Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Early modern period. Following the conquest of Granada in 1492, the offices of corregidor and regidor(es) were established in Granada. [1] While the Constitutive Charter granted by the Catholic Monarchs on 20 September 1500 has been traditionally framed by most authors as the point of origin of the city's municipal regime, the document has been more recently argued to rather be a reform or ...
Radio 87.7 "El dial que le hace viajar en el tiempo" 88.3 FM Radio Colosal 88.7 FM Radio 88 Stereo 91.1 FM Radio Puntarenas 91.7 FM On Radio - Jaco 91.9 FM Zoom Radio 93.5 FM and 670 AM Radio Monumental 95.5 FM 95.5 Jazz 96.3 FM Radio Centro 96.7 FM Radio Universidad de Costa Rica See: Radio stations of University of Costa Rica. 98.7 FM Radio ...
Radio stations: more than 100 privately owned radio stations and a public radio network (2007). [1] Radios: 980,000 (1997). [needs update] Television stations: multiple privately owned TV stations and 1 publicly owned TV station; cable network services are widely available (2007). [1] Television sets: 525,000 (1997). [needs update]
The following 3 digits indicate the service provider. However, their assignment is on a first-come first-served basis. Additionally, the same service provider has different numbers in each of the 5 telephone types, and those numbers are not contiguous. The assignment tables can be found at Superintendencia de Telecomunicaciones
Before 1994, all phone numbers in Costa Rica were six digits long. The Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad, which at that time had the monopoly on telecommunications, introduced a system in which the telephone numbers in every province were assigned a prefix to make them 7 digits long. This numbering system was effective for some time.
Repretel owns Costa Rican channels 4, 6, 11 and 2. [1] Repretel began operating in 1993 with Channel 9, in 2000 the lease expired and moved to Channel 4. [2] The company also operates 11 radio stations. [3] In 2012, Repretel bought Channel 2, from Mrs. Roxie Blen and branded the channel as CDR 2.
The Radio Club de Costa Rica (RCCR) (in English: Radio Club of Costa Rica) is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Costa Rica.Key membership benefits of the RCCR include a QSL bureau for those amateur radio operators in regular communications with other amateur radio operators in foreign countries, and a network to support amateur radio emergency communications.
Canal 4 is a private Costa Rican television channel, owned and operated by Repretel.It was the second television station acquired by Repretel in Costa Rica. The station broadcasts on channel 6.2 which the frequency is used by sister channel Canal 6 due to the original frequency being impossible to convert to digital until 2021.