Television in Macedonia

Television in Republic of Macedonia was first introduced in 1964; it remains the most popular news medium. The public broadcaster is the Macedonian Radio-Television, founded in 1993. TEKO TV (1989) from Štip is the first private television channel in the country. Other popular private channels are: Sitel, Kanal 5, Telma, Alfa TV, and Alsat-M.Most private media are tied to political or business interests and state media tend to support the government. Public broadcast networks face stiff competition from commercial stations, which dominate the ratings. A European Union sponsored report says that with scores of TV and radio networks, the market is overcrowded and many local broadcasters are struggling to survive financially.[1]

DVB-T

DVB-T was introduced in Republic of Macedonia in November, 2009 as a Pay TV platform known as BoomTV by ONE. The platform includes the Republic of Macedonia channels with national frequency and the most popular world channels. Boom TV is using 3 multiplexes (MUX 1, MUX 2 and MUX 3). The DVB-T switch off in Macedonia has completed on 1 June 2013. MRD (Republic of Macedonia Broadcasting Council) operates and maintains the DVB-T network in the Republic of Macedonia and the public Macedonian Radio-Television using MUX 4 and MUX 5 while ONE operates the private national and local TV stations in Macedonia using MUX 6 and MUX 7.

The DVB-T transmissions in Macedonia are standard-definition and high-definition, MPEG-4, X7F modulation, 64-QAM, 2/3 Code-rate.

DVB-T Frequencies in Macedonia
Nationwide free-to-air DVB-T television channels in Macedonia
Name Owner Programming Type Encryption MUX
MRT 1 Macedonian Radio-Television General Public broadcaster Clear 4
MRT 2 Macedonian Radio-Television General Public broadcaster Clear 4
MRT 3 Macedonian Radio-Television General Public broadcaster Clear 4
MRT Sobraniski Kanal Macedonian Radio-Television Parliament Public broadcaster Clear 4
MRT 1 HD Macedonian Radio-Television General Public broadcaster Clear 5
Alsat-M TV Alsat-M General Private channel Clear 6
Kanal 5 TV Kanal 5 General Private channel Clear 6
Sitel TV TV Sitel General Private channel Clear 6
Alfa TV TV Alfa General Private channel Clear 6
Telma TV TV Telma General Private channel Clear 6
Regional free-to-air DVB-T television channels in Macedonia
Name Region Programming Type Encryption MUX
TV EDO D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV ERA D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV BTR D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Shutel D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV MTM D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Skopje D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Tikveshija D1 Skopje Regional Private channel Clear 7
KTV Kavadarci D1 Veles Regional Private channel Clear 7
Sitel 2 D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
K3 D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Plus D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
KRT D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Festa D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Hana D2 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Star D3 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV D1 D3 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Iris D3 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Vis D4 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Kobra D4 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV VTV D4 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Boem D5 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Vizhn-BM D5 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Uskana D5 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV NTV D6 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Kanal 3 D7 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Koha D8 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Menada D8 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Kiss D8 Regional Private channel Clear 7
TV Chegrani D8 Regional Private channel Clear 7

IPTV

On 17 November 2008, IPTV officially started in Macedonia when the country's first IPTV service, MaxTV, was launched by Makedonski Telekom.

Cable television

Cable television is highly developed, with cable television penetration in Skopje at 67% of all households. There are 49 cable TV providers with the two majors Blizoo and Telekabel holding 80% of the market. The two majors offer cable television in both analogue and digital, and they have also introduced triple play at the beginning of 2007.

Public television stations with national frequency

TV Channels at the state level through the operator of digital terrestrial multiplex[2]

TV Channels at the state level through public electronic communications network[3]

TV Channels at the state level through satellite[4]

TV Channels at the regional level through public electronic communications network that uses limited resources[5]

High-definition television stations

Macedonian television stations on satellite

International channels translated into Macedonian

Channels marked with an asterisk (*) have a Macedonian audio channel, all others have Macedonian subtitles only

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.