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Vivo (Portuguese for 'Live', as in Live Broadcasting, or 'Alive'), known as Vivo Brazil, is a brand of Telefônica Brasil, a subsidiary of Telefónica and the largest telecommunications company in Brazil.
Vivo TV is a Brazilian pay television provider, owned by the Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica, through its subsidiary in the country, Vivo. It provides digital cable , satellite and IPTV services.
In 2023, Vivo was ranked among the top 5 smartphone makers, achieving a global market share of 10%. [12] In April 2021, three pallets of Vivo phones caught fire at Hong Kong International Airport, prompting a ban on air freight of Vivo phones through Hong Kong. [13] In June 2022, Vivo entered the world-famous Guinness Book of Records. [14]
Vivo Film, an Italian film production company; Vivo Italian Kitchen, a restaurant at Universal Orlando Resort, Florida, US; Vivo Software, an American streaming media company acquired by RealNetworks in 1998; Vivo TV, a Brazilian pay television operator; Vivo!, a retail-park brand of the Austrian real-estate company Immofinanz
Vivo Software was a pioneer internet streaming media company which was acquired by RealNetworks in March 1998. Vivo Software designed the Vivo Video/Audio platform, including its encoding tools and end-user VivoActive Player. The Vivo format, obsolete today, was one of the first to be designed and used for internet streaming.
Vivo; Usage on fr.wikipedia.org Vivo (entreprise) Usage on it.wikipedia.org Vivo (telecomunicazioni) Usage on ja.wikipedia.org ヴィーヴォ (ブラジルの企業) Usage on pt.wikipedia.org Vivo; Usage on pt.wikinews.org Vivo teria bloqueado outros aplicativos além do WhatsApp; Telefônica anuncia fim da GVT; Usage on ru.wikipedia.org Vivo S.A.
CELPE-Bras (Portuguese: Certificado de Proficiência em Língua Portuguesa para Estrangeiros, "Certificate of Proficiency in Portuguese for Foreigners") is the only certificate of proficiency in Brazilian Portuguese as a second language officially recognized and developed by the Brazilian Ministry of Education.
Brazilian Portuguese (Portuguese: português brasileiro; [poʁtuˈɡejz bɾaziˈlejɾu]) is the set of varieties of the Portuguese language native to Brazil. [4] [5] It is spoken by almost all of the 203 million inhabitants of Brazil and spoken widely across the Brazilian diaspora, today consisting of about two million Brazilians who have emigrated to other countries.