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  2. Digital media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_media

    "Triple-product" business model of digital media platforms. [7]Digital media platforms like YouTube work through a triple-product business model in which platforms provide information and entertainment (infotainment) to the public often at no cost, while simultaneously capturing their attention, and also collecting user data to sell to advertisers. [7]

  3. Digital content - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_content

    Forms of digital content include information that is digitally broadcast, streamed, or contained in computer files. Viewed narrowly, digital content includes popular media types, while a broader approach considers any type of digital information (e. g. digitally updated weather forecasts, GPS maps, and so on) as digital content.

  4. Electronic media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_media

    The primary electronic media sources familiar to the general public are video recordings, audio recordings, multimedia presentations, slide presentations, CD-ROM and online content. Most new media are in the form of digital media. However, electronic media may be in either analogue electronics data or digital electronic data format.

  5. Digital journalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_journalism

    Non-profit and grassroots digital journalism sites may have far fewer resources than their corporate counterparts, yet due to digital media are able to have websites that are technically comparable. [67] Other media outlets can then pick up their story and run with it as they please, thus allowing information to reach wider audiences.

  6. Media (communication) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_(communication)

    In communication, media (sing. medium) are the outlets or tools used to store and deliver semantic information or contained subject matter, described as content. [1] [2] The term generally refers to components of the mass media communications industry, such as print media (), news media, photography, cinema, broadcasting (radio and television), digital media, and advertising. [3]

  7. Digital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital

    Digital culture, the anthropological dimension of the digital social changes; Digital divide, a form of economic and social inequality in access to or use of information and communication technologies; Digital economy, an economy based on computing and telecommunications resources; Digital rights, legal rights of access to computers or the Internet

  8. Streaming media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streaming_media

    Streaming media refers to multimedia delivered through a network for playback using a media player.Media is transferred in a stream of packets from a server to a client and is rendered in real-time; [1] this contrasts with file downloading, a process in which the end-user obtains an entire media file before consuming the content.

  9. New media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_media

    New media versus cyberculture – Cyberculture is the various social phenomena that are associated with the Internet and network communications (blogs, online multi-player gaming), whereas new media is concerned more with cultural objects and paradigms (digital to analog television, smartphones).