Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Electronic programming guide interface in MythTV.. Electronic programming guides (EPGs) and interactive programming guides (IPGs) are menu-based systems that provide users of television, radio, and other media applications with continuously updated menus that display scheduling information for current and upcoming broadcast programming (most commonly, TV listings).
Similar to Guide+ was Star Sight, [51] with its decoders built into TVs manufactured by Zenith, Samsung, Sony, Toshiba, Magnavox, and others. This was an electronic program guide service similar to Guide+, but was a service that relied on monthly subscription fees paid by the user, not from revenue gathered from on-screen advertisements like ...
Zenith was the first company to experiment with subscription television, launching their Phonevision system with experimental Chicago station KS2XBS (originally broadcasting on Channel 2 before the Federal Communications Commission forced them to relinquish it to WBBM-TV). Their experiment involved a descrambler box mounted on the television ...
Zenith Productions (later Zenith Entertainment) was a British independent film and television production company. Zenith created content for the BBC , ITV , Channel 4 , Sky and UKTV , including a number of series such as Inspector Morse for ITV and Byker Grove and Hamish Macbeth for the BBC. [ 1 ]
National State Television and Radio Company of the Republic of Belarus; Belarus-1; Belarus-2; Belarus-3; Belarus-4; Belarus-5; Belarus-24; Viciebsk; NTV-Belarus
The Jack Benny Program (now on Antenna TV) The Jerry Lewis Show; The Joey Bishop Show (now on Antenna TV) Kate & Allie; Knight Rider; Kojak; Kraft Suspense Theatre; Laredo (now on Get) Lock-Up* Leave It to Beaver (now airs on MeTV) Magnum, P.I. (now airs on Hallmark Movies & Mysteries) Marcus Welby, M.D. McHale's Navy (now on Antenna TV) Merv ...
TV Quest later migrated to Apple's eWorld services and to the internet in the mid-1990s. Version 1.0 of Zap2it debuted on the web in May 2000. In its earliest iteration, the site was a combination of TMS-owned listings sites TVQuest and MovieQuest plus the then-recently purchased content site UltimateTV .
Electra was a teletext service in the United States that was in operation from 1982 up until 1993, [1] when it was shut down due to a lack of funding, and discontinuation of teletext-capable television sets by the only US television manufacturer offering teletext capability at the time, Zenith. [1]