Posted on 22 July 2010
Chicago, IL, (June 02, 2010) – The Chicago-based CD, DVD and Blu-ray disc replication and packaging services company iDEA MEDIA SERVICES, in support of its partners at Discovery Education, a division of Discovery Communications whose networks include the Discovery Channel, is pleased to have packaged the eleven part, dual disc DVD boxed education edition of the Discovery Channel’s wildly popular natural history series LIFE . Read the full story
Posted on 19 May 2010
iDEA MEDIA SERVICES, a leader in CD, DVD, Blu-ray disc replication and packaging, is pleased to be the official media manufacturing partner for the progressive improvisational rock band Umphrey’s McGee. Read the full story
Posted on 29 May 2009
By Andrew Shapiro
One of the things both our industrial clients and our entertainment clients have in common is an increase in the amount of content they need to send abroad. Establishing a foothold for your business in an international market or making sure your latest nature special gains as much revenue as possible form the European market are both excellent reasons to consider producing replication runs for overseas consumers. The only down side, in fact, is the confusing array of standards and compatibility issues that can arise when leaving the USA. Lets take a look at the major considerations in some depth: Read the full story
Posted on 21 December 2008
As with DVD, enabling independent producers can help drive the growth of the BD market.
Technology providers for the entertainment industry often refer to market “tiers” – Tier 1 is typically Hollywood; Tier 2 is outside Hollywood. Tier 1 is smaller, but more influential. To be successful, you need to garner at least one Tier 1 customer, because then you can attract Tier 2 customers. If you’re lucky, then you make it to the broader market of Tier 3: the pro-sumers, amateurs and wannabees. Or so the theory goes. Read the full story
Posted on 15 December 2008
There’s a lot of money to be made in “free” music…
We know all about the Long Tail, but what about the Short Nose? The front end, whether it belongs to a car or a consumer, is the place where the first impact generally takes place, where the nature of the experience is determined. Western content companies have had mixed results with their encounters with the digital front end. Their obsession with monitoring and monetizing every pixel and audio sample has led to a misplacement of priorities that has hobbled the evolution of their business models into fully digital economics. Read the full story