Globecast Explained

Globecast
Foundation:1996
Location City:Issy-les-Moulineaux
Location Country:France
Key People:Christian Pinon, Olivier Barberot, Philippe Bernard
Industry:Telecommunications, Broadcasting
Products:Media processing and transmission services for television broadcasters and content owners
Parent:Orange S.A.
Homepage:https://www.globecast.com/

Globecast is a service company for the radio, television and media industry, providing solutions for media and content management, aggregation, formatting, processing, transmission and distribution. These contents are feeding various television and radio platforms: direct-broadcast satellite (DBS), digital terrestrial television (DTT), cable TV, IPTV, TV for internet connected screens (OTT TV), digital signage networks, cinema theaters (DCP and live events delivery). Globecast is a key player in this industry, serving the needs for top 100 television broadcasters in the world.

Globecast has an established presence in Europe, America, Asia, Africa and Middle-East, through nineteen points of presence, among them twelve satellite telecommunication teleports and technical operation centers, all of them linked via an international terrestrial telecommunication network.

The company is fully owned by Orange. It is currently led by Philippe Bernard (previous CEO was Olivier Barberot; and before him Christian Pinon, Alain Baget).

In 2013, Globecast changed its visual identity (logo) and its name lost the uppercase C (former writing was GlobeCast).

History

The DEA is composed by the TDF (TéléDiffusion de France) company and Direction des Transmissions Audiovisuelles (DTA). DTA will then become known as GlobeCast.

The DEA also covers:

  1. the "Audiovisuel International" (AVI) marketing department of France Telecom Réseaux & Services Internationaux (FTRSI);
  2. the shares of the following companies: 100% of Maxat (UK), 40% of Keystone (USA) and 20% of TIBA (Argentina);
  3. the services of Direction des Opérations of TDF;
  4. three operation centers of FTRSI, TDF and the Direction des réseaux Nationaux (DRN);
  5. the "delegation of the image service", which purpose was the promotion of the Telecom 2 satellite.

SERTE

The technical operation center of Globecast in Paris (France), located at 61 rue des Archives, was for a long time known as SERTE. This name is still used sometimes by television professionals, even outside France, because it was used for many years. This technical center is a major routing node for television and radio feeds.

The SERTE acronym used to refer to: Service d'Exploitation Radio Télévision Extérieur (in English, Foreign radio and television operation center).

A brief history of SERTE:

Digital cinema

In France, Globecast operates a service to deliver digital film copies (DCP) to theaters via terrestrial telecom networks.

World TV and MyGlobeTV

In the USA, Globecast operated a television bouquet via satellite under the name World TV and an internet television bouquet under the name MyGlobeTV.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Telstra Purchase of Globecast Australia Concludes. 2015-11-22. 2024-03-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20240310164723/http://www.globecast.com.au/news/press-release/Telstra-Purchase-of-Globecast-Australia-Concludes. dead.
  2. Web site: Russian news channel RT unavailable on StarHub, Singtel due to transmission disruption 'at source' . 2022-03-06 . CNA . en.
  3. Web site: Low . Dominic . 2022-03-05 . Singtel, StarHub users unable to view Russian-funded TV channel since Friday The Straits Times . 2022-03-06 . www.straitstimes.com . en.