MCOM 100 Introduction to New Media

 


General Comparison between Traditional Mass Media and New Media

Traditional Mass Media

New Media

Geographically Constrained

Distance Insensitive

Hierarchical

Flattened

Unidirectional

Interactive

Space/Time Constrained

Less Space/Time Constrained

Professional Communicators

Amateur/Non-Professional

High Access Costs

Low Access Costs

Broad Coverage

Customized

Linearity of Content

Non-Linearity of Content

Delayed Feedback

Immediate Feedback

Advertising-Driven

Diverse Funding Sources

Institution-Bound

Decentralized

Fixed Format

Flexible Format

News Values, Journalistic Standards

Formative Standards


New Media Characteristics

Networked Linkage - Vanishing of fixed place

Ubiquity

Digital: New media are digital media and are capable of:

·         Duplication without degradation, 

·         Easy alteration, retrieval, calculation or computation

·         Machine readable

·         Magnetic or optical storage

·         Compression

Space Binding and Distance Insensitivity

Geographical Insensitivity

Personalized

Prosthesis and Telepresence

Virtuality,  Virtual Community

Hypertext

Interactivity

Push v. Pull

Convergent: Merged Modal Capabilities, multimedia, multiple media

"Smart" Server controlled functions

Wired, Wireless, Terrestrial and Satellite-based

Electromagnetic v. Optical

 

 

Back to the Schedule