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Televisión Boliviana (Bolivia TV) is the first television channel of Bolivia and serves the only means of television communication from the government. The channel was established in August 1969 under the government of Luis Adolfo Siles after years of planning by the government of then-recently deceased René Barrientos. [2]
Teleoriente consolidated its position as a local television station when, in 1991, it affiliated with Red ATB, enabling its programs to be seen in seven of the nine departments of Bolivia. In 1993, the station introduced a new building, which as of 2008 was still in use.
TGV-TV: 3 (Guatemala City)| 10: Canal 3 - El Súper Canal (Televisión Guatemalteca - Albavisión) TGCE-TV: 5 (Guatemala City) | 12: TV Maya (Academy of Mayan Languages of Guatemala); formerly known as Cultural and Educational TV (military channel)
Red Uno Santa Cruz is a Bolivian television station licensed to Santa Cruz de la Sierra.Operating on VHF channel 13 (digital channel 35, PSIP 13.1), it is both an owned-and-operated station and the flagship station of Red Uno de Bolivia, and one of the oldest private television stations in the country.
The station gained national notoriety on May 12, 2020 for being the first television channel in Bolivia to air the weather in a native language . [ 4 ] On November 20, 2023, UPEA Televisión started digital terrestrial broadcasts on virtual channel 25.1 in high definition.
Honduras was the first country in Central America to adopt a Digital TV standard, ATSC in 2007. Currently there are three digital channels broadcasting: "TEN Canal 10" was the first digital TV station in Honduras. It began broadcasting in 2007 in SDTV.
Red ATB (Asociación Teledifusora Boliviana) is a Bolivian free-to-air television channel.Its origins date back to 20 October 1984 in La Paz, when Paceña de Television (Channel 9) began broadcasting.
TVU is the second-oldest television channel in La Paz, after Televisión Boliviana, which until 1980 was the only television station in the city. [2] Between 1976 and 1980, Bolivia was setting up a network of university television stations. While these stations were funded by the government, they had independent management.