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ARD, consortium of German public broadcasting services, consisting of the following public stations (which also provide regional programming in separate channels): Das Erste (The First) (ARD) ARD-alpha — German education channel, with TV courses; One; tagesschau24; Bayerischer Rundfunk (BR) BR Fernsehen; Hessischer Rundfunk (HR) hr-fernsehen
Prior to 30 April 2012 there were eight free-to-air HDTV channels originating in Germany broadcast via satellite: Das Erste HD, ZDF HD, Arte HD, Anixe HD, [16] EinsFestival HD, [17] sonnenklar.TV HD, QVC HD and HSE24 HD. [18]
The service is available in 32 languages. DW's satellite television service consists of channels in English, Spanish, and Arabic. [4] The work of DW is regulated by the Deutsche Welle Act, [note 1] [5] stating that content is intended to be independent of government influence. DW is a member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). [6]
European countries have a tradition of most television services being free-to-air. Germany, in particular, receives in excess of 100 digital satellite TV channels free-to-air. Approximately half of the television channels on SES Astra's 19.2° east and 28.2° east satellite positions, and Eutelsat's Hot Bird (13° east) are free-to-air.
209.2 Satellite channels. 210 Taiwan. Toggle Taiwan subsection. 210.1 Free-to-air networks. 211 Tajikistan. ... National Geographic Channel (Germany) Nat Geo Wild ...
Federal Republic of Germany: ProSiebenSat.1 Welt: ProSiebenSat.1 Media: in the U.S. and Canada, programming from the German television channels ProSieben, Sat.1, Kabel 1 and N24: RTL International: RTL Group: External broadcasting service of RTL Television (2016-2017) Dolphin TV: German Television Channel based in Florida (discontinued in May 2007)
In 1996, Kirch Media launched a digital satellite platform called DF1, which offered several different channels, including premium movie and sports channels and basically, thematic channels. Premiere started broadcasting three digital channels in 1997, one channel mirroring the analogue channel and two showing the same content at different times.
On 1 April 1992, Deutsche Welle inherited RIAS-TV's broadcast facilities, using them to start a German and English-language television channel broadcast via satellite, DW (TV), adding a short Spanish broadcast segment the following year. In 1995, it began 24-hour operation (12 hours in German, 10 hours in English, two hours in Spanish).