Wiki

Explanation of terms and acronyms related to the media and broadcasting world. Updated every week!

Pay Per View (PPV)

Pay-Per-View (PPV) is a system where a viewer is required to pay a certain fee for viewing special programs such as Live Events or Sports. The program is telecasted at the same time to everyone subscribing to PPV Service. Examples for Pay-Per-View (PPV): WWE- World Wrestling Federation, UFC PPV is often used in conjunction with live streaming services, which allow viewers to watch programs in real time over the internet. This can be a convenient way to watch PPV events,…

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Pay TV

Pay TV is a television broadcasting system, where users need to pay to watch a specific channel or program. Usually, Pay TV includes pay-per-view premium content such as newly released movies or sporting events, which may be delivered at a scheduled time or on-demand.  However, it is different than Pay Per View. Alternatively, it is known as premium television or subscription television. Pay TV usually provided by both digital and analog and satellite and cable television.  While Pay TV remains…

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Paywall

A paywall is a system of limiting access to content through a paid subscription. Sports web sites and online news are the most common users of paywalls. There are three high-level models of paywall: Hard Paywall, Soft Paywall, and combination of both. Mainly, the content restrictions of a hard paywall are much stricter compared to the soft paywall. It will not allow users to access free content. Whereas, a soft paywall gives substantial access to free content so that it…

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Pixel

The word "Pixel" means a picture element. This is the smallest element of an image. Pixels are generally square or round. Typically, they are arranged in a two-dimensional grid to create an image. Each pixel can be turned on (illuminated) or off (darkened) on a screen (Computer Monitor, Television Screen, Mobile Screen). Resolution of an image depends on the number of pixels a monitor can display. Normally, VGA monitors display 640 x 480 (307,200) pixels per inch (PPI), SVGA monitors…

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Podcast

The term “Podcast” is originated from POD and Cast. POD means Portable on Demand, and Cast relating to the term broadcast. It is an episodic series of digital video or audio files which a user can download and view/listen to. An audio podcast can be directly played from the website or downloaded as an MP3 or alike format to be played on a compatible mobile device or a computer.   In recent years, live streaming services have revolutionized how audiences…

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Programmatic Ads

Programmatic Ads refer to the automated buying and selling of ad inventory through real-time bidding (RTB) platforms. It involves using algorithms and data to match advertisers with relevant ad opportunities in real-time auctions. One of the most exciting and rapidly growing areas of programmatic advertising is live audio streaming. Live streaming services, such as podcasts and radio stations, are increasingly using programmatic advertising to monetize their content. This allows advertisers to target specific audiences based on their interests and demographics, and…

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Upcoming Webinar

How AI is Going to Revolutionize Video Delivery
How AI is Going to Revolutionize Video Delivery

As media libraries expand and viewer demands accelerate, traditional media management methods are struggling to keep pace. In this webinar, we’ll dive into how AI — both today’s practical solutions and tomorrow’s transformative innovations — is going to reshape the way streaming platforms, broadcasters, and enterprises manage, organize, and distribute content across Digital Asset Management (DAM) and Media Asset Management (MAM) systems. This session will give you a clear roadmap for harnessing AI — both current tools and emerging frontiers — to transform your media operations into a faster, smarter, and future-ready ecosystem.

Things the webinar would cover:

  • AI-driven content workflows: Automate captioning, audio-to-text conversion, subtitle translation, and multi-language transcription
  • Smart content discovery: Unlock scene-level video search, automated chaptering, and AI-generated metadata
  • AI-native content creation: Instantly generate training videos, marketing clips, or explainers directly from documents, URLs, or text prompts 
  • Agentic AI for media: Explore how autonomous AI agents can manage content ingestion, quality checks, compliance editing, and metadata enrichment
  • Next-gen video editing: Use simple prompts to mute, blur, annotate, or clip scenes
  • Personalization and localization at scale: Automate dubbing, voice cloning, localized metadata tagging, and audio translation 
  • Intelligent recommendations: From dynamic playlist curation and personalized ad insertions to predictive analytics 
  • Next-gen distribution intelligence: Learn how AI optimizes encoding ladders, predicts CDN traffic patterns, suggests smarter storage strategies, and enables dynamic playout based on device and bandwidth conditions.

Upcoming Webinar

May 29

9:00 AM PST

30 Minutes