CNM Short Takes

Bell GlobeMedia distributes $5M in funding
Three prominent arts groups are hoping to forge a common approach to new media funding in time for the Banff TV festival this June. L’Institut national de l’image et du son (INIS), the Canadian Film Centre and the Banff New Media Institute are receiving $5 million from Bell Globemedia to work collaboratively on projects that benefit Canada’s interactive content industry.
The funding, dispersed equally over five years, was included in Bell’s $230-million public benefits package attached to its parent’s acquisition of CTV Inc last year (CNM, July 26/00).
Caryl Brandt, acting artistic director of media and visual arts at the Banff Centre, says there are some significant details to hammer out before the trio can put out a request for proposals this summer. But she expects there will likely be three components to the funding.
One could include money to help students from each institution travel and take part in the other partners’ events and workshops. Some could be earmarked for matchmaking efforts, creating networking opportunities for national producers to meet one another. As well, a significant portion of the funding will be used to fund individual projects. Current goals call for at least six prototype projects per year, likely developed in stages from proposal to commercial prototype.

How projects will be adjudicated still has to be decided. Some of those agreement areas will be discussed by the partners at the Hot Docs festival later this month, and at a proposed two-day retreat in the intervening time between now and the TV fest.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

BC gov’t offer to adopt ESRB ratings system isn’t enough, says video game industry

The British Columbia government may be extending an olive branch to the video game industry by leaning towards adoption of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) system of classification, but that isn’t placating the industry’s main lobby group in Canada (see story page 1). The Canadian Interactive Digital Software Association (CIDSA) doubts new legislation passed last week will have a positive effect in combating video game violence. Instead, it warns the law will result in higher costs and headaches for producers and retailers.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Cloakware receives Entrust investment

Entrust Technologies Ltd has taken a minority equity stake in an Ottawa-based company that could help protect digital content rights with new technology that fights software tampering. Under the agreement, Cloakware Corp and Entrust will work together to develop products that integrate the security giant’s PKI infrastructure products with Cloakware’s tamper resistant software.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

BEE Internet broadcast technology garners world attention quickly: president

A Montreal-based company has attracted international interest in a new technology that provides free television over the Internet, and at a fraction of the cost of streaming platforms. BEE Multimedia Inc says its Television player also enables networks to broadcast high-quality TV without overloading their servers. Current clients include the BBC, NBC and various Fox network affiliates.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Motorcycles Galore.com hopes hybrid web/physical retail approach will pay off

A Vancouver company hopes to set a new standard for Internet retailing with an experiment that combines ecommerce and bricks-and-mortar showrooms across the United States. The first phase of Motorcycles Galore Inc’s strategy was launched last week with a web retailing site. It will be followed over the next year with the opening of a chain of scooter shops. Company CEO Patrick Smyth says the hybrid approach should succeed where Internet-only properties have begun failing in critical numbers.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

CAB makes new request for JumpTV status

The Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB) has made a twelfth hour appeal to the Copyright Board of Canada to participate in a tariff proceeding for JumpTV. Many in industry had written off the CAB as a participant after a Dec. 21 letter from the board stating that it was "inclined to deny" the broadcasters’ application for leave to intervene.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

BellFund to issue expanded version of industry content producers’ guide

A group of industry experts have prepared a new handbook to help new media creators navigate the funding waters for converged content. Most digital media companies are novices when it comes to raising financing, and one of the handbook’s editors says this resource is designed to guide people through the entire production process from development, presentation, project management, budgeting, financing, business plans, legal affairs, marketing and promotion strategies and pitching.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

Partnerships to become key focus for Liberty Village centre in second year

The Liberty Village New Media Centre is boasting a slew of new partnership successes on the eve of its official launch late next week in Toronto. Since the centre’s "soft launch" last November (CNM, Nov. 15/00), the group has continued acting as a networking resource, even without a physical space. Now, the chi-chi 2,700 sq. ft. meeting and office space is available to the new media community in Ontario, and executives are hoping to build on several relationships forged in the past 12 months to extend its reach beyond the province and into the national and international spheres.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

BC passes video game legislation, industry ESRB ratings likely to be adopted

British Columbia’s plan to introduce a ratings system for video games won’t necessarily result in more red tape or higher costs for game makers and retailers, suggests a key BC official with the attorney general’s office. Barry Salmon, planning and priorities manager with the ministry’s public safety branch, says he understands the software industry’s outcry over new legislation that will restrict retail access to video games, but he offers hope that adoption of an international ratings system would alleviate many of those concerns.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required

ROW Short Takes

Maxlink purchase to close soon, insiders say
Apparently a prospective buyer has stepped up to the plate and made a bid for the embattled 28 GHz licence holder, Maxlink Communications Inc. The receiver Ernst & Young has been reluctant to provide any information to Report on Wireless. Industry Canada is keeping a close eye on the deal, as the licence that Maxlink currently holds comes up for renewal in a year.

This content is available to wirereport.ca subscribers

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

Unlock all the Canadian telecom, broadcasting and digital media news you need.

Take a free trial or subscribe to The Wire Report now.

FREE TRIAL

Two weeks free access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Register for free

* Required

SUBSCRIBE

Unlimited access to thewirereport.ca and our exlusive newsletters.

Continue

* Required