservative, red-in-the-face news narrowcast to the red states.
- With sufficient bandwidth could IP spell the end of traditional broadcast video delivery and become strictly videostreaming or mediastreaming to the end goal of personal narrowcasts?
- ‘Although cable can't hit this narrowcast level it can complement the message by providing more details via television,’ he added.
- One of the significant cultural aspects of the Internet is that, given its narrowcast properties, it's been able to open up the discussion.
Origin1930s: back-formation from narrowcasting, on the pattern of broadcasting. |