enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Guía Roji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guía_Roji

    Guía Roji (Roji's Guides) is a cartography company based in Mexico City. Guía Roji was created in 1928 by Joaquín Palacios Roji Lara. Since that year, the characteristic cover color of the map books has been red. The first maps showed the reduced size of Mexico City in the 1920s. In the late 1960s, the number of maps began to increase ...

  3. Jalisco TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jalisco_TV

    Jalisco TV, virtual channel 17, is the public television network of the Mexican state of Jalisco, operated by the Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión alongside XEPBGJ-AM and XEJB-FM and broadcasting on transmitters in Guadalajara, Ciudad Guzmán and Puerto Vallarta. Its programming is primarily cultural and educational content.

  4. List of television stations in Jalisco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_television...

    Guadalajara: Quiero TV (Quiero TV -2 horas, Inova) 50 kW Quiero Media 23 11 XHPBGD-TDT: Guadalajara: Canal Once (Once Niñas y Niños) 124.996 kW Instituto Politécnico Nacional 35 13 XEDK-TDT: Guadalajara: Canal 13 (TN23) 140 kW Telsusa 20 14 XHSPRGA-TDT: Guadalajara: SPR multiplex (14.1 Canal Catorce, 20.1 TV UNAM, 22.1 Canal 22) 29.95 kW

  5. List of television stations in Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_television...

    Guadalajara: Quiero TV (Quiero TV -2 horas, Inova) 50 kW Quiero Media 23 11 XHPBGD-TDT: Guadalajara: Canal Once (Once Niñas y Niños) 124.996 kW Instituto Politécnico Nacional 35 13 XEDK-TDT: Guadalajara: Canal 13 (TN23) 140 kW Telsusa 20 14 XHSPRGA-TDT: Guadalajara: SPR multiplex (14.1 Canal Catorce, 20.1 TV UNAM, 22.1 Canal 22) 29.95 kW

  6. Canal 44 (Jalisco) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canal_44_(Jalisco)

    Canal 44 (Spanish: Channel 44) is the television network of the Universidad de Guadalajara (UDG), a university in Jalisco, Mexico.The primary station, XHCPCT-TDT, broadcasts to the Guadalajara metropolitan area from a transmitter located on Cerro del Cuatro in Tlaquepaque, [2] with additional transmitters in Ciudad Guzmán, Lagos de Moreno, and Puerto Vallarta.

  7. XEDK-TDT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XEDK-TDT

    The history of XEDK-TV begins with the sign-on of XEHL-TV channel 6, which came to air on September 22, 1960. [2]: 27 XEHL was owned by Televisión Tapatía, a local group backed by Guadalajara business owners. Only months earlier, XEWO-TV channel 2, the first Telesistema Mexicano station in Guadalajara, had taken to the air. XEHL was among the ...

  8. XHQMGU-TDT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XHQMGU-TDT

    The station was renamed Ocho TV in 2004, and it grew to gain coverage on several national cable systems beyond Guadalajara, particularly when Telecable de Zapopan was sold off in 2015. Quiero Media, S.A. de C.V., won a television station (XHQMGU-TDT) was awarded in the IFT-6 TV station auction of 2017 and began program service on May 2, 2018.

  9. MVS TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MVS_TV

    On September 1, 1989, MVS launched the Multivisión MMDS wireless cable system, including a bouquet of original channels. One of them, Multicable, was the flagship offering, with a program lineup of foreign series dubbed into Spanish, a cartoon block and a news program hosted by Pedro Ferriz de Con; in addition to airing on its own MMDS system, it was added to the Mexico City cable system ...