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Archive and program funds of the Czech Television (Archiv a programové fondy České televize; abbreviation APF) is a specialized archive of the Czech Television. [1] Organizationally, it is divided into three separate departments in Prague , Brno and Ostrava .
Czech Television (Czech: Česká televize [ˈtʃɛskaː ˈtɛlɛvɪzɛ]; abbreviation: ČT) is a public television broadcaster in the Czech Republic, broadcasting six channels. Established after breakup of Czechoslovakia in 1992, it is the successor to Czechoslovak Television founded in 1953.
České Radiokomunikace was speculated by media to be the likeliest new operator, but it decided to not participate in the tender. Telefónica Czech Republic , T-Mobile , Livebox, and current operator Visual Unity (renamed from KIT digital Czech) decided to participate. [ 14 ]
ČT1 (ČT Jedna, Česká televize 1, "Jednička") is a Czech public television channel, operated by Czech Television. ČT1 is a general purpose channel, showing family-oriented television, Czech movies, children's programming, news and documentaries.
After launching the broadcast, the program ČT :D and, consequently, the sister program ČT art, which are broadcast on multiplex 1a, became a target of criticism due to the inability to tune this program. [6] [7] The most frequent reasons are insufficient signal coverage or the necessary change in the antenna system. [8]
ČT edu is a web portal of the Czech Television, which offers teachers, pupils and parents thousands of short videos to supplement teaching.Videos cover topics from pre-school, primary and secondary education and are divided according to grades, but also according to subjects and the specific subject they cover.
Olesya Taylor and her 12-year-old daughter Olivia were among the 67 people who died in the D.C. plane crash on Jan. 29. Friend Olga Konopelko, who spoke with Olesya shortly before the doomed ...
After the Velvet Revolution in 1989, Czechoslovak Television (ČST) started broadcasting its third station, OK3, in May 1990. [2] Further changes took place on September 3, 1990, when the existing ČST I program became the nationwide federal channel F1. the program was divided into two national stations: the Czech ČTV and the Slovak S1.