Yep. Some do this better than others; the BBC World Service website is updated pretty well. So is the CBC. For the most part, Radio National is also current (at least during the regular season).
The CBC, better than most broadcasters (at least in my own opinion), has successfully sorted out that the website is both a reference for radio and TV as well as a medium itself, requiring its own reference. The Voice of Russia did a reasonably good job until their recent revamp. Radio Prague also "gets it" pretty well. Radio Australia is a lot better than it used to be 2-3 years ago, when it was much more static than it is nowadays. Richard Cuff / Allentown, PA On Sat, Jan 2, 2010 at 8:46 PM, Scott Royall <[email protected]> wrote: > What occurs to me is that, if international broadcasters really do see the > Internet as a legitimate transmission medium, they have to make a quantum > leap in the attention they give their websites. (Yes, that's all one > sentence.) _______________________________________________ Swprograms mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/swprograms To unsubscribe: Send an E-mail to [email protected]?subject=unsubscribe, or visit the URL shown above.
