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Television in Cyprus
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Television in Cyprus was introduced in 1956. In 1957, CyBC was created.[1] Private TV was introduced on 26 April 1992, by the church owned Logos TV which started its transmissions in stereo and Teletext from day one. In August 1995, Logos also introduced the first internet service provider in Cyprus, LOGOSNET. By the mid-1990s, Cyprus had five free-to-air television channels, with the appearance of ANT1 Cyprus and Sigma TV.[2] The Republic of Cyprus currently uses the PAL colour system and has converted terrestrial transmissions to digital on 1 July 2011, in line with EU policy. Because of the political division of the island, television companies are also divided.
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (June 2012) |
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Republic of Cyprus
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Terrestrial digital transmission is now available in Cyprus (parallel analogue transmissions ended finally on 1 July 2011).[3] Satellite digital transmission is available through Nova platform. Athina Sat, another provider, was launched in May 2005 but ceased operations in 2008. CytaVision and PrimeTel both offer digital TV through IPTV transmission and Cablenet through its privately owned cable network (in certain urban areas).
Free-to-air
Public Stations
- CyBC 1 (Aglandjia) (ΡΙΚ 1)
- CyBC 2 (Aglandjia) (ΡΙΚ 2)
- CyBC HD (Aglandjia) (ΡΙΚ HD)
- ERT News (Agia Paraskevi)
- ERT World (Agia Paraskevi)
Private Channels
- Alpha TV Cyprus (Nicosia)
- ANT1 Cyprus (Nicosia)
- Capital TV (Limassol)
- Omega TV (Nicosia)
- One Channel (Limassol)
- Plus (Limassol and Nicosia)
- Sigma TV (Nicosia)
- Smile TV Cyprus (Limassol)
- Vergina (Nicosia and Limassol)
The private channels ANT1 Cyprus, Plus TV, Omega, Sigma and New Extra (a predecessor of One Channel) formed Velister which carries their digital programming. It's thought that Velister covered the whole south region of Cyprus before the analogue switch off on 1 July 2011. Reception of free to air digital channels varies across the country.
Pay TV
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