On 26/02/2010 18:17, Mo McRoberts wrote:
I would place a wild guess that it’s probably being moved from one bit of
England to another;)
(Anybody feel free to correct me if I’m wrong, it really was a wild, if
slightly educated, guess!)
M.
Ah, but you can see out of your window that the
indefinitely live BBC archive?
my daughter (age 13) asks:
why can't the BBC make some programmes available all the time?
regards
Jonathan
ie there must be a large number of programmes that the BBC creates,
and owns copyright permissions.
why aren't at least some of these available via
On 28/02/2010 17:38, Jonathan Chetwynd wrote:
:
why can't the BBC make some programmes available all the time?
Rights, dear boy.
Gordo
-
Sent via the backstage.bbc.co.uk discussion group. To unsubscribe, please
visit http://backstage.bbc.co.uk/archives/2005/01/mailing_list.html.
--- On Sun, 28/2/10, Jonathan Chetwynd j.chetw...@btinternet.com wrote:
From: Jonathan Chetwynd j.chetw...@btinternet.com
Subject: [backstage] indefinitely live BBC archive?
To: backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk
Date: Sunday, 28 February, 2010, 17:38
indefinitely live BBC archive?
my daughter
On Sun, Feb 28, 2010 at 17:54, Glyn Wintle glynwin...@yahoo.com wrote:
If you want any easy start the BBC could make BBC Parliament content
available permanently.
I’m actually not sure why anybody _owns_ that content in the first
place. It should be that PARBUL is merely contracted to produce
-Original Message-
From: owner-backst...@lists.bbc.co.uk
[mailto:owner-backst...@lists.bbc.co.uk] On Behalf Of Kieran Kunhya
Sent: 27 February 2010 02:25
To: backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk
Subject: [backstage] A quick Dolby E question
A teeny bit off-topic but I'm sure there are
On 28 Feb 2010, at 17:53, Gordon Joly wrote:
why can't the BBC make some programmes available all the time?
Rights, dear boy.
and Residuals in particular - Equity MU contracts ensure that every
time a drama is rescreened the performers get another set of smaller
fees.
UKGold when it
why can't the BBC make some programmes available all the time?
Rights, dear boy.
And kids, in their limitless quest to just get what they want now, care not
one bit for that most wonderfully complex of one-word answers.
Then again, most regular people don't care either. ;)
-
Sent via the
Hello Again,
I'm not sure if reviving this mail is the right thing to do, but I am doing
it anyway.
I realized this prototype a few weeks ago now - and I wasn't happy with it
at all, especially with the design and the lack of features.
I almost immediately decided to re-design and re-code the
Whilst, as already mentioned, rights agreements stop us from doing this for
most programmes, there are cases where we can do it. It's even part of the
service licence for Radio 4.
From
Jonathan,
that's excellent, but there must be more...
and where is the central search facility?
best
~:
On 28 Feb 2010, at 20:37, Jonathan Tweed wrote:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/features/in-our-time/archive/
Jonathan Chetwynd wrote:
indefinitely live BBC archive?
my daughter (age 13) asks:
why can't the BBC make some programmes available all the time?
regards
Jonathan
ie there must be a large number of programmes that the BBC creates, and
owns copyright permissions.
why aren't at least some of
On 28 Feb 2010, at 22:24, Ian Stirling wrote:
But the index is freely available.
Just past the tiger, down the flight of stairs (bring your own torch) all
nicely card-indexed.
Heh. I wish that wasn't as accurate as it is.
Much of the BBC's Archive (the documents and photos, but thankfully
Hi Jonathan
As more of our archive content gets migrated into /programmes, it will start to
appear in various places and central indexes throughout the site, including
search results.
However, that's a mammoth task and one we've only just begun. Other archive
content you may have already
14 matches
Mail list logo