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  2. Television in Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_in_Serbia

    Serbia has a total of 7 national free-to-air channels, which can be viewed throughout the country. These are RTS1, RTS2 and RTS3 from the country’s public network Radio Television of Serbia, as well as private channels TV2, Prva, B92, Pink and Happy. These free-to-air channels require a subscription, which is paid via the electricity bill.

  3. DVB-T2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVB-T2

    In March 2006, DVB decided to study options for an upgraded DVB-T standard. In June 2006, a formal study group named TM-T2 (Technical Module on Next Generation DVB-T) was established by the DVB Group to develop an advanced modulation scheme that could be adopted by a second generation digital terrestrial television standard, to be named DVB-T2.

  4. List of digital television deployments by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_digital_television...

    [70] [71] This time, in addition to H.264 being used as the codec, the broadcast utilised DVB-T2 rather than the DVB-T used by standard Freeview and the earlier test broadcasts, thus requiring users to purchase new reception equipment. Freeview HD was the first operational TV service in the world to use the DVB-T2 standard. [72]

  5. Radio Television of Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Television_of_Serbia

    RTS1 is the oldest television station in Serbia, launched on 23 August 1958 as Televizija Beograd. It is available nationally free-to-air and is the most watched television channel in the country beating the other two most popular television networks in Serbia, RTV Pink and Prva . [ 31 ]

  6. Digital television transition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_television_transition

    Fiji: Introduced its DVB-T2 digital terrestrial service called Walesi in testing phase 2016 and rolled out to public in December 2017. Switchover was planned to start in 2020. No completion date yet. [300] Kiribati: DTT in DVB-T2 form was introduced with help from Papua New Guinea in 2018, first rolling out in the main island Tarawa. No ...

  7. ATSC standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATSC_standards

    ATSC standards are marked A/x (x is the standard number) and can be downloaded for free from the ATSC's website at ATSC.org. ATSC Standard A/53, which implemented the system developed by the Grand Alliance, was published in 1995; the standard was adopted by the Federal Communications Commission in the United States in 1996.

  8. Digital terrestrial television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_terrestrial_television

    DVB-T (and even more so DVB-T2) are tolerant of multipath distortion and are designed to work in single-frequency networks. Developments in video compression have resulted in improvements on the original discrete cosine transform (DCT) based H.262 MPEG-2 video coding format , which has been surpassed by H.264/MPEG-4 AVC and more recently H.265 ...

  9. Telekom Srbija - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telekom_Srbija

    Telekom Srbija a.d. Beograd is a Serbian state-owned telecommunications operator. It was founded in May 1997 as a joint-stock company, by spinning off the telecommunications business from PTT Srbija (present-day Pošta Srbije). In April 2015, Telekom Srbija started providing all services in Serbia under the mts brand. [4] [5] [6]