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Mobile broadband usage among individuals in Portugal increased to 82% in 2021, up from 72% in 2018, yet it slightly trails the EU average uptake of 87%. Despite this progress, Portugal's advancement in 5G deployment was notably absent in 2021, with 0% coverage, while other EU member countries were significantly ahead, achieving an average 5G coverage of 66% across populated areas.
At the end of 2023, the number of households connected to the fibre-optic networks (FTTH/B) by all operators stood at 3.24 million. [1] The number of households with access by cable totalled 1.3 million. Nearly the totality of family households now have access to at least one high-speed network. [1] Telephones - main lines in use: 5.5 million ...
Jornais de Portugal Banca de Jornais Sapo The Portuguese-American Journal (PAJ) is an online interactive publication dedicated to the Portuguese-American heritage with the purpose of informing and offering an insight into the Portuguese-American experience.
RTP3 (RTP três) is a Portuguese free-to-air television channel owned and operated by state-owned public broadcaster Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP). It is the company's all-news television channel, and is known for its 24-hour rolling news service and its live coverage of breaking news.
A weekly newspaper, it incorporates various supplements, covering general news, business, sports, international news, entertainment, society, a magazine, recruitment and real estate classified supplements, as well as having a site on the Internet. It is particularly known for its editorial independence and its probing political reporting. [3] [15]
[2] [3] The paper is based in Lisbon. [3] It is owned by the Cofina group [4] [5] and is published by its subsidiary. [6] The company acquired the paper in 2000. [7] Its sister newspaper is Jornal de Negócios. [6] Both papers are published in tabloid format. [8] The newspaper focuses mainly on crime, scandals and attention-grabbing headlines.
It is the only Portuguese-language newspaper in Portugal with a defined political orientation (right-wing liberalism). [4] It is an online newspaper with no printed edition, [5] with the exception of the Anniversary [6] and Lifestyle editions. [7] Observador commits itself to publish and update information on a 24/7 basis. [8]
In the period of 1995–1996 Diário de Notícias had a circulation of 63,000 copies slightly down on its 1880s circulation and below its peak as a propaganda newspaper for the Estado Novo in the 1930s (circulation of 120,000 in mainland Portugal and an additional 70,000 in its colonies), making it the seventh best-selling newspaper and third best selling daily newspaper in the country. [14]