The Insider's Guide to Production: Sound Design - The digital difference
09 Dec 2005 | by Tim Lofts, Alchemy Soho
Technological advances mean sound designers now have more creative power than ever before.
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It was the year London took gold, a frog drove adults crazy and Freddie replaced Becks. Here are 2005's most memorable events.
Technological advances mean sound designers now have more creative power than ever before.
British American Tobacco is planning to launch what it claims will be a 'safer' cigarette next year. The cigarettes will contain treated tobacco, which BAT claims carries less risk of heart disease - The Sun.
Walt Disney Internet Group has acquired mobile game developer and Rugby World, published by IPC Media, has a cover-mount of a British publisher Living Mobile, the producer of games including Resident Evil.
BlackBerry has appointed Manning Gottlieb OMD to handle its £4 million international media planning and buying account. The agency beat Carat in a pitch that was handled by the AAR.
BT has upped the ante in the increasingly competitive battle for digital TV customers with plans to launch a set-top box that will allow access to Freeview.
BT has upped the ante in the increasingly competitive battle for digital TV customers with plans to launch a set-top box that will allow access to Freeview.
LONDON - BT is cutting its TV adspend as it refocuses on below-the-line media including online and email.
They may like to think of themselves as cutting edge, but trendspotters are now very well established within agencies, Larissa Bannister writes.
ITV is boosting its use of mobile interactivity as part of its "beyond the spot" initiative. The broadcaster is trying to encourage advertisers to include a text-message response mechanism on TV ads after signing a deal with Mobile Interactive Group.