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Taiwan Television Enterprise, Ltd. (Chinese: 臺灣電視公司; pinyin: Táiwān Diànshì Gōngsī; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tâi-ôan-tiān-sī-kong-si), commonly known as TTV and formerly known as Central Television and Voice of Taiwan, is the first terrestrial television station in Taiwan. [1]
Taiwan terminated over-the-air analog broadcasting on 30 June 2012, and the remainder of the analog system ended in 2014, when the analog cable television broadcasts were terminated. The first three free-to-air analogue terrestrial television stations, using the American NTSC system, were launched during the 1960s and 1970s:
Pages in category "Television stations in Taiwan" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
In 2007, Taiwan Indigenous Television (TITV), Hakka TV, and Taiwan Macroview Television (MACTV) join Taiwan Broadcasting System, completed the structure of TBS. [ 2 ] In 2020 the Taiwanese Ministry of Culture announced that they would be providing PTS with funding to produce English language programming. [ 1 ]
Taiwan Broadcasting System (TBS; Chinese: 台灣公共廣播電視集團), founded 1 July 2006, is a public broadcasting group that operates 8 television channels in Taiwan. It also owns 2 ( CTS and PTS ) of the five major Taiwan television networks (the other are TTV , CTV and FTV ).
Early forays to digital television started on Taiwan on July 1, 2004. The main channels started to use SDTV format with analog signal which had been carried out for decades. Taiwan's first HDTV channel HiHD (which belonged to PTS) started on February 1, 2008 with test transmissions throughout the country, mainly in the northern region. Official ...
TVBS News (Chinese: TVBS新聞台) is a Taiwanese pay television channel. Launched in 1995, it is the first 24-hour nationwide news channel in the country. Launched in 1995, it is the first 24-hour nationwide news channel in the country.
Established on March 27, 1996, FTV began broadcasting on June 11, 1997 as the first free-to-air television station established without direct relationship to a political party or the Taiwanese government. On May 24, 2004, FTV was among the first free-to-air channels in Taiwan to switch from terrestrial analog signal to digital television. [1]