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Zrenjanin, Novi Bečej, Sečanj, Nova Crnja, Žitište Until 2013, Telekom Srbija had a monopoly on fixed telephony services. When the new regulation came in force, competition became allowed in this field as well, and other operators entered the market, using alternative communication infrastructure:
Telekom Srbija a.d. Beograd is a Serbian state-owned telecommunications operator. It was founded in May 1997 as a joint-stock company, by spinning off the telecommunications business from PTT Srbija (present-day Pošta Srbije). In April 2015, Telekom Srbija started providing all services in Serbia under the mts brand. [4] [5] [6]
The country calling code of Bosnia and Herzegovina is +387.. Bosnia and Herzegovina received the +387 code following the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992, whose country code was previously +38.
Telekomunikacije Republike Srpske a.d. Banja Luka, doing business as m:tel, is a telecommunications company based in Banja Luka, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.The company is owned by Telekom Srbija, and is the second largest telecommunications company in Bosnia and Herzegovina [2] and the biggest one listed on the Banja Luka Stock Exchange, with the market capitalisation of about ...
A1 Srbija d.o.o. (formerly Vip mobile) is a Serbian mobile network operator owned by A1 Telekom Austria Group. As of 2020, it is the third largest mobile telephony operator with market share of 25.67%.
063 Mobtel Srbija logo (1994–2005) Originally launched in 1994 as Mobtel Srbija ("Mobtel Serbia"; full name: Mobilne telekomunikacije Srbija, "Mobile telecommunications Serbia"), the company's operation was a joint venture founded in 1994 between Moscow-based BK Trade (owned by Bogoljub Karić) and government-owned PTT.
North Macedonia's telephone numbering plan is the system used for assigning telephone numbers in North Macedonia.It is regulated by the Agency for Electronic Communications (AEK), which holds responsibility for telecommunications.
The task of assigning a two-letter ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code for Serbia, which could seem trivial, was made hugely complex by the number of countries having names which begin with the letter S. All combinations of S as a first letter and any other letter in word Serbia, or even Srbija (in Serbian), were already taken