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Telesistema Informativo (known as TSi) is a television station in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, broadcasting on Channel 3 and Channel 7 in NTSC and is owned by TVC. The station has repeaters in La Ceiba and Puerto Cortés, also on channel 7. Until 2016, the channel had programs of news, entertainment, series, sports and movies.
Televicentro or TVC is a television corporation in Honduras, which as of 2004, is owned by Rafael Ferrari. [1]Televicentro was founded in 1987 with the aim of merging Canal 5, Canal 3/7 and Telecadena 7/4 under an umbrella organization, aiming at improving the coverage of the stations and creating new relayers for them. [2]
Canal 8 formerly known as Televisión Nacional de Honduras (Spanish for: National Television of Honduras) or TNH is a state-owned television network based in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. The channel is the first state-owned television channel and is operated by the Ministry of Culture and Telecommunications. [ 1 ]
Honduras had initially adopted ATSC Standards for digital terrestrial television broadcasting, but later decided to adopt the ISDB-T International standard used in many other Latin American nations. [2] The first Digital High Definition TV Station, CampusTv, was founded by Universidad de San Pedro Sula.
Canal 27 (Guatemala City)| 28 and 66: El Canal de la Esperanza (Christian Ministry Grounds) Canal 29 (Guatemala City): Grupo Nuevo Mundo; Canal 31 (Guatemala City): TV Azteca; formerly known as Latitud Televisión; Canal 33 (Guatemala City): TV-USAC; Canal 35 (Guatemala City): TV Azteca; Canal 40 (Petén): Corporación de Radio y Televisión ...
Canal 5 (Canal Cinco), is a Honduran terrestrial television channel, owned by the Ferrari family and operated by the Televicentro Corporation. Its first official broadcast was on September 15, 1959. Channel 5's programming consists mainly of telenovelas, entertainment programs, both national and foreign production, game shows and newscasts.
The Sikaffy family had already owned La Voz de Centroamérica (HRVW) before, [3] the television station by 1988 had a schedule limited to imports from the United States, Latin America and Spain. At the time, the channel was developing its news operation, when, at the time, the only news program was Hoy Mismo on Telesistema Hondureño.
On September 5, 2013, CONATEL (Comisión Nacional de Telecomunicaciones: i.e.: National Telecommunications Commission) put television channel 60 and other channels up for sale, several of them with local coverage and one with full coverage. [1]