Brainly
History
Radio era (1961-1968)
Launching the first radio broadcast signal (call sign: HLKV, frequency: 900 kHz, output: 10 kW) from Seoul, MBC started as the first non-governmental commercial broadcaster in Korea. On 12 April 1963, it obtained a license from the government for operating regional stations in major cities (Daegu, Gwangju, Daejeon, Jeonju) in Korea, and established a broadcast network which connects six cities including Seoul and Busan.
Black & white TV era (1969-1980)
MBC launched TV broadcasting on 8 August 1969 (call sign: HLAC-TV, output: 2 kW), and started to broadcast its main news program MBC Newsdesk on 5 October 1970. It reached affiliation deal with 7 commercial stations (in Ulsan, Jinju, Gangnueng, Chuncheon, Mokpo, Jeju, Masan) between 1968 and 1969, and started nationwide TV broadcasting through its 13 affiliated or regional stations. In 1974, FM radio was launched, and MBC took over The Kyunghyang Shinmun (daily newspaper company).
Colour TV era (1980-1990)
The first colour TV broadcasting was started on 22 December 1980. MBC was separated from The Kyunghyang Shinmun according to the 1981 Basic Press Act. In 1982, it moved into the Yeouido headquarters and founded professional baseball team MBC Cheong-ryong (Blue Dragon). With the live coverage of the 1986 Seoul Asian Games and the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, MBC made a great advancement in scale and technology.
Multimedia era (1991-2000)
After rapidly growing into a large corporation, covering major international events, MBC established specialized companies for each value chain (MBC Production, MBC Media Tech, MBC Broadcast Culture Center, MBC Arts Company, MBC Arts Center) and spined them off as subsidiaries to become a more efficient corporation amid fiercer competition in the multimedia era. ※ MBC Production and MBC Media Tech were merged into MBC C&I in August, 2011.
Digital era (2001–present)
As the convergence of broadcasting and communications becomes full-fledged, MBC made its subsidiary iMBC (internet MBC) an independent corporation and pursued various internet-related business. Furthermore, it started cable TV (MBC Plus Media,) satellite TV, new DMB broadcasting and full daytime broadcasting on terrestrial television. In 2007, MBC established digital production centre Ilsan Dream Center, which is equipped with high-tech production facilities. In September 2014, it completed the construction of a new headquarters building and moved from Yeouido to Sangam-dong, opening a new era of Sangam MBC.
In 2001, MBC launched satellite and cable television broadcasting. As part of this expansion it created MBC America, a subsidiary based in Los Angeles, United States, to distribute its programming throughout the Americas. On 1 August 2008, MBC America launched MBC-D, a television network carried on the digital subchannels of KSCI-TV, KTSF-TV, and WMBC-TV. The service was planned to be launched in Atlanta, Chicago, and Washington, D.C. by the end of the year.[1][2] In northeast metro Atlanta, it aired on WKTB-CD channel 47.3, but as of 2011 is on WSKC-CD channel 22.1.
In March 2013, computer shutdowns hit South Korean television stations including the MBC.[3] The South Korean government asserted a North Korean link in the March cyberattacks, which has been denied by Pyongyang.[4]
International relations
ClueBot NG
Sejarah
Brainly dibentuk oleh Lukasz Haluch, Michal Borkowski dan Tomasz Kraus pada tahun 2009 di Krakow, Polandia dalam versi bahasa Polandia bernama Zadane.pl. Karena melihat adanya kemauan siswa dalam membantu sesama dalam menyelesaikan pekerjaan rumah mereka, Brainly bertujuan membuat kegiatan tersebut dapat dilakukan secara daring.[5]
Brainly mengalami perkembangan yang cepat di negara Ukraina, Polandia, Rusia dan Brasil, mencpai 25 juta siswa di seluruh dunia. Kemdian, Brainly mulai memasuki Amerika Serikat dan mendapatkan lebih dari 50.000 pengguna.[5]
Lihat pula
Referensi
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20190805030726/https://www.urdumex.com/2019/06/ptv-sports-live-watch-live-ptv-sports.html
- ^ "Archived copy". Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 2015-04-02. Diakses tanggal 2008-08-02.
- ^ Choe Sang-Hun, "Computer Networks in South Korea Are Paralyzed in Cyberattacks" Diarsipkan 2 June 2019 di Wayback Machine., The New York Times, 20 March 2013.
- ^ Lee Minji (April 10, 2013). "(2nd LD) Gov't confirms Pyongyang link in March cyber attacks". Yonhap News. Diarsipkan dari versi asli tanggal 15 April 2013. Diakses tanggal 2 June 2019.
- ^ a b (Inggris) Borkowski, Michal. "Helping Students Solve the Homework Pandemic". WIRED. Diakses tanggal 7 April 2020.
Pranala luar
- (Inggris) Situs web resmi