Rediffusion's television sale and rental operations continued to grow, particularly following the start of colour television broadcasts in 1967.
Malta now known as P.B.S Creativity Hub in
Gwardamanġa, built for Rediffusion (Malta) Ltd in 1958 On 14 February 1975, the employees of the Rediffusion (Malta) Ltd staged a sit-in strike at the company's premises in Malta and they even started to run the company. On 30 July 1975, an agreement was reached between Rediffusion Group of Companies and the
Dom Mintoff led
Labour Party government of Malta for the transfer of all Rediffusion's assets in Malta to the Maltese government. The company also experimented with its local cable operations: a local community station in Bristol ("Bristol Channel") from 1973 to 1976, and an optical fibre system in Hastings in 1976. Redifon, established in 1946, became a manufacturer of
aircraft simulation in 1948, located at Crawley, West Sussex, UK. A subdivision was established at Arlington, Texas, US in 1968. In 1981, BET changed Redifon's name to
Rediffusion Simulation to capitalise on the name. The company was sold in 1988 to
Hughes Aircraft, which kept the Rediffusion name until it sold the company in 1994 to
Thomson-CSF, when it was merged with Thomson's previous 1990 acquisition of Link-Miles to become Thomson Training & Simulation, later rebranded into
Thales Training & Simulation. The fixed-wing division was sold to the L3 Group in 2012 which continues as
L3 Commercial Training Solutions. Redifon (later Rediffusion) Computers was also part of the group and was likewise based in
Crawley,
West Sussex. It initially started in the production of analogue computers to control
flight simulators, then moved to produce minicomputers ("R range"), departmental Unix Servers and microcomputers ("teleputers"), specialising in data capture, enterprise accounting for local government and
videotex systems.
Michael Aldrich joined the company as marketing director in 1977, and became managing director and CEO in 1980. From 1980, the company designed, manufactured, sold, installed and maintained online shopping systems mainly in the UK and achieved a significant number of world firsts. The company's name was changed to Rediffusion Computers in 1981. During the 1980s, a large part of the company's revenue came from its sales in
Eastern Europe and Russia. Equipment that met the CoCom directive for the sales of high performance technology to the Soviet Bloc was supplied to a number of customers the largest of which was
Gazprom who used the systems on the Siberian Gas Pipeline project. In addition there was a steady stream of Polish engineers attending the Crawley training facility to enable them to support and maintain this equipment mainly in Russia but also in other countries in the
Eastern Bloc. The company was highly innovative and amongst other things developed a signature recognition system for detecting
cheque fraud. It was one of the first companies to sell a turnkey solution that utilised the newly available Post Office database (PAF) for postcode recognition. In 1984, Aldrich led a
management buyout and the company became
ROCC Computers (Rediffusion's Old Computer Company). Aldrich was the largest shareholder and he subsequently bought-out the other shareholders. In the 1980s, Rediffusion's cable operations were left behind by the new generation of
cable TV networks. BET (from 1983 the sole owners of Rediffusion) began divesting and sold off its overseas interests, and at the end of the 1980s, the company was broken up, The rentals business went to
Granada, and the cable network systems were sold to the
Maxwell Communications. Reditronics Jersey was sold to SCK Holdings Limited in 1986, and following BET's retreat from cable and the consequent loss of associated contracts, it ceased trading in 1987. The Rediffusion Jersey cable network was sold to Jersey Cable Limited (now
Newtel Solutions) in 1988. In 1991, a Hong Kong-based branch of the company, now known as
Asia Television, returned telerecording copies of all four episodes of
The Tomb of the Cybermen, a
Doctor Who serial, to the
BBC. The prints were in good condition, and the episodes were thought to have been lost for roughly fifteen years. ==See also==