What do you call to internet broadcasting system in U.K or U.S.A.
In Korea. A new media called "internet broadcasting" was produced
in four or five years ago. In this media, we can see or heard their
own messages all days. The broadcasting is produced by ASX
files (It can be accessed by Microsoft Windows Media Player) mainly.
The contents of this messages are composed of their own messages,
for example, talking about his friends or his hobby or her favorate's
music collection.
I suppose that there's many media like this also in U.S.A or U.K.
If so, I would like to study English by seeing those media contents.
But, I don't know how do you call this media in U.S.A or U.K.
Firstly, I think that they call it as a "internet broadcasting" or
"internet radio". But I find that if I search in yahoo.com by using
those letters("internet broadcasting", "internet radio") there's
no result. How do you calll this media in England or America?
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Peter Duncanson - 20 Jan 2005 15:05 GMT
>What do you call to internet broadcasting system in U.K or U.S.A.
>
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>those letters("internet broadcasting", "internet radio") there's
>no result. How do you calll this media in England or America?
That is an interesting question.
I have not heard of this being used in the U.K. or the U.S.A.

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Peter Duncanson
UK
(posting from u.c.l.e)
mUs1Ka - 20 Jan 2005 16:35 GMT
>> What do you call to internet broadcasting system in U.K or U.S.A.
>>
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
>
> I have not heard of this being used in the U.K. or the U.S.A.
I believe the BBC are about to trial on demand TV via the www. They have
been making radio programmes available for some time, both live and for
later listening - streaming only.

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Ray
Mike Barnes - 20 Jan 2005 16:54 GMT
In uk.culture.language.english, seamoon wrote:
>What do you call to internet broadcasting system in U.K or U.S.A.
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>for example, talking about his friends or his hobby or her favorate's
>music collection.
If I understand you correctly, you refer to a system whereby anyone can
broadcast their own content from their own PC, not the sort of corporate
broadcasting that you'd expect from the BBC (for instance http://www.bbc
.co.uk/fivelive/live/live_int.asx).
One general term is "webcasting" but I don't think that distinguishes
what you're talking about from what the BBC etc does. What software is
used for personal broadcasting, if that's what it is?

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Mike Barnes
Tom - 20 Jan 2005 17:55 GMT
Mike Barnes wrote...
> In uk.culture.language.english, seamoon wrote:
>
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> what you're talking about from what the BBC etc does. What software is
> used for personal broadcasting, if that's what it is?
one common name is 'streaming media'
Peter Duncanson - 20 Jan 2005 18:18 GMT
>Mike Barnes wrote...
>> In uk.culture.language.english, seamoon wrote:
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
>one common name is 'streaming media'
I might have been distracted by the OP's use of the word "messages".
This conjured up the idea of a messaging system using audio rather than text
- possibly based on a central server for receiving and distributing
messages.

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Peter Duncanson
UK
(posting from u.c.l.e)
Tom - 20 Jan 2005 20:58 GMT
seamoon wrote...
> What do you call to internet broadcasting system in U.K or U.S.A.
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> for example, talking about his friends or his hobby or her favorate's
> music collection.
This sounds like some sort of streaming blog.
http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=%22streaming+blog%22
66 Google hits
"radio blog" 468,000 hits
"video blog" 77,100 hits
"multimedia blog" 965 hits