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Serbia Broadband (branded as SBB; full legal name: Serbia Broadband - Srpske kablovske mreže d.o.o.) is a cable television and broadband internet service provider in Serbia. The SBB company operates as part of the United Group , leading media and telecommunication operator in Southeastern Europe .
Television in Serbia was introduced in 1958. It remains the most popular of the media in Serbia —according to 2009 survey, Serbian people watch on average 6 hours of television per day, making it the highest average in Europe .
The situation changed in 2002 when Serbia Broadband (SBB), then a growing cable operator, approached subscribers with a cable Internet option of a tariff based 128 kbit/s access. As of 2019 SBB offers speeds up to 300 Mbit/s. In 2005 Telekom Srbija started offering ADSL2+ service and in 2013 added VDSL2 service.
On 13 March 2012, the biggest Serbian cable network Serbia Broadband became the main sponsor, and the team changed its name to SBB Vukovi Beograd. After winning the national title against their fiercest rival the Wild Boars once again, Vukovi lost the CEFL finals against Ljubljana Silverhawks with 34–21.
Serbia has a developed and efficient telephone network infrastructure. Domestic line system is 100% digital, with digital cable trunk line connecting switching centres. A drop in fixed-line connections in the last decade has been more than offset by a sharp increase in mobile-cellular telephone use.
United Group was formed in 2007, as a Luxembourg-registered multinational entity, in a merger of Serbia Broadband (SBB) and two companies named Telemach, one in Slovenia and the other in Bosnia and Herzegovina. [1] Telemach Montenegro became a part of United Group in 2014. Telemach acquired Tušmobil on 1 April 2015. [2]
Srbijavoz (Serbian Cyrillic: Србијавоз; formerly Srbija Voz, Serbian Cyrillic: Србија Воз, Anglicized: Serbia Train) is the national passenger railway company of Serbia. Srbijavoz is an associate member of the International Union of Railways (UIC) since 2016.
Serbia and Montenegro received the code of +381 following the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992 (which had +38 as country code). Montenegro switched to +382 after its independence in 2006, so +381 is now used only by Serbia. [2] An example for calling telephones in Belgrade, Serbia is as follows: