User:Carcharoth/Article incubator/Shoenberg Memorial Lecture
Appearance
Annual lecture held in memory of Isaac Shoenberg and organised by the Royal Television Society.[1][2]
- 1971 - James Dwyer McGee - The Life and Work of Sir Isaac Shoenberg
- 1971 - Walter Bruch - The Next Decade in Home Entertainment
- 1972 - George Harold Brown - Video in Vacuo - Television's role in the Exploration of Space
- 1973 - Walter Perry - The Open University: A progress report and hopes for the future
- 1974 - Robert F. Chinnick - The Canadian Domestic Communication Satellite System
- 1975 - Joe Roizen - The History of Videotape Recording
- 1976 - William David Wright - Picture Quality - the Continuing Challenge Towards Visual Perfection
- 1977 - Robin Scott - Television Production: Can Technology meet the Future Challenge?
- 1978 - Robert B. Pfannkuch - Twenty-four hour prime time: the choice of Video
- 1979 - Joseph Polonsky - The Challenge of High Definition Television: Its Implications for the future of Television and Films
- 1980 - Andrew F. Inglis - Satellite and the Expansion of Television Services
- 1981 - Charles P. Ginsburg - The Horse or the Cowboy, getting television on tape
- 1982 - Makoto Kikuchi [1] - A Physicist in the Electronic Minefield
- 1983 - Delbert Dudley Smith [2] - Space Platforms and Television, shaping the future of the medium
- 1984 - Henry Mertens - The Future Evolution of Broadcasting Standards
- 1985 - Cornelis Johannes van der Klugt nl:Cor van der Klugt - New Television Standards - Revolution or Evolution?
- 1986 - Richard J. Taylor - Creative digits
- 1987 - Kerns H. Powers [3] - The Treacherous Road to High Definition Television
- 1988 - Carlos Kennedy - The Global Standards Dilemma - Agreement or Anarchy?
- 1989 - Henrikas Yushiavitshus - The Past and Future of Soviet Television
- 1990 - Jacques Sabatier - Consumer Electronics in the 1990's
- 1991 - Pierre Meyrat [4] - European HDTV - New Opportunities or Risks for Consumers and Broadcasters?
- 1992 - John Friedline - Putting Multi Media to Work
- 1993 - Joseph Flaherty - How, Why and When?
- 1994 - Roland Huber - The Information Society - What are the Limits?
- 1995 - David Brookes - The Future Development of the Television Receiver'
- 1997 - Ulrich Reimers - Going digital: engineering passion or business imperative?
- 1998 - Gary Tonge - Digital TV - Now and Next
- 1999 - Charles Jablonski - A Digital Letter from America
- 2000 - Geoff Walters - Developing Digital: Putting Viewers First
- 2001 - Philip Laven - Will the Internet Kill Broadcasting?
- 2002 - Roderick Snell - Digital TV – Is it wasted on Broadcasters?
- 2003 - Robert H. Plummer - Now We’re All Digital - What Now?
- 2004 - John Varney - Convergence, Collaboration Creativity
- 2005 - scheduled but cancelled
- 2006 - John Ive [5] - Technophobia and Digital Divergence, Navigating the Technology Challenges for Television
References
[edit]- ^ Annual Lectures, Royal Television Society, accessed 17/04/2015
- ^ Shoenberg Memorial Lecture, Royal Television Society, accessed 19/04/2018