Communication
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Media - In general, "media" refers to various means of communication. Channels of communication that serve many diverse functions, such as offering a variety of entertainment with either mass or specialized appeal, communicating news and information, or displaying advertising messages. The media carry the advertisers' messages and serve as the vital link between the seller of a product or service and the consumer. Communication: "Any act by which one person gives to or receives from another person information about that person's needs, desires, perceptions, knowledge, or affective states. Communication may be intentional or unintentional, may involve conventional or unconventional signals, may take linguistic or nonlinguistic forms, and may occur through spoken or other modes." The Sender in the Communication Process "Two essential elements in every communication situation are the sender and the receiver. Thesender is anyone who wishes to convey an idea or concept to others, seek information, or express a thought or emotion. The receiver is the person to whom the message is sent. The sender encodes the idea by selecting symbols with which to compose a message. The message is the tangible formulation of the idea that is sent to the receiver. The message is sent through a channel, which is the communication carrier. The channel can be a formalreport, a telephone call, an e-mail message, or a face-to-face meeting. The receiver decodes the symbols to interpret the meaning of the message." "In the communication process, the role of receiveris, I believe, as important as that of sender. There are five receiver steps in the process of communication--Receive, Understand, Accept, Use, and Give a Feedback. Without these steps, being followed by the receiver, no communication process would be complete and successful." Intrapersonal communication is language use or thought internal to the communicator. It can be useful to envision intrapersonal communication occurring in the mind of the individual in a model which contains a sender, receiver, and feedback loop. Intrapersonal communication is communicating with one's self, that is any for of relaying messages to your own person. Normally successful communication requires having an independent sender and receiver, who sens messages back and forth between them. This definition is currently challenged, there are some people who consider intrapersonal communication too useful to be discounted. again helps a person retain information. It becomes abnormal when a person talks to oneself in socially inappropriate situations. around you. Interpersonal communication is usually defined by communication scholars in numerous ways, usually describing participants who are dependent upon one another. It can involve one on one conversations or individuals interacting with many people within a society. It helps us understand how and why people behave and communicate in different ways to construct and negotiate a social reality. While interpersonal communication can be defined as its own area of study, it also occurs within other contexts like groups and organizations. Interpersonal communication is the process that we use to communicate our ideas, thoughts, and feelings to another person. Our interpersonal communication skills are learned behaviors that can be improved through knowledge, practice, feedback, and reflection. Interpersonal communication includes message sending and message reception between two or more individuals. This can include all aspects of communication such as listening, persuading, asserting, nonverbal communication, and more. A primary concept of interpersonal communication looks at communicative acts when there are few individuals involved unlike areas of communication such as group interaction, where there may be a large number of individuals involved in a communicative act. Individuals also communicate on different interpersonal levels depending on who they are engaging in communication with. For example, if an individual is communicating with a family member, that communication will more than likely differ from the type of communication used when engaged in a communicative act with a friend or significant other. Overall, interpersonal communication can be conducted using both direct and indirect mediums of communication such as face-to-faceinteraction, as well as computer-mediated- communication. Successful interpersonal communication assumes that both the message senders and the message receivers will interpret and understand the messages being sent on a level of understood meanings and implications. tel·e·vi·sion [tel-uh-vizh-uhn] Show IPA noun 1. the broadcasting of a still or moving image via radio waves to receivers that project a view of the image on a picture tube. radio Listen See in ThesaurusSee in a sentence Radio is communication over distance when sounds are converted to electromagnetic waves and sent to a receiver that transfers the waves back to sounds. (noun) An example of radio is how people listen to music in their cars on their way to work. Radio means to communicate over a device that uses electromagnetic waves.(verb) An example of radio is to broadcast an important community announcement over the local music station. Radio means relating to a device that uses electromagnetic waves for communication. (adjective) An example of radio used as an adjective is in the phrase "radio station," which means a particular station that broadcasts news and or music. print [print] Show IPA verb (used with object) 1. to produce (a text, picture, etc.) by applying inked types, plates, blocks, or the like, to paper or other material either by direct pressure or indirectly by offsetting an image on to an intermediate roller. Printed, as distinguished from broadcast or electronically transmitted communications. The print media include all newspapers, newsletters, booklets, pamphlets, magazines, and other printed publications, especially those that sell advertising space as a means of raising revenue. In·ter·net noun \ˈin-tər-ˌnet\ Definition of INTERNET : an electronic communications network that connects computer networks and organizational computer facilities around the world The Internet, sometimes called simply "the Net," is a worldwide system of computer networks - a network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other computers) Philippine Television Television (often abbreviated to TV, T.V.; sometimes called the tube, or telly in the UK) is a widely used telecommunication system for broadcasting and receiving moving pictures and sound over a distance. The term may also be used to refer specifically to a television set, programming or television transmission. The word is derived from mixed Latin and Greek roots, meaning "far sight": Greek τῆλε "tele", far, and Latin vision, sight (from video, vis- to see). Television watching has become an obsession among Filipinos and was always blamed for most people's lack of sleep, tardiness and even discontentment.However, looking back, establishing this instrument that has been dubbed as source of envy and family deterioration was indeed awe-inspiring. [edit] History Philippine television started as early as October 23, 1953 where the first official telecast was made. American engineer James Lindenberg and the future "Father of Philippine Television," established the Bolinao Electronics Corporation (BEC) named after his wife's hometown, Bolinao Pangasinan, on June 13,1946. He was the first to apply a license to establish a television station in 1949 and was granted on 1950. The first television station in the Philippines was DZAQ (initials of Judge Antonio Quirino) and first ever broadcast was made at a garden party at the Quirino residence. Television in the Philippines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia "Philippine television" redirects here. For Television networks broadcasting in the Philippines, see List of television stations in the Philippines. Television in the Philippines was introduced in 1953. But even before that, a number of academic experiments had been done and replicated by Filipino engineering students. Contents [hide] 1 History o 1.1 Origins o 1.2 Rising popularity o 1.3 Marcos era and martial law o 1.4 Restoration and expansion 2 Pay television 3 Digital television 4 See also 5 References [edit]History [edit]Origins James Lindenberg, an American engineer dubbed as the "father of Philippine television," began assembling transmitters and established the Bolinao Electronics Corporation (BEC) on June 26, 1946. It was named after his wife's hometown of Bolinao, Pangasinan. Three years later, he was the first to apply for a license in Philippine Congress to establish a television station. After a year, on June 14, 1950, his request was granted. Due to the scarcity of raw materials and strict import control since 1948, he was compelled to branch into radio broadcasting instead.[1] Lindenberg's attempt to put up a television station did not go to waste. Judge Antonio Quirino, the brother of President Elpidio Quirino, had been trying to get a license from Congress that would allow him to put up a television station. The Congress, however, denied him from getting such license for the fear that he might use it as vehicles for propaganda for his brother who was then running for a second term in the Presidential elections of 1953. Because of this, he brought 70-percent share of BEC stocks,[1] which