Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 2005, the slogan was changed to "Știri sau nu știi" ("News or you don't know"). On 12 December 2009, it became N24 Plus, becoming thus an information and entertainment The 2011 to 2022 and 2022-present idents of Național 24 Plus are identic with the idents of Național TV used from 2003 to 2004.
PRO TV (HD) – general [1] PRO TV Chișinău – general; PRO TV Internațional – international; Intact. Antena 1 (HD) – general; Antena 3 CNN (HD) – news; Antena Internațional (HD) – international; Antena Stars (HD) – entertainment; Happy Channel (HD) – feminine public; ZU TV (HD) – music; Doğan Media International SA. Kanal D ...
Duck TV (stylised ducktv) is a children's television channel which was launched in October 2007 as Bebe TV on UPC and was owned by WICKS Communications, and available in Hungary, Romania, Spain, Slovakia and Czech Republic.
Disney Junior is a Romanian pay television preschool channel owned by The Walt Disney Company Limited in London. [1] It was launched as a programming block in 1 June 2011, named as Disney Junior Pė Disney Channel and is Currently a channel since 1 March 2012. [2]
Disney Channel is a British-managed Romanian pay television channel owned by The Walt Disney Company Limited in London. [2] [1]It broadcasts for preschoolers and kids, and also for teenagers and adults, [3] from series and movies.
On 4 January 2008, the channel started broadcasting 24 hours a day in Romania. [11] Initially only TV provider Dolce offered the 24h feed. A CEE feed specifically for Romania and Hungary was launched, replacing Cartoon Network Poland on 1 October 2009. On 1 April 2015, the channel started broadcasting 24 hours a day in Hungary.
Monitorul de Cluj is the most read news portal in Cluj, the online extension of the daily newspaper, which has been published in Cluj since 1998. It publishes daily, in real time (24 hours a day, 7 days a week), news, reports, interviews, analyzes and investigations about all events in Cluj County , in Romania, and around the world.
Romania is the only EU state that didn't end analogue broadcasting because of low interest in terrestrial television. DVB-T tests began in 2005 with two channels in Bucharest and one in Sibiu using MPEG 2 for SD Channels and MPEG 4 for HD Channels.