Posts Tagged ‘programming’

Los Angeles affiliate KCET is leaving the PBS network

Posted in Education, Entertainment, News, economy on October 9th, 2010 by admin – Comments Off

So long, “Sesame Street.” And probably “NewsHour,” “Antiques Roadshow,” “Nova,” “Masterpiece” and ” Frontline” too, at least for many Los Angeles TV viewers.

After months of fractious negotiations, KCET, the flagship public broadcasting station in the Los Angeles market for 40 years, abruptly announced Friday that it would exit the PBS network effective Jan. 1. The move, which caught PBS officials in Washington by surprise, marks the first time a major-market station has left the network and will make KCET the largest independent public TV station in the nation.

“This is not a decision we made lightly,” Al Jerome, the station’s president and chief executive, said in a statement.


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“We have been in discussions with PBS for over three years about the need to address challenges that are unique to our market as well as our station.”

In a follow-up interview, Jerome said the station would assemble its own programming, a plan that would take roughly two years to implement fully. KCET is expected to keep airing locally produced public-affairs shows such as “SoCal Connected.” Last month it announced a new Sunday-night movie show hosted by KTLA entertainment reporter Sam Rubin. Jerome said the station was also exploring news, documentaries and other programming from providers in Japan, Canada and other countries as well as the Hollywood community.

But Jerome acknowledged that some longtime viewers face the immediate prospect of losing favorite, nationally recognized shows. “There are going to be some disruptions,” he said. According to Jerome, KCET would remain a nonprofit enterprise mostly reliant on funds from viewers and corporate donors; the station’s FCC license does not permit it to become a commercial, for-profit outlet supported entirely by the traditional 30-second spot.

Station officials have complained they could not afford to pay member dues that rocketed 40% after KCET in 2005 won a landmark series of grants from oil giant BP and other sources totaling $50 million for two series aimed at preschoolers. Those grants came with the stipulation the money could not be used for paying dues to PBS. But PBS has defended the dues structure as necessary to maintaining quality programming and argued KCET was asking for special treatment.

Talks aimed at ending the impasse have gone nowhere. The door is still open for KCET to remain tied to PBS through a proposed consortium with Southern California secondary public stations: Orange County’s KOCE as well as KVCR in San Bernardino and KLCS, which is licensed to the Los Angeles Unified School District. The group would share certain programming, fundraising and marketing functions to save money and operate more efficiently. But Jerome said KCET would still remain independent under that scenario. It’s also possible that the station and PBS could reach an 11th-hour settlement, but those hopes seem to be growing dimmer with each passing day.

Friday’s move left PBS officials scrambling. In a sign of how badly relations have frayed with the dissident station, a network spokeswoman was not aware that KCET was about to send out a news release announcing the split until a reporter called to ask about it.

“PBS was notified today of KCET’s intention to withdraw its membership,” PBS said in a statement. “At issue were KCET’s repeated requests that it be allowed to operate as a PBS member station without abiding by PBS policies and paying the corresponding dues.

“PBS’ goal is to have a financially stable service in the Los Angeles market,” the network added. “PBS fully supports the idea of a Southern California consortium of stations and continues discussion with KOCE, KVCR and KLCS, PBS’ additional stations serving the Los Angeles market.”

Their divorce could wind up being painful for both KCET and PBS — not to mention local viewers.

The station faces the challenge of trying to raise funds without invoking name brands such as “Sesame Street” and “Antiques Roadshow.” Such famous PBS series are frequently cited as reasons to donate during ubiquitous on-air pledge drives. Without such brands, KCET may find it much harder to persuade viewers to open their wallets, especially during a time of economic uncertainty and reduced corporate giving.

However, KCET’s prospects for viability could greatly improve if KCET secures funding from the federal government. In a statement released Friday by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which receives Congressional funding and distributes it to public media, KCET will still be eligible for federal monies as long as it is — as it plans to be — an FCC-licensed educational television station, providing noncommercial and general interest programming.

