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4. ALTV (Thai PBS Active Learning TV) 5. Royal Thai Army Radio and Television (TV5 HD) 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)
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 .
Channel 3 HD (Thai: ช่อง 3 เอชดี, formerly known as สถานีวิทยุไทยทีวีสีช่อง 3, lit. 'Thai Television Broadcasting Station Color TV Channel 3 (Channel 3 HDTV Channel 33)') is a Thailand and Bangkok's very first commercial free-to-air television network that was launched on 26 March 1970 as Thailand and Bangkok's very first ...
It was presided over by the then Prime Minister of Thailand Field Marshal Thanom Kittikachorn. The first programme to air was the 1967 Miss Thailand Pageant. Channel 7 was known back then as "Bangkok Colour Television Network", with callsign HSB-TV, airing on Channel 5 and was the country's first colour television station using PAL colour. On 1 ...
Thai PBS is a public television station broadcasting on UHF Channel 29. The station broadcasts on a frequency formerly held by the privately run channel, iTV. Thai PBS tested its broadcast by connecting to a temporary signal for broadcasting to the special programs chart which had been appropriated by Television of Thailand (TVT or TV 11 ...
Thai Parliament Television. Thai Public Broadcasting Service. Thai-Tai Channel. Thairath TV. TNN (Thai TV channel) Top News (Thailand) True Spark. True Sports. True4U.
Bangkok Channel 3. Bangkok BEC World. 33 ( HDTV ) TPBS MUX4. CH44 (658MHz) Bangkok. Bangkok. Bangkok 7 HD. Bangkok Broadcasting Television Co., Ltd.
Channel 5 is the second oldest television station in Thailand, owned and operated by the Royal Thai Army, and as such features, among others, programming devoted to the Royal Thai Armed Forces . Channel 5 completely ceased its analog broadcast on 21 June 2018 at 9:30am as part of its digital switchover.