WorldSpace Satellite Radio: Fading Signals? |
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"People are as developed as the information that they can access. Hence we are committed to creating information affluence. Radio also reaches out to people where other media simply can't."1 - Noah Samara, Chairman and CEO of WorldSpace Corporation, in 2002. "If people can pay for superior content on TV, they can do it for radio as well. Those who had heard WorldSpace swore by its content."2 - Farokh Balsara, a senior partner and Media & Entertainment Practice Leader at Ernst & Young India, in 2006. Creating A New Identity
WorldSpace, the world's first digital satellite radio service provider, had launched its service (also called WorldSpace) in Africa in 1999. The service was initially launched with the mission of creating 'information empowerment' in Africa and other third world regions, although the company later started offering commercial channels and entertainment as well. At the beginning, WorldSpace offered the same channels in all its markets, but after its launch in India, the company adopted a region-centric approach, and launched several channels with Indian content.
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1] Archana Raghuram, "Distance Education Not So
Distant,"The Hindu, September 4, 2002.
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