In the meantime, the loss of its largest West Coast station casts a dark cloud over the future of PBS, at a time when many TV analysts are already questioning the relevance of a federally mandated broadcasting entity that dates from the 1960s.

“PBS certainly does not play the essential role it once did in the nation’s media landscape,” Jeffrey McCall, a media professor at DePauw University wrote in an e-mail. “For years, PBS provided things that couldn’t be had from the traditional networks. Public affairs, educational programs, dance, fitness, crafts, kids shows, documentaries and all that were found on your local PBS affiliate and perhaps no place else.

“Now, with cable outlets, not to mention the Internet, the public doesn’t rely on PBS for such fare,” McCall added. “Those multichannel entities are rooted in corporate vision, but they only need a niche audience to make a go of it these days. Not to mention that PBS has taken on some of the corporate vision itself, with lengthy, enhanced underwriting announcements, corporate partnerships, etc.”

Now that KCET has taken the plunge as an independent station — PBS will have to write a new chapter for its network in Southern California.

Local attorney Gordon Bava, chairman of KCET’s board of directors, said in a statement: “While separating from the PBS mother ship is daunting, the potential of providing a media platform for the creative, scientific, and cultural communities of Southern California to create informative and entertaining non-commercial programming with a fresh perspective is very exciting.”

scott.collins@latimes.com
Los Angeles affiliate KCET is leaving the PBS network

When you should use a 301

Posted in Tech on December 10th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

301

Moving a Website to a New Domain but Keep the Page Rank

Google Page Rank is important to a lot of people, and many base their decisions around it. There is now no excuse to stay with an underperforming or useless domain name if you can move it and keep the rank.

There are many reasons why you might want to move domain names. Two have already been mentioned. Usefulness is a big factor, one that most of the webmasters out there are keen to compete on. Underperforming is something else entirely. Some domain names just work, they do. They are either perfectly descriptive, niche names or you got there before everyone else did. If you have a page that appears high on the SERP, you may put up with bad ones in order to retain the result. Well no longer do you have to.

I have tried this one myself, which is why I’m writing about it now. I moved a site from a .com domain to a .org a little over three months ago. It had a Page Rank of four before the move, and I was a little apprehensive that all my good work would have been for naught. However, the new site is now back at four, right where we started from!

So here is what I did.

Firstly, and obviously I did a 301 redirect on the old domain and pointed it to the new one. Then I pointed the new .org domain to the website directory. Within that directory I created a folder called “com-site.” The name could have been anything but the descriptive title would remind me what it was if I was having a blonde day.

Within the “com-site” directory I created a new .htaccess file in order to tell browsers, and search engines what to do. The code I used was:

Options +FollowSymLinks
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule (.*) http://www.websitename.org/$1

Then I tested from every browser that typing in the old .com address it redirected to the .org one. It may have been overkill, trying each browser, but it’s a habit I got into when first starting out in web design.

Then I pointed the old domain to the “com-site” directory and tested again with each browser. It didn’t work at first, but after a couple of hours it got picked up and started working properly. My patience was tested, as I was ready to take action and undo it all, but luckily I was interrupted by some work, and by the time I went back it was working.

I then updated the sitemap.xml file to reflect the new domain name and deleted the sitemap from Google. I replaced it with a new one and sat back to wait. Approximately three months later, after many days with the Google toolbar, it showed PR4 again. Not trusting the toolbar on its own, I went to Webmaster Central, and lo and behold, I was PR4 again!

I’m sure most of you out there already know this one, but I was so pleased it worked that I just had to share.

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/**
* MyBB 1.4.9
* Copyright © 2009 MyBB Plus, All Rights Reserved
* Redirect Link Hit Counter
**/

Information:
This displays a hit counter for forums that you have set up as a URL Redirect, in the same way IPB does.

