From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Digital terrestrial television in Estonia, was officially launched on 15 December 2006, when the operator Zuum TV launched its pay service on two multiplexes. [1] Transmissions are made with MPEG-4 AVC compression using the DVB-T standard. A DVB-T2 standard-based network (Multiplex 7) has been created for HD-quality TV picture transmission. [2]

In June 2007, Levira and ETV announced that they had agreed to launch an HDTV trial in July 2007. [3]

In November 2007, a third multiplex was launched, covering almost all of the country. This multiplex was to be used by free-to-air services, while the two existing national multiplexes would only carry pay channels. Hence the public channel ETV was transferred to the new multiplex. [4] At this time there are only five free-to-air channels (ETV, ETV2, ETV+, TallinnaTV, France 24) while others are pay-TV channels, offered by AS Elisa. [5]

As of January 2019, There are 3 High Definition and 39 Standard Definition channels on these multiplexes: [6]

LCN Channel Language MUX
1. ETV Estonian 1
2. ETV2 Estonian 1
3. Kanal 2 Estonian 6
4. TV3 Estonian 6
5. Tallinna TV Estonian 1
6. AntenniTV info Estonian 1
7. ETV+ Estonian

Russian

1
9. France 24 English 6
10 TVP World English 6
12. Duo 4 Estonian 2
13 TV6 Estonia Estonian 2
14. Duo 5 Estonian 3
15. Euronews English

Russian

3
16. Viasat History English

Russian

Estonian subtilties

6
18 Fox Life English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
19. Fox English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
20. Duo 3 English
Russian
2
21. Filmzone English

Russian

Estonian subtitles

3
22. Duo 6 English

Russian subtilties

2
23. RTL TV German 6
24. Filmzone+ English

Russian

Estonian subtitles

3
25. Investigation Discovery English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

2
26. Discovery Channel English

Russian

2
27. National Geographic Channel English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
28. Animal Planet English

Russian

2
29. History Channel English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

2
31. Kidzone TV Estonian

Russian

2
32. Pingviniukas Estonian

Russian

3
34 Eurosport English

Russian

2
35 Eurosport 2 English

Russian

3
36. Setanta Eurasia Russian

English

2
38. MyHits Estonian 3
39. TLC English

Russian

3
40. Travel English

Russian

6
43. RTR Planeta Russian 6
44. TV3 Plus Russian 2
45 PBK (Estonia) Russian 2
46. Ren-TV Estonia Russian 6
47. NTV Mir Russian 2
50. Hustler TV English 3
201 ETV HD Estonian

Russian Subtitle

7
202 ETV2 HD Estonian

Russian Subtitle

7
205 TallinnaTV HD Estonian 7

See also

References

  1. ^ "Estonia - Official launch of DTT services". DigiTAG. 15 December 2006. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  2. ^ "Teenused telekanalitele". Levira (in Estonian). Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Levira and ETV agreed to start HD transmissions over DTT" (Press release). Levira. 4 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 June 2007.
  4. ^ Third DTT mux for Estonia : Broadband TV News
  5. ^ "Terrestrial TV broadcasting". Levira. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  6. ^ "LEVIRA DTT" (PDF). Retrieved 29 January 2019.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Digital terrestrial television in Estonia, was officially launched on 15 December 2006, when the operator Zuum TV launched its pay service on two multiplexes. [1] Transmissions are made with MPEG-4 AVC compression using the DVB-T standard. A DVB-T2 standard-based network (Multiplex 7) has been created for HD-quality TV picture transmission. [2]

In June 2007, Levira and ETV announced that they had agreed to launch an HDTV trial in July 2007. [3]

In November 2007, a third multiplex was launched, covering almost all of the country. This multiplex was to be used by free-to-air services, while the two existing national multiplexes would only carry pay channels. Hence the public channel ETV was transferred to the new multiplex. [4] At this time there are only five free-to-air channels (ETV, ETV2, ETV+, TallinnaTV, France 24) while others are pay-TV channels, offered by AS Elisa. [5]

As of January 2019, There are 3 High Definition and 39 Standard Definition channels on these multiplexes: [6]

LCN Channel Language MUX
1. ETV Estonian 1
2. ETV2 Estonian 1
3. Kanal 2 Estonian 6
4. TV3 Estonian 6
5. Tallinna TV Estonian 1
6. AntenniTV info Estonian 1
7. ETV+ Estonian

Russian

1
9. France 24 English 6
10 TVP World English 6
12. Duo 4 Estonian 2
13 TV6 Estonia Estonian 2
14. Duo 5 Estonian 3
15. Euronews English

Russian

3
16. Viasat History English

Russian

Estonian subtilties

6
18 Fox Life English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
19. Fox English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
20. Duo 3 English
Russian
2
21. Filmzone English

Russian

Estonian subtitles

3
22. Duo 6 English

Russian subtilties

2
23. RTL TV German 6
24. Filmzone+ English

Russian

Estonian subtitles

3
25. Investigation Discovery English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

2
26. Discovery Channel English

Russian

2
27. National Geographic Channel English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

3
28. Animal Planet English

Russian

2
29. History Channel English

Russian
Estonian subtitles

2
31. Kidzone TV Estonian

Russian

2
32. Pingviniukas Estonian

Russian

3
34 Eurosport English

Russian

2
35 Eurosport 2 English

Russian

3
36. Setanta Eurasia Russian

English

2
38. MyHits Estonian 3
39. TLC English

Russian

3
40. Travel English

Russian

6
43. RTR Planeta Russian 6
44. TV3 Plus Russian 2
45 PBK (Estonia) Russian 2
46. Ren-TV Estonia Russian 6
47. NTV Mir Russian 2
50. Hustler TV English 3
201 ETV HD Estonian

Russian Subtitle

7
202 ETV2 HD Estonian

Russian Subtitle

7
205 TallinnaTV HD Estonian 7

See also

References

  1. ^ "Estonia - Official launch of DTT services". DigiTAG. 15 December 2006. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
  2. ^ "Teenused telekanalitele". Levira (in Estonian). Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. ^ "Levira and ETV agreed to start HD transmissions over DTT" (Press release). Levira. 4 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 June 2007.
  4. ^ Third DTT mux for Estonia : Broadband TV News
  5. ^ "Terrestrial TV broadcasting". Levira. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  6. ^ "LEVIRA DTT" (PDF). Retrieved 29 January 2019.



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