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As of 2023, 94% of households had high-speed Internet services [1] and 97% of companies had Internet access. [2] Most Portuguese watch television through fibre-optic (2023: 66.2% of households). [1] Paid Internet connections are available at many cafés, as well as many post offices.
Mobile broadband usage among individuals in Portugal increased to 82% in 2021, up from 72% in 2018, yet it slightly trails the EU average uptake of 87%. Despite this progress, Portugal's advancement in 5G deployment was notably absent in 2021, with 0% coverage, while other EU member countries were significantly ahead, achieving an average 5G coverage of 66% across populated areas.
Supplement to the newspaper O Século about the suffragettes of the Liga Republicana das Mulheres Portuguesas, published on May 12, 1910: 5 - Ana de Castro Osório; 6 - Maria Veleda; 7 - Beatriz Pinheiro; 8 - Maria Clara Correia Alve; 13 - Sofia Quintino; 14 - Adelaide Cabete; 15 - Carolina Beatriz Ângelo; 16 - Maria do Carmo Joaquina Lopes
[2] [3] The paper is based in Lisbon. [3] It is owned by the Cofina group [4] [5] and is published by its subsidiary. [6] The company acquired the paper in 2000. [7] Its sister newspaper is Jornal de Negócios. [6] Both papers are published in tabloid format. [8] The newspaper focuses mainly on crime, scandals and attention-grabbing headlines.
It is one of the four triple play operators in Portugal along with MEO, NOS and Vodafone. [1] NOWO belongs to the Romanian company Digi Communications. [2] [3] [4] NOWO has mobile, 4G and wired telecommunication. It has a fiber optic network of around 14,000 km (~8,700 mi), covering more than 70 municipalities and 200 parishes in Portugal.
In response to its success, the public television network RTP bought NTV, Northern Portugal's news channel, and transformed it into RTPN in 2004, directly competing with SIC Notícias. Beside the rolling-news blocks, it also offers special editions and thematic programs on economy , health , interviews , show business , automobile industry ...
In the period of 1995–1996 Diário de Notícias had a circulation of 63,000 copies slightly down on its 1880s circulation and below its peak as a propaganda newspaper for the Estado Novo in the 1930s (circulation of 120,000 in mainland Portugal and an additional 70,000 in its colonies), making it the seventh best-selling newspaper and third best selling daily newspaper in the country. [14]
It is the only Portuguese-language newspaper in Portugal with a defined political orientation (right-wing liberalism). [4] It is an online newspaper with no printed edition, [5] with the exception of the Anniversary [6] and Lifestyle editions. [7] Observador commits itself to publish and update information on a 24/7 basis. [8]