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A&E dropped TV as their brands had moved beyond just the TV channel while keeping Networks being contemporary to similar companies. [11] In July 2012, NBCUniversal confirmed plans to divest its 15.8% stake in A&E Networks by way of a share repurchase by A&E Networks, making Disney and Hearst 50-50 partners in the joint venture.
/e/ (also known as /e/ OS and /e/OS, formerly Eelo) is a fork of LineageOS, [4] [5] an Android-based mobile operating system, and associated online services. [6] /e/ is presented as privacy software that does not contain proprietary Google apps or services, [7] and challenges the public to "find any parts of the system or default applications that are still leaking data to Google."
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Free software is generally available at no cost and can result in permanently lower TCO (total cost of ownership) compared to proprietary software. [67] With free software, businesses can fit software to their specific needs by changing the software themselves or by hiring programmers to modify it for them.
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The merged A&E unit retained the same arts-focused and foreign drama programming for the next twenty years, though it eventually drifted towards a direction heavy towards reality television by 2008 and has long drifted away from the channel's original remit. [5]
A&E launched on February 1, 1984, initially available to 9.3 million cable television homes in the U.S. and Canada. [2] The network is a result of the 1984 merger of Hearst/ABC's Alpha Repertory Television Service (ARTS) and (pre–General Electric merger) RCA-owned The Entertainment Channel.