1. Broadcast Media
Broadcasting is the distribution of audio and video content to a dispersed audience via any audio or visual mass communications medium, but usually one using electromagnetic radiation (radio waves). The receiving parties may include the general public or a relatively large subset thereof. Broadcasting has been used for purposes of private recreation, non-commercial exchange of messages, experimentation, self-training, and emergency communication such as amateur (ham) radio and amateur television (ATV) in addition to commercial purposes like popular radio or TV stations with advertisements.
2. Mobile Media
Mobile media is a type of terms that we frequently utilize which is pervasive in our day-to-day life and yet so indistinct theoretically that we are not able to identify it. We all know that it can be our mobile phones when we are not using it to start calls or create texts, our iPods, our table pc's and all another gadgets. But we do not grasp the thought to the point that we all know print media for the reason that newspapers and magazines as what we read, TV as what we watch and radio as what we listen to. But with cell phones, tablet PC's, laptops and iPods and other mp3 devices which can make us read news, watch video clips and listen to or in other terms, access all 3 types of media, we can not technically reveal that mobile media is new content.
3. Outdoor Media
Outdoor media is a form of mass media which comprises billboards, signs, placards placed inside and outside of commercial buildings or objects like shops or buses, flying billboards (signs in tow of airplanes), blimps, and skywriting. Many commercial advertisers use this form of mass media when advertising in sports stadiums. Tobacco and alcohol manufacturers used billboards and other outdoor media extensively.
4. Art as Media
"Media art" refers to artworks that depend on a technological component to function. The term "media" applies to any communication device used to transmit and store information. By incorporating emerging technologies into their artworks, artists using new media are constantly redefining the traditional categories of art.
5. Electronic Media
Electronic media are media that use electronics or electromechanical energy for the end-user (audience) to access the content. This is in contrast to static media (mainly print media), which today are most often created electronically, but don't require electronics to be accessed by the end-user in the printed form. The primary electronic media sources familiar to the general public are better known as video recordings, audio recordings, multimedia presentations, slide presentations, CD-ROM and online content. Most new media are in the form of digital media. However, electronic media may be in either analog or digital format.
6. Printed media
Pamphlets, brochures, and posters constitute other print media used to disseminate health messages. These devices are readily found in most public health agencies, offices of private practitioners, health care institutions, and voluntary health organizations. The extent to which persons read, reread, and keep these devicesr circulate them to other readerss not well evaluated. Thus, their permanence is unknown.
7. Film Media
Film encompasses motion pictures as individual projects, as well as the field in general. The name comes from the photographic film also called filmstock, historically the primary medium for recording and displaying motion pictures. Many other terms exist motion pictures or just pictures, the silver screen, photoplays, the cinema, picture shows, flicks and commonlymovies.
8. Primitive Media
Primitive media bear the marks of the human touch.It reveal the aesthetic and subtle communicative possibilities of primitive media.The end of every medium should be to reveal the connect between the natural, the cultural and the spiritual elements of a community. Primitive media, unlike mainstream media, have no implicit or explicit agenda. Though graffiti are an unedited display of emotion, a wall journal can serve as a fine primitive medium to fulfill the creative aspirations of a community.
9. Written Media
Written media is defined as any words, events, message or thoughts written or recorded on a surface. Writing needs to be more explicit, since obscurities and misunderstandings cannot be removed immediately. People feel more committed to what they write because of the potential permanence of the written communication. Self-correction is eliminated through editing in writing.
10. Spoken Media
Conversation, the most common type of speech, involves immediate interchange between the participants, who convey their reactions either in words or through facial expressions and bodily movements. There is more spontaneity in conversation than in writing; self-correction occurs in the flow of conversation.


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