Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Laguna's first editions were titles by one of the most popular British authors, Terry Pratchett.Today, some of this publisher's foreign language titles include the names of classic authors (Shakespeare, Goethe, Gogol, Chekhov, Kafka, Proust, Musil) and numerous contemporary writers with works mostly from English, Spanish, German, French and Russian speaking territories such as: Nobel winners ...
Robne kuće Beograd company was founded in 1965 and soon became the largest supermarket chain in former SFR Yugoslavia, and third largest chain in Europe. [3] [4] In 1970, it opened a store in the capital city of Belgrade that opened 24 hours a day, the first such store in SFR Yugoslavia. [5]
Studio B was launched as a radio station in 1970 by the journalists from the Borba group, which included Marko Janković. [3] [4] In 1972, it became a corporation owned by Belgrade's Municipal Council. [5]
SBB company headquarters - Telepark kompleks Logo used from 2002 until 2012.. The Serbia Broadband company – SBB – was formed in 2002 through the merger of KDS d.o.o Kragujevac, Telefonija Belgrade cable system, Media Plus Novi Sad, YU VOD Nis and a number of small operators.
RTS 1 was the first television channel founded in the territory of Serbia. The channel began broadcasting on 23 August 1958 at 8:55 am, under the name Televizija Beograd, with its first progamme is the opening of the 2nd International Fair of Technics and Technical Achievements. [1]
Mathematical Grammar School (Serbian: Математичка гимназија Београд, romanized: Matematička gimnazija Beograd, abbr. "MG" or "MGB"), is a special school for gifted and talented students of mathematics, physics and informatics located in Belgrade, Serbia.
Nacionalna Televizija Happy (often shortened to Happy) is a privately owned TV channel in Serbia.Happy has gained a strong reputation for its entertainment programming. The station offers a compilation of international and domestic movies, American sitcoms, dramas, Indian soap operas and Latin telenovelas, as well as locally produced talk/variety shows.
Some 67% of households are provided with pay television services (i.e. 38.7% cable television, 16.9% IPTV, and 10.4% satellite). [5] There are 90 pay television operators (cable, IPTV, DTH), largest of which are SBB (mainly cable) with 48% market share, Telekom Srbija (mts TV) with 25%, followed by PoštaNet with 5%, and Ikom and Kopernikus with 4% and 3%, respectively.