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Romania has a high penetration rates for cable television in Europe, with over 79% of all households watching television through a CATV network in 2007. The market is extremely dynamic, and dominated by two giant companies – Romanian-based RCS&RDS (DIGI) and U.K.-based (Vodafone). Both offer internet broadband, fixed (VOIP) and mobile telephony.
In 2005, the channel has relocated on paper to Romania. In 2007, Cool TV launched a series of topical shows produced by the channel, such as Cool Live and Cool Night, featuring younger hosts lent to Cool by RTL Klub; the former being a youth lifestyle show, and the latter being an adult show including interviews with Hungarian porn stars and ...
The name Cool TV may represent: Cool TV, a television channel in Hungary and Romania; CoolTV, a defunct cable specialty channel in Canada;
FOX Kids Play (now Disney Junior Romania) 2006 TV K Lumea (now Kiss TV) 2007 TV Sport (now Pro Arena) A+ Anime; 2009 Info Dolce; Jetix (now Disney Channel Romania) 2010 Cosmos TV; Hallmark Channel (now Diva) MTV Two; Boom Sport (now Orange Sport) 2011 Vox News; Telesport; Playhouse Disney (now Disney Junior Romania) Digi Sport (now Digi Sport)
TVR moved in 1969 to a new building, a purpose-built television center on Calea Dorobanților [].It was designed by well-known architect Tiberiu Ricci, and since then serves as the network headquarters where the main studios and offices are located.
UPC Romania was a telecommunications company in Romania, which provided cable television, broadband internet and fixed telephony to approximately 1 million customers. On July 31, 2019, Vodafone acquired the company and it was merged into Vodafone Romania on 31 March 2020.
Pages in category "Television networks in Romania" ... Telekom TV; TVR (TV network) This page was last edited on 6 June 2020, at 10:30 (UTC). Text ...
Romania's newspaper market thrived after the 1989 revolution, but many newspapers subsequently closed because of rising costs. Most households in Bucharest have cable TV. There are hundreds of cable distributors offering access to Romanian, European and other stations. According to europaworld.com, in 2004 there were: [3] radio users: 5,369,000