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List of television stations in Belgium


This list contains the Belgian television channels that are broadcast either terrestrially (DVB-T), via cable (Telenet, VOO and Numericable) or phone lines (Belgacom TV), or via satellite (TV Vlaanderen and Télésat).



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List of television stations in Belize


This is a list of Belizean television stations.




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Lists of television channels in Canada


This piglix contains articles or sub-piglix about Lists of television channels in Canada


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List of television stations in Denmark


This is a list of television stations in Denmark. DR1 and TV 2 are universally available through antenna in the entire country. In addition DR2, 6'eren, local channels are available locally, and channels from Germany and Sweden are available at around Denmark's borders with those respective countries as a result of signal spillover.

National:

National:

Regional:

Viasat:

Viasat Sports Channels:

Viasat Film Movie channels:

Discontinued:

C More Entertainment:

Discontinued:

NSTV Nordic Broadcasting:

NSTV Nordic Distributing:

TBS:

Time Warner:

Digital Terrestrial:

Satellite:

Cable:



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List of television stations in Germany


As one of the largest industrial nations and with the largest population in the European Union, Germany today offers a vast diversity of television stations.

ARD, consortium of German public broadcasting services, consisting of the following public stations (which also provide regional programming in separate channels):


RTL Group

ProSiebenSat.1 Media

Discovery Networks CEEMEA

Viacom

Others

Sky Deutschland

Sky

Disney Channels Worldwide

Studio100 Media

Turner Broadcasting System Germany

Fox Networks Group

MTV Networks

HD

Others

Special



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List of television stations in France


This is a list of TV services available on digital terrestrial, satellite, internet streaming and cable systems in France.

List available from 5 September 2016:

List available from 5 April 2016:

This is a list of channels carried by CanalSat, as of February 2016:



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Television in Estonia


Television in Estonia was introduced in 1955, following the Soviet government's decision to establish a television station in 1953. The National TV Channel ETV has maintained an archive since 1955 in which broadcasts of unique aspects of Estonian culture are held.

Northern Estonia receives television signals from Finland. During the 1970s and 1980s, Finnish broadcasts were more popular than Soviet-Estonian offerings until the Singing Revolution, with many Estonians enjoying Dallas and other programs portraying non-Communist lifestyles.

Digital television was officially launched on December 15, 2006 when the operator Eesti Digitaaltelevisiooni AS launched its pay service ZUUMtv, operated by Starman, on two multiplexes. In 2006, only ETV was available for free, but as of March 2009, there are already 7 free channels in digital broadcast. Digital television signal (DVB-T and DVB-H) is broadcast by Levira. DVB-C is provided by cable operators Starman, STV, Telset, telecommunications company Elion (also offering IPTV). Analog transmitters were turned off in July 2010.



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Television in Croatia


Television in Croatia was first introduced in 1956. As of 2012 there are 10 nationwide and 21 regional DVB-T (Digital Video Broadcasting – Terrestrial) television channels, and more than 30 other channels either produced in the Republic of Croatia or produced for the Croatian market and broadcast via IPTV (Internet Protocol television), cable or satellite television. The electronic communications market in Croatia is regulated by the Croatian Regulatory Authority for Network Industries (HAKOM), which issues broadcast licenses and monitors the market. The DVB-T and satellite transmission infrastructure is developed and maintained by the state-owned company Odašiljači i veze (OiV).

The first television signal broadcast in Croatia occurred in 1939 during the Zagreb Fair, where Philips showcased its television system. The first regular broadcasts started in 1956, when Television Zagreb was established as the first TV station in the Yugoslav Radio Television system. Color broadcasts began in 1975. Coverage and number of channels grew steadily, and by the 2000s there were four channels with nationwide coverage in Croatia. DVB-T signal broadcasts began in 2002, and in 2010 a full digital switchover was completed. During that period the IPTV, cable and satellite television markets grew considerably, and by 2011 only 60.7 percent of households received DVB-T television only; the remainder were subscribed to IPTV, cable and satellite TV in addition, or as the sole source of TV reception. As of January 2012 DVB-T is broadcast in three multiplexes, while the territory of Croatia is divided into nine main allotment regions and smaller local allotments corresponding to major cities. High-definition television (HDTV) is broadcast only through IPTV, although HDTV DVB-T test programming was broadcast from 2007 to 2011. A DVB-T2 test broadcast was conducted in 2011.



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List of television stations in Chile


List of television stations in Chile:



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Television in Bulgaria


Television in Bulgaria was introduced in 1959. Although the Bulgarian media market is small, it is one of the most vibrant and highly competitive in Central and Eastern Europe. Global players such as News Corporation, Modern Times Group, Central European Media Enterprises HD Sofia TV and Fox Broadcasting Company and others operate the biggest and most popular media outlets in the country.

In 1954, a team at the Machine and Electrotechnics Institute in Sofia (today called the Technical University of Sofia) started experimental television broadcasting with two antennas (one for sound and one for image) on the roof of a building near the Vasil Levski monument in the city, after having previously conducted successful cable test transmissions. These experimental broadcasts aroused the interest of the Ministry of Communications, which decided to build a broadcasting tower in Sofia, with a state-controlled channel to air from it. The new channel started with an unofficial broadcast on November 1, 1959, and made its first official broadcast several days later with the live coverage of the November 7 , commemorating the Russian Revolution of 1917. The experimental channel of the MEI did not air anything but a test chart on that day, although it did show a greeting to the new Sofia Television Station three times after 19:05. The MEI channel continued to operate until late 1960, when the team started working on the future introduction of color television.

The new channel, later referred to as "Bulgarian Television" (BT) used the OIRT standard of 625 lines and 25 frames per second. It also used the D/K audio system, which was generally done to prevent reception of Western European stations in Eastern Bloc countries. Public attention was quickly caught by the new medium, and the number of bought and registered television sets increased gradually. In 1960, a powerful 20 kilowatt transmitter was installed at Botev Peak, covering a large area of the country. Later, more transmitters and retranslators were placed in various cities, towns and villages around the country.



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