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National Broadcasting Services of Thailand (Thai: สถานีวิทยุโทรทัศน์แห่งประเทศไทย, romanized: Sathani Witthayu Thorathat Haeng Prathet Thai) (NBT) is the public broadcasting arm of the Government Public Relations Department (PRD), a division of the Thai Government. It operates ...
The 2007 constitution instead called for the creation of a single regulatory agency, and the new Act on Organization to Assign Radio Frequency and to Regulate the Broadcasting and Telecommunication Services, B.E. 2553 was passed in 2010. The first 11-member commission of the NBTC, to serve under terms of six years, was appointed in September ...
FM 92.5 MHz – Radio Thailand National Radio Network Bangkok FM 95.0 MHz – Malay language services in Yala FM 105.0 MHz – Happy Family Radio (for children, youth and families)
Thai PBS tested its broadcast by connecting to a temporary signal for broadcasting to the special programs chart which had been appropriated by Television of Thailand (TVT or TV 11 Thailand) at TVT New Phetchaburi Road Broadcasting Station. (presently National News Bureau of Thailand headquarters and NBT World TV Station and formerly UHF ...
Television was first officially introduced to Thailand on 24 June 1955 in NTSC. [1] One of the first broadcasters of television were the Mass Communication Organization of Thailand, which was established on 10 November 1952. In the first few years, viewership was low before gradually climbing to 2000 in 1957.
National Broadcasting Services of Thailand (NBT) [1] [28] Radio Thailand. Radio Thailand for Learning and Warning Network (Formerly Known as National Education Radio) Radio Thailand World Service; NBT Digital 2 HD. NBT Regional 11 (Separate broadcasting on 4 areas but HD only Central Area TV Program Chart)
Radio Thailand World Service is the official international broadcasting station of Thailand.It was launched on 20 October 1938 under callsign HSK-9. Owned by the National Broadcasting Services of Thailand, the station broadcasts in 10 languages: Thai, English, Chinese, Burmese, Lao, Khmer, Malay, German, Japanese and Vietnamese.
On World Press Freedom Day 2015, four of Thailand's professional media organizations issued a joint statement calling for the military government to revoke onerous press restrictions and cease political interference with the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission of Thailand.