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In the course of the radio reform, Vikerraadio was merged with the I program (the name remained the I program). A new Estonian Radio station started operating on the frequency of program II - a self-sustaining commercial station aimed at young people, Raadio 2, which was broadcast for the first time from the 10th floor of the new Radio Building on May 1, 1993.
Eesti Rahvusringhääling (ERR) – Estonian Public Broadcasting – is a publicly funded and owned radio and television organisation created in Estonia on 1 June 2007 to take over the functions of the formerly separate Eesti Raadio (ER) (Estonian Radio) and Eesti Televisioon (ETV) (Estonian Television), under the terms of the Estonian National Broadcasting Act.
Radio Maximum (in Russian language) (Tallinn 100.0 FM, Kohtla-Jarve 96.3 FM and Narva 100.0 FM) Radio Svoboda (RFE/RL Russian service) (DAB+ in Tallinn, Pärnu and Tartu) SSS-Radio (Finnish-language station) (Tallinn 93.7 FM) BFBS Radio (in English language) (Camp Tapa 94.9 FM) BFBS Radio 2 (in English language) (Camp Tapa 89.2 FM)
Eesti Kanal – retro channel. SmartZone – young entertainment channel. KidZone Max – children channel. Mostly for older children aged 6-12 years. KidZone Mini – children channel. Mostly for children aged 6-12 years. FilmZone – movies channel. FilmZone Plus – movies channel. TV3 – news, current affairs and general entertainment channel.
Vikerraadio is an Estonian national radio channel of Eesti Rahvusringhääling (formerly Eesti Raadio). [1] It began broadcasting on April 3, 1967. Ingrid Peek has been the editor-in-chief since August 7, 2017.
In 2007, Estonian Radio and Estonian Television were merged, and Eesti Rahvusringhääling (Estonian Public Broadcasting, ERR) was established. ERR has five radio stations. There are around 35 private radio stations with programmes broadcast both in Estonian and in Russian, and radio is the primary source of information for 51% of Estonia
ETV2's former logo (2008—2018) ETV2 (Estonian: ETV kaks) is the second channel of the Estonian Public Broadcasting (ERR) focusing on children's programming during the day and providing cultural content in the evening.
In 2006, only ETV was available for free, but as of March 2009, there are already 7 free channels in digital broadcast. [4] [5] 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). [6]