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Oi Fixo (landline service, formerly Telefone Telemar) Oi Móvel (mobile service, cornerstone of the Oi brand) Oi Velox (ADSL, 3G formerly Velox) Oi Internet (ISP) 31 (long-distance and international calling) Oi Wi-Fi (Wi-Fi access, at home or via hotspots) Oi TV (DTH pay TV) Oi Voip (Voice over IP) In 2010, Portugal Telecom acquired 22.4% of Oi ...
Oi, which was once Brazil's fourth-largest mobile carrier, filed for judicial reorganization in 2016, selling its mobile division (Oi Móvel) in 2020 to a consortium formed by the three largest operators. In 2022, the sale was approved by the regulatory agency Anatel and Oi's 36.5 million mobile customers were transferred to TIM (40%), Claro ...
14 Oi (formerly Brasil Telecom) 15 Vivo; 21 Claro (formerly Embratel) 23 Intelig Telecom; 25 GVT; 31 Oi (formerly Telemar) 41 TIM; 43 Sercomtel; 65 CGB Voip Informática e Comunicação; Area codes in Brazil are popularly known as "DDD codes" (códigos DDD) or simply "DDD", from the initials of "direct distance dialing" (discagem direta à ...
Until the 1990s, the city of Paranaíba, in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul and served by Companhia Telefônica do Brasil Central (now Algar Telecom) used the code 176. Today, this city, like the others in this state, use the area code 67.
Vivo (Portuguese for 'Live', as in Live Broadcasting, or 'Alive'), known as Vivo Brazil, is a brand of Telefônica Brasil, a subsidiary of Telefónica and the largest telecommunications company in Brazil. It is headquartered in the Brooklin Novo neighborhood of São Paulo.
Brasil Telecom S.A. (Brazilian Portuguese pronunciation: [bɾaˈziw teleˈkõw]; BrT) was a major Brazilian telecommunications company headquartered in the Brazilian capital of Brasilia. The company was one of three landlines and eight mobile telephone companies – and only long-distance service provider – that emerged in Brazil following ...
Black logo, used from 1995 to 1996 (similar to the American Broadcasting Company logo).. The Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão (Brazilian Portuguese: [sisˈtemɐ bɾaziˈlejɾu dʒi televiˈzɐ̃w]; SBT [ˈɛsi ˈbe ˈte]; "Brazilian Television System") is a Brazilian free-to-air television network founded on Wednesday, 19 August 1981, by the businessman and television personality Silvio Santos.
The daily average of TV sets turned on dropped from 65% in 1982–1991 to 42% in 2008. [11] In the decade, the top five TV networks in the country lost altogether 4.3% of their share. [12] SBT lost 44% of its viewership in the prime time, while Globo lost 9%. [13]