The updated BBC TV code introduces several key changes aimed at enhancing viewer experience and ensuring content quality. One notable change is the emphasis on diversity and inclusion, with guidelines promoting representation of diverse voices and perspectives. Additionally, there's a renewed focus on accuracy and impartiality in reporting, reflecting the BBC's commitment to journalistic integrity. Furthermore, the code addresses issues related to privacy and data protection, aligning with evolving regulatory standards. Overall, the updated BBC TV code underscores the broadcaster's dedication to delivering informative, engaging, and responsible content to its audience worldwide. For more information, visit bbc.com tv code and explore the TV code section.
Präsident Macron empfing eine Delegation aus Rojava und sicherte Unterstützung zu, der türkische Vizeministerpräsident droht mit Angriffen auch auf französische Soldaten
BBC coverage has revealed damning information about Turkey’s recent occupation of northern Syria. And it has smashed Turkish state propaganda to pieces.
Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum, returns to Radio Taking artefacts from William Shakespeare's time, he explores how Elizabethan and Jacobean playgoers made...
Georgi Kobilarov, Tom Scott, Yves Raimond, Silver Oliver,
Chris Sizemore, Michael Smethurst, Christian Bizer, and Robert Lee:
Media Meets Semantic Web – How the BBC
Uses DBpedia and Linked Data to Make
Connections
I'm Nick Haley, the Head of User Experience and Design for Sport & London 2012 at BBC Future Media. As the final pieces of our four-screen Olympic jigsaw come together, I thought I'd take the opportunity to share some of the design thinking that has gone into delivering this huge sporting event across desktop, tablet, mobile and connected TV. (tags: webdesign olympia bbc)
The BBC’s website for the 2010 World Cup was notable for the raw amount of rich information that it contained. Every player on every team in every group had their own web page, and the ease with which you could navigate from one piece of content to the next was remarkable. Within the Semantic Web community, the website was notable for one more reason: it was made possible by the BBC’s embrace of Semantic Web technologies.. Topic: Information Management
Clive James presents reflections on topical issues ranging from politics to pop culture in this award-winning series of BBC Radio 4's A Point of View. These programmes were first broadcast between 2007 and 2009.
This is our blog for BBC Radio Labs - a place where we show some of our prototypes for new sites and services. They are all at an early stage of development and some of them might not work quite right, some might look a bit sketchy and they may never be taken any further. They're what we call betas. We'll write about every new beta we release on this blog so please play with them and come back here to let us know what you think. We'll also be writing about other things we're working on, how we do our work and anything else we think you might be interested in.
Kamaelia - Concurrency made useful, fun In Kamaelia you build systems from simple components that talk to each other. This speeds development, massively aids maintenance and also means you build naturally concurrent software. It's intended to be accessible by any developer, including novices. What sort of systems? Network servers, clients, desktop applications, pygame based games, transcode systems and pipelines, digital TV systems, spam eradicators, teaching tools, and a fair amount more :)
The BBC Music Beta project is an ongoing effort by the BBC to build semantically linked and annotated web pages about artists and singers whose songs are played ...
"The BBC has long been an advocate of Linked Data, an approach to using the Web to connect related data, or as Wikipedia puts it "a term used to describe a recommended best practice for exposing, sharing, and connecting pieces of data, information, and knowledge on the Semantic Web using URIs and RDF.""
Janacek's The Cunning Little Vixen holds a very special place in the repertoire - an opera whose characters are a mixture of human beings and animals and that started life as a cartoon-strip in a newspaper. It tells the story of the life of a Vixen from the moment she is adopted as a pet by the Forester to the moment she is shot by the Poacher.
BBC iPlayer relaunches today in an attempt to develop beyond "catch-up" - adding some new features that see the site integrate deeply with social networking sites, and compete with the personalised, flexible viewing offered by TV platforms such as Sky+. The new beta version at http://beta.bbc.co.uk/iplayer has a redesigned homepage that creates more space by separating TV and radio. Users are encouraged to sign in to the site to take advantage of the new features: it's free, and an existing bbc.co.uk ID can be used.
Michael Mosley takes an informative and ambitious journey exploring how the evolution of scientific understanding is intimately interwoven with society's historical path
Ahead of tonight's Micro Men programme, which charts the rivalry between Sir Clive Sinclair and Acorn Computers in the early 1980s, drobe.co.uk spoke to the film's producer, Andrea Cornwell, to find out more about the show - and now you can read our review of the film
This is another brilliant Adam Curtis documentary originally produced for the BBC. It talks about the modern political realities, where the policies came from and the massive failures of those ideals and how they have ended up exactly where they did not want to be. This episode focuses on the 1990's and how the politicians decided to apply the model of a free market economy to the rest of society and consequences of these actions being felt all over the world in wesetern democracy's.