Television in Slovenia

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Analog television

Television in Slovenia was first introduced in 1958. Slovenia used the PAL standard until December 1, 2010 when analog broadcasting ceased. The first TV station in Slovenia was launched in 1958 as TV Ljubljana (now TV Slovenija). The first commercial (private) TV station, Planet TV was launched in 1989.

List of TV stations in Slovenia

Public

Commercial and other

  • ATV signal (Litija)
  • Gorenjska televizija - GTV (Kranj) [1]
  • TV IDEA - Kanal 10 (Murska Sobota)
  • RTS (Maribor)
  • TV Celje (Celje)
  • TV Primorka (Šempeter pri Novi Gorici)
  • Vaš kanal (Novo mesto)
  • VTV - Vaša Televizija (Velenje)
  • EPTV (Ljubljana)
  • ETV (Kisovec) [2]
  • Gea TV (Domžale)
  • KTV (Ormož) [3]
  • Kanal 3 (Apače) [4]
  • Kanal A (Ljubljana)
  • Koroška TV (Dravograd) [5]
  • Media TV (Škofja Loka)
  • Moj TV (Selnica ob Dravi)
  • MTV Adria (Ljubljana) [6]
  • Net TV (Maribor) [7]
  • Net XXL (Maribor) [8]
  • Play TV (Ljubljana) [9]
  • POP TV (Ljubljana)
  • R-Kanal (Ribnica)
  • Sponka.tv (Portorož)
  • Studio AS (Murska Sobota)
  • Studio Signal (Ljubljana) [10]
  • Top RTV [11]
  • TV3 Medias (Koper)
  • TV Galeja (Ilirska Bistrica) [12]
  • Golica TV (Ljubljana)
  • TV Kras (Sežana) [13]
  • TV Lep (Logatec) [14]
  • TV Petelin (Ljubljana) [15]
  • TV Plus (Komenda) [16]
  • TV Radgona - Kanal 11 (Gornja Radgona) [17]
  • TV Trbovlje (Trbovlje) [18]
  • Vascom (Pivka) [19]
  • ViTel (Dornberk)

Non-profit

DVB-T

Experimental DVB-T broadcasts began in 2001 using the MPEG-2 standard. In 2007 the Slovenian government decided to test DVB-T transmission in Ljubljana using the MPEG-4 standard, following the approval of the APEK (Agency for Post and Telecommunications Republic of Slovenia).

After that Radiotelevizija Slovenija had to determine which transmitter would be used for the 3-month test. They settled on the transmitters made by a Slovene company, Elti, who produces analog and digital TV transmitters. After the test, the RTV SLO decided to expand transmissions to TV SLO 2. In 2007, the RTV SLO launched a new channel: TV SLO 3 (a public affairs broadcast) to its digital offering. High-definition broadcast with AC-3 was experimented during the Beijing 2008 olympic games. The 2010 Winter Olympic Games were also broadcast in HD.

Currently, there are two multiplexes operating, Mux A and Mux C.

Mux A

The operator is Radiotelevizija Slovenija. Mux A is intended for public programs.

Channels

Mux C

Started on October 14, 2013. The operator is Radiotelevizija Slovenija. Mux C is intended for commercial programs.

Channels

  • POP TV
  • Kanal A
  • Planet TV
  • TV3 Medias
  • Golica TV
  • Gold TV
  • Obvestilo C

Rating Shares

Rank Channel Owner Average Rating Share (7pm-11pm)
1 POP TV CME 32.1%
2 TV Slovenija 1 RTVSLO 14.2%
3 Kanal A CME 12.6%
4 TV Slovenija 2 RTVSLO 5.0%
5 Planet TV ANT1 3.7%
6 TV3 Medias Medias 2.2%
7 TV Slovenija 3 RTVSLO 0.7%

References

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External links