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Royal Thai Army Radio and Television (TV5 HD) 7. T Sports 7. 10. Thai Parliament Television (TPTV) 11. NBT Regional 11 (Broadcast in each region to 4 sectors, to consist of) NBT North (Main Station in Chiang Mai, Broadcast in the Northern Region and Lopburi) NBT Northeast (Main Station in Khon Kaen, Broadcast in the Northeastern Region)
NBT World, launched in 2013, is the network's 24/7 English language television service aimed for Thai, ASEAN and Asian communities broadcast Internationally via cable and satellite. (Currently broadcast and can only be watching via the station page [6] since 1 October 2022) However NBT World is owned by National News Bureau of Thailand which is ...
The digital terrestrial television system was launched in Thailand in 2014. it employs DVB-T2 as its digital encoding standard.. The Broadcast Commission (BC) under the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) announced in the last quarter of 2013 that it plans to give DTTV license through open auction within December 2013.
Channel 8 ( ช่อง 8) is a Thai digital television channel that broadcasts entertainment, foreign TV series, and sports. It is owned and operated by RS Multimedia Company Limited (thru RS Vision Company Limited) (a subsidiary of RS Group ). The channel is based in Bangkok, Thailand, where it is available on both C and KU bands. [1]
Digital: 40 (MUX#3: MCOT) Virtual: 30. History. Former call signs. HST-TV [1] Former channel number (s) 4 (1955-1975) Channel 9 MCOT HD ( Thai: ช่อง 9 เอ็มคอตเอชดี) is a Thai state-owned free-to-air television network launched on 24 June 1955. It is owned by MCOT .
Line TV. Watch live (Thailand only) Thairath TV ( Thai: ไทยรัฐทีวี) is a digital terrestrial television channel owned by Triple V Broadcast Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of the news publisher, Thairath, which was owned by Vacharaphol Co., Ltd., launched in April 2014 after they won a digital television broadcast license. [1]
In September 2018, Channel 3 (owned by BEC and MCOT) was the last broadcaster to broadcast analog television services in Thailand. The network made the move to digital television in late 2019 on VHF while analogue television ceased transmission on 26 March 2020 at 00:00 am ( UTC+7 ), exactly 50 years after the channel's launch.
World Heritage Sites. Thailand portal. v. t. e. In Thailand, television broadcasting started on 24 June, 1955 (in NTSC ). [1] Color telecasts ( PAL, System B/G 625 lines) were started in 1967, and full-time color transmissions were launched in 1975. As of November 2020, there are currently 21 digital ( DVB-T2) TV channels in Thailand .