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Arabic script is the most widespread RTL writing system in modern times, being used as an official script in 29 sovereign states. Hebrew and Thaana scripts are other RTL writing systems that are official in Israel and the Maldives respectively. Ancient Chinese was written top to bottom, right to left
This is a list of television channels available on digital terrestrial, satellite and cable systems in Israel.Channels shown in bright green are available free-to-air with Israel DTT service, called "Idan Plus".
Cartoon Network Arabic; Taxi TV; ONTV; Zee Aflam; Zee Alwan; Zee Masr; Time Sports; Watan TV; Azhari TV; IUC TV; ... Al Araby TV HD; Al Araby 2; Al Rayyan; Al Rayyan ...
i24NEWS (Israeli, American, French, Arabic) [11] [12] Right-wing leaning Maariv Holdings: Azur Eli Azur: Maariv (Maariv Online, Maariv Ha'shavoa, Maariv La'noar), The Northern Radio, The Jerusalem Post, The Jerusalem Report, ECO99fm, Walla, Hamal, National Geographic Israel [13] [14] [15] Jewish Israeli Channel Ltd. Mirilashvili Yitzchak ...
Furthermore, Israeli television bought the rights to many American and British TV series and movies (broadcast with Hebrew-Arabic subtitles). The result was a mixture of colour and black and white broadcasts, which encouraged traders to import colour TV sets, especially as TV stations in neighbouring Jordan and Egypt started colour ...
Arabic: Sahar TV Iran: IRIB: English, French, Arabic, Kurdish, Bosnian, Urdu (Sahar Universal Network also had programs in Russian and Turkish language. Those languages went off the air later.) Al Forat Iraq: Arabic: Al Iraqiya News Iraq: Government of Iraq: Arabic: Al Sharqiya Iraq: Arabic: iNEWS TV Iraq: Arabic: INS Iraq: Arabic: Iraq 24 TV ...
Bidirectional script support is the capability of a computer system to correctly display bidirectional text. The term is often shortened to "BiDi" or "bidi".Early computer installations were designed only to support a single writing system, typically for left-to-right scripts based on the Latin alphabet only.
Due to lack in Arabic programs, the channel also broadcast reruns from IBA's Channel 1 and Channel 33. In a couple of years after the establishment, IBA had realised that it cannot financially support three TV channels, and decided to merge Channel 33 with the Arabic channel into a new IBA "Channel 3 - Middle East" in early 2004.