Example:

   

Support:
http://mybb.ithium.net

Install:
You may need to CHMOD inc/functions_forumlist.php to 777

Upload redirect.php to your forums root directory (where index.php is)

Upload the plugin to the plugins directory (inc/plugins)

Download:

  redirecturl.zip (Size: 19.46 KB / Downloads: 25)

Donate:

Server rules should work
You should be able to set what files are interpreted as php so you could do something like
mysite.com/your.name/FILENAME
If you have Linix/Unix server you can create .htaccess file to interpret .name files with this declaration
AddType application/x-httpd-php .name
Here is a tutorialhttp://www.translatum.gr/forum/index.php…
If you are on a virtual server or shared host you may or may not be able to do this
Another way to do it is as a rewrite rule:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteRule ^name/.+$ /name.php?filename=$1
for something like
mysite.com/name/FILENAME
will be taken to
mysite.com/name.php? filename=FILENAME

Déplacement d'un site vers un nouveau domaine mais garder le Page Rank Google Page Rank est important pour beaucoup de gens, et la base de beaucoup de leurs décisions autour d'elle. Il n'ya maintenant aucune excuse pour rester avec un sous-performants ou nom de domaine inutile si vous pouvez le déplacer et à maintenir le rang. Il ya plusieurs raisons pour lesquelles vous pouvez renommer les noms de domaine. Deux ont déjà été mentionnées. L'utilité est un facteur important, celui que la plupart des webmasters là-bas sont désireux de concourir sur. Sous-performant est tout autre chose. Certains noms de domaine de travail juste, ils le font. Ils sont soit parfaitement descriptive, les noms de niche ou vous y êtes arrivé avant tout le monde fait. Si vous avez une page qui semble élevé sur les SERP, vous mai mis en place avec les mauvaises, afin de conserver le résultat. Eh bien non plus le faire vous devez.

The arrival of the Internet and the creation of the World Wide Web brought something different in the lives of men. A lot of things became convenient particularly communication. We used to contend and gripe about slow paced postal mails which came to be known as snail-mails. Today, we cannot imagine a world without Internet connectivity in our midst because a lot of our businesses depend greatly in our emails. Until we learned to create a blog which we used to communicate our thoughts to whoever would be interested to read it.

To create a blog site could be easy if you know where to find the right tools you could use as well as understand the different applications. A blog site which is opposed to a website contains mostly your personal views. Later on, Google made it all easy when this Internet giant provided the user not only the use of free emails, but also free resources to create a blog site. Google's Blogger, is quite user friendly, dispensing of the need to go into tutorials just to create a blog site where you could post just about anything.

Google also made it possible to create a blog site to earn some form of income, when they included adwords and adsense features to the Blogger. Later on, the use of keywords became significant especially when thinking up of your blog title should you decide to create your own blog site. Since the Google advertising tools also made use of keywords to install their ad spots, the blogger then became conscious that keywords are necessary tools, if they are to create a blog to fill up their site. Search engines include just about any keyword related content and your earning potentials are enhanced if a lot of people were to visit your blog site.

To create a blog content, there are no limitations to the topic you choose to discuss for as long as they are not pornographic or illegal in nature. A dashboard is provided at your disposal where you can create a blog to post and publish as your content with very little need for a formal tutoring. “WYSIWYG” or “What You See is What You Get” is the term used to describe the Blogger's dashboard. The individual blogger is not required to be knowledgeable about HTML just to publish and create a blog content. Simply paste your blog draft whether from text pad or Word Document and the “WYSIWYG” will take care of the rest.

You can explore all other features when you create a blog site, like changing the templates, fonts, inserting links or adding images since they can be previewed or easily deleted in case your first try turns out awry. The Blogger's basic tools for adding widgets and all other popular gadgets are also very accessible and user friendly.

The Internet user has come a long way in harnessing the World Wide Web to make his existence known all across the globe. He only needs to create a blog site and let everyone know what he thinks about himself, his family and friends, his religion, his work, about the US President, about wars, or even contribute his knowledge about health, love, parenting, and just about everything and anything under the sun.