Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Canada Wire and Cable – manufacturer, acquired by Alcatel [1] Carling O'Keefe – brewery, acquired by Molson; Chapters – acquired by Indigo Books and Music; Cineplex Odeon – acquired by Loews Theatres; Consumers Distributing – catalogue retail store chain; CTV (Canadian Television) – acquired by Bell Globemedia; formerly Baton ...
Videon Cablesystems (also Videon Cable-TV or Metro Videon Community Antenna Television Inc.) was a Canadian cable television service in Manitoba, Alberta, and for a short period, northwest Ontario. The company was owned by Moffat Communications Ltd. and Randall L. Moffat was its president.
XO provided managed and converged Internet Protocol (IP) network services for small and medium-sized enterprises. [1] XO delivered services through a mix of fiber-based Ethernet and Ethernet over Copper (EoC). [2] In addition, the company had external network-to-network interface (E-NNI) agreements with traditional carriers and cable companies. [2]
Limited availability over-the-air, but is available on cable throughout the province. TVOntario, a publicly owned educational station in Ontario owned by the government of Ontario. Available over-the-air and on cable throughout the province.
Rogers Cable is Canada's largest cable television service provider with about 2.25 million television customers, and over 930,000 Internet subscribers, primarily in Southern and Eastern Ontario, New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador. Rogers Cable is a division of Rogers Communications Canada Inc., the operating unit of Rogers ...
Viewers of Chinavision, namely in Toronto area had to obtain a converted box that had to connected to their existing cable boxes to decode signals for the channel. [4] Thus Chinavision was only available to cable subscribers only. In 1991 Chinavision had about 110,000 subscribers across Canada (Toronto, Vancouver, Edmonton and Calgary). [5]
This wiring scheme constitutes a crossover cable. A crossover cable may also be used to connect two hubs or two switches on their upstream ports. Because the only difference between the T568A and T568B pin and pair assignments are that pairs 2 and 3 are swapped, a crossover cable may be envisioned as a cable with one modular connector following ...
Eastlink was the first [14] major Canadian cable company to offer competitive local telephone service in its territory in 1999 over a fibre optic network. [15] In 2005, the area code 902 telephone market was the most competitive telephone exchange in North America [ according to whom? ] and this was credited to Eastlink's presence in the market.