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Channel 5 or Channel 5 HD (Full Name : Royal Thai Army Radio and Television Station; also known as Thai TV5 or simply TV5) is a Thai free-to-air public television network owned by the Royal Thai Army, launched on 25 January 1958.
The following television stations broadcast on digital channel 36 in the United States: [1] [2] [3] K36AB-D in Lawton, Oklahoma; K36AC-D in Yuma, Colorado, on virtual channel 47, which rebroadcasts K21NZ-D; K36AE-D in Clarkdale, Arizona, on virtual channel 10, which rebroadcasts KSAZ-TV; K36AI-D in Parowan/Enoch, etc., Utah
Allure Channel – Thailand; Brazzers TV – US (formerly Fresh! & Spice), New Zealand (formerly Spice:Xcess) Rush Stories – Thailand; Sexy Hot – Brazil; SexySat TV - Brazil, Netherlands, Slovakia; SpiceTV HD – Korea
Channel 3 or Channel 3 HD (Thai: ช่อง 3 เอชดี, formerly known as สถานีโทรทัศน์ไทยทีวีสีช่อง 3, lit. 'Thai Television Color Channel 3') [3] is a Thailand and Bangkok's first commercial free-to-air television network that was launched on 26 March 1970 as Thailand and Bangkok's first commercial television station.
HTVC – Ho Chi Minh City Cable Television - 7 pay channels (HTVC Thuần Việt, HTVC Gia Đình, HTVC Phụ Nữ, HTVC Phim, HTVC Du lịch, HTVC Ca Nhạc, HTVC+) 62 provincial television stations International Channels
TTV Channel 4 (later to TTV Channel 9 since 1970, M.C.O.T. Channel 9 in 1977 and Modernine TV in 2002 to 2015) Channel 3 (BEC-Bangkok Entertainment Company, under license from MCOT) (Defunct in 2020, Now all program was forced to move Digital TV Station on 3 HD)
Wireless LAN (WLAN) channels are frequently accessed using IEEE 802.11 protocols. The 802.11 standard provides several radio frequency bands for use in Wi-Fi communications, each divided into a multitude of channels numbered at 5 MHz spacing (except in the 45/60 GHz band, where they are 0.54/1.08/2.16 GHz apart) between the centre frequency of the channel.
From 1 June 1970 to 1974, the channel migrated from broadcasting in black-and-white at 525-lines on VHF channel 4 to a colour using a 625-line system on VHF channel 9 (the second in Southeast Asia). On 3 February 1977, the Thai Television Company was dissolved and channel 9 was put under direct State administration.
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