When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sound bite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_bite

    A sound bite or soundbite [1] [2] is a short clip of speech or music extracted from a longer piece of audio, often used to promote or exemplify the full length piece. In the context of journalism, a sound bite is characterized by a short phrase or sentence that captures the essence of what the speaker was trying to say, and is used to summarize information and entice the reader or viewer.

  3. Sound studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_studies

    Two significant categories to what we hear and pay attention to are natural and technological sounds. According to R. Murray Schafer (through a survey of quotes in the literature), the proportion of nature sounds heard and noticed among European authors has decreased over the past two centuries from 43% to 20%, but not for North America, where it has stayed around 50%.

  4. 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]

  5. Sound recording and reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_recording_and...

    This lets the audio data be stored and transmitted by a wider variety of media. Digital recording stores audio as a series of binary numbers (zeros and ones) representing samples of the amplitude of the audio signal at equal time intervals, at a sample rate high enough to convey all sounds capable of being heard.

  6. Code (semiotics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_(semiotics)

    In communication research and media research, the way receivers act towards the message and the way it is encoded becomes relevant, and generates different reactions: In "radical reading" the audience rejects the meanings, values, and viewpoints built into the text by its makers.

  7. Audiobook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiobook

    An audio first production is a spoken word audio work that is an original production but not based on a book. Examples include Joe Hill, the son of Stephen King, who released a Vinyl First audiobook called Dark Carousel in 2018. It came in a 2-LP vinyl set, or as a downloadable MP3, but with no published text. [36]

  8. Audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio

    Digital audio, representation of sound in a form processed and/or stored by computers or digital electronics; Audio, audible content (media) in audio production and publishing; Semantic audio, extraction of symbols or meaning from audio; Stereophonic audio, method of sound reproduction that creates an illusion of multi-directional audible ...

  9. Radio broadcasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_broadcasting

    The earliest radio stations were radiotelegraphy systems and did not carry audio. For audio broadcasts to be possible, electronic detection and amplification devices had to be incorporated. The thermionic valve, a kind of vacuum tube, was invented in 1904 by the English physicist John Ambrose Fleming. He developed a device that he called an ...