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RTB Sukmaindera (Jawi: سوكمايندرا RTB ) (formerly known as RTB4 and RTB International, stylised as RTB SUKMAINDERA) [1] is a 24-hour free-to-air television channel in Brunei owned by Radio Television Brunei (RTB), the country’s state broadcaster. The channel officially began broadcasting on 9 July 2003, a pilot service had ...
On 24 December 1993, RTB introduced a one-hour satellite broadcast service using the Indonesian Palapa B2P satellite. The service, named RTB Sukmaindera, was set to start on 1 January 1994. The primary target audience was Bruneians in the Malay archipelago, delivering news, current affairs programmes and documentaries produced by the ...
RTB Perdana (formerly known as RTB1 and Television Brunei, stylised as RTB perdana) [1] is the oldest free-to-air terrestrial television channel in Brunei. The channel officially began broadcasting on 1 March 1975. RTB Perdana broadcasts for 05:40 until 23:20 BST followed by a prayer in Makkah filling the rest of its
RTB Aneka (Formerly known as RTB 2 and RTB 3 HD) - A 16.5-hour second channel of Radio Television Brunei airs entertainment programmes in 1080p HDTV. [17] RTB Sukmaindera (Formerly known as RTB 4) - A 24-hour international satellite television channel airing all of RTB programs both locally and internationally in 1080p HDTV. [18]
Website Algeria: Radio Algérie Internationale ... Website Brunei: RTB Sukmaindera: Free-to-air (Terrestrial and Satellite) RTB Sukmaindera
RTB Perdana; RTB Sukmaindera This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 02:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Ownership information about the station and their parent company, as well as their contact information, such as street and mailing addresses, telephone or fax number, zip code, e-mail, and website details. [2] A video of people singing a closing song, or closing dance performance to end the day's broadcast.
The channel launched on the same day as RTB Sukmaindera, under the same arrangement on the same satellite. [5] [6] On launch day, a full-page advertisement was given to SITV on the Straits Times. [7] The channel started off with a limited offering, with initial plans for the channel to increase its programming if time was available.