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Canal 4; Country: El Salvador: Headquarters: Alameda Dr. Manuel Araujo Km. 6½ San Salvador: Programming; Language(s) Spanish: Picture format: 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 480i for the SDTV feed) Ownership; Owner: Telecorporación Salvadoreña: Sister channels: Canal 2 Canal 6 TCS+: History; Launched: 4 January 1959; 65 years ago () Former names ...
Telecorporación Salvadoreña (TCS) is a television network corporation in El Salvador. Telecorporación Salvadoreña is a group of local television stations formed by channels 2, 4, 6, and TCS+. Telecorporación Salvadoreña is a group of local television stations formed by channels 2, 4, 6, and TCS+.
YSU 4: Canal Cuatro - Telecorporacion Salvadoreña; YSLA 6: Canal Seis - Telecorporacion Salvadoreña; YSWE 8: Canal Ocho - Agape TV; YSAL 9: Canal Nueve - Legislative Assembly Channel; YSTVE 10: Canal Diez - Televisión de El Salvador; YSTU 11: Canal Once - Red Salvadoreña de Medios; YSWX 12: Canal Doce - Red Salvadoreña de Medios
Pages in category "Television stations in El Salvador" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. ... Canal 4 (Salvadoran TV channel) Canal 6 ...
Later it was founded as a successor to two former public stations called Televisión Educativa de El Salvador (Canal 10) from 1964 to 1968, and would return transmitting with Canal 8 on 29 January 1973; which those two channels lasted until 1989 when Canal 8 went signed off, leaving Canal 10 the only public TV channel at the time. [4]
The channel started broadcasting on November 30, 1965. The channel's callsign is YSR-TV which is founded by Boris Eserski, owner of the YSR radio station. The station initially broadcast an educational service, similar to Canal 10, but in 1966, the station was facing problems and began a strategic union with Canal 4 in order to keep the station afloat.
In times, Channel 2 had been preferred by some audience. In July 1966, an agreement is signed to operate Canal 4. On 6 April 1973, Canal Seis SA relaunched the company through YSLA-TV, which was the first to introduce color television. In 1986, together with Canal 2 and 4, Canal 6 was merged to form Telecorporación Salvadoreña.
Calling code: +503 [1]; International call prefix: 00 [5]; Fixed lines: 1.1 million lines in use, 74th in the world (2012). [1]Mobile cellular: 8.7 million lines, 88th in the world (2012); [1] in 2007 the number of mobile phones exceeded the country's population giving the country a 1.06 per capita cellphone penetration rate.