Digital terrestrial television in Estonia
Digital terrestrial television in Estonia, was officially launched on 15 December, when the operator Zuum TV launched its pay service on two multiplexes.[1] Transmissions are made with MPEG-4 AVC compression using the DVB-T standard. A DVB-T2 standard-based network (Multiplex 7) has been created for HD-quality TV picture transmission.[2]
In June 2007, Levira and ETV announced that they had agreed to launch an HDTV trial in July 2007.[3]
In November 2007, a third multiplex was launched, covering almost all of the country. This multiplex was to be used by free-to-air services, while the two existing national multiplexes would only carry pay channels. Hence the public channel ETV was transferred to the new multiplex.[4] At this time there are only five free-to-air channels (ETV, ETV2, ETV+, TallinnaTV, France 24) while others are pay-TV channels, offered by AS Elisa.[5]
As of January 2019, There are 3 High Definition and 39 Standard Definition channels on these multiplexes:[6]
LCN | Channel | Language | MUX |
---|---|---|---|
1. | ETV | Estonian | 1 |
2. | ETV2 | Estonian | 1 |
3. | Kanal 2 | Estonian | 1 |
4. | TV3 | Estonian | 6 |
5. | Tallinna TV | Estonian | 1 |
6. | AntenniTV info | Estonian | 1 |
7. | ETV+ | Estonian
Russian |
1 |
9. | France 24 | English | 6 |
12. | Kanal 12 | Estonian | 2 |
13 | TV6 Estonia | Estonian | 2 |
14. | Kanal 11 | Estonian | 3 |
15. | Euronews | English
Russian |
3 |
16. | Viasat History | English
Russian Estonian subtilties |
6 |
18 | Fox Life | English
Russian |
3 |
19. | Fox | English
Russian |
3 |
20. | Sony Channel | English Russian |
2 |
21. | Filmzone | English
Russian Estonian subtitles |
3 |
22. | Sony Turbo | English
Russian subtilties |
2 |
23. | RTL TV | German | 6 |
24. | Filmzone+ | English
Russian Estonian subtitles |
3 |
25. | Investigation Discovery | English
Russian |
2 |
26. | Discovery Channel | English
Russian |
2 |
27. | National Geographic Channel | English
Russian |
3 |
28. | Animal Planet | English
Russian |
2 |
29. | History Channel | English
Russian |
2 |
31. | Kidzone TV | Estonian
Russian |
2 |
32. | Pingviniukas | Estonian
Russian |
3 |
34 | Eurosport | English
Russian |
2 |
35 | Eurosport 2 | English
Russian |
3 |
36. | Setanta Eurasia | Russian
English |
2 |
38. | MyHits | Estonian | 3 |
39. | TLC | English
Russian |
3 |
40. | Travel | English
Russian |
6 |
43. | RTR Planeta | Russian | 6 |
44. | TV3+ (Estonia) | Russian | 2 |
45 | PBK Estonia | Russian | 2 |
46. | Ren-TV Estonia | Russian | 6 |
47. | NTV Mir | Russian | 2 |
50. | Hustler TV | English | 3 |
201 | ETV HD | Estonian
Russian Subtitle |
7 |
202 | ETV2 HD | Estonian
Russian Subtitle |
7 |
205 | TallinnaTV HD | Estonian | 7 |
See also
References
- "Estonia - Official launch of DTT services". DigiTAG. 15 December 2006. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2007.
- "Teenused telekanalitele". Levira (in Estonian). Retrieved 29 January 2019.
- "Levira and ETV agreed to start HD transmissions over DTT" (Press release). Levira. 4 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 June 2007.
- Third DTT mux for Estonia : Broadband TV News
- "Terrestrial TV broadcasting". Levira. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
- "LEVIRA DTT" (PDF). Retrieved 29 January 2019.