DDishTV

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ChrisGualtieri (talk | contribs) at 01:52, 27 December 2013 (Remove stub template(s). Page is start class or higher. Also check for and do General Fixes + Checkwiki fixes using AWB). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

DDishTV
Country Mongolia
HeadquartersUlaanbaatar, Mongolia
Ownership
OwnerGEM INTERNATIONAL

DDISHTV (Mongolian: ДДэшТВ ХХК) is a Mongolian satellite TV and Internet provider company led by Ganbold Dendev (CEO).

A member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union (ABU), DDISHTV was established in January 2008 to carry out Mongolian government’s proposal to broadcast more television channels in the countryside in high quality. It has officially started broadcasting in June 2008.

Background

Previously people outside of bigger cities in Mongolia were able to view only four national TV channels due to outdated C-Band system with analog technology which requires big antenna. DDishTV began to work as first and unique operator with more TV channels to the consumers across the country through latest Ku-Band technology which allows small dishes.

Coverage area and channel list

As of April 2013, DDishTV broadcast across Mongolia for over 50,000 customers, though the reception is also available in over 25 different Asian countries, such as Russia, China, Korea, India, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Kazakhstan, Iran etc...

Television channels that are currently being broadcast by DDishTV are:

  1. MNB (Mongolian National Broadcaster)
  2. MNB-2 (Mongolian National Broadcaster)
  3. C1 (Mongolian)
  4. Eagle TV (Mongolian)
  5. TV5 (Mongolian)
  6. TV5-Home shopping (Mongolian)
  7. TV5-Sport (Mongolian)
  8. Edutainment TV (Mongolian)
  9. Ekh Oron (Mongolian)
  10. TV8 (Mongolian)
  11. TV9 (Mongolian)
  12. TV9-2 (Mongolian)
  13. NTV (Mongolian)
  14. SBN (Mongolian)
  15. TMTV (Mongolian)
  16. UBS (Mongolian)
  17. UBS-2 (Mongolian)
  18. UBS-3 (Mongolian)
  19. ETV (Mongolian)
  20. ETV-2 (Mongolian)
  21. Channel 25 (Mongolian)
  22. Channel 25-2 (Mongolian)
  23. Mongol HD TV (Mongolian)
  24. Shine Delkhii (Mongolian)
  25. Channel-1 ORT (Russian)
  26. Sport Box (Mongolian)
  27. Movie Box (Mongolian)
  28. Za TV (Mongolian)
  29. TV-10 (Mongolian)
  30. MNC (Mongolian)
  31. Malchin suvag (Mongolian)
  32. Soyon Gegeeruulegch (Mongolian)
  33. UTV (Mongolian)
  34. Moncinema (Mongolian)
  35. Inner Mongolia Odon TV (Mongolian)
  36. NBS (Mongolian)
  37. NBS-2 (Mongolian)
  38. Bloomberg (Mongolian)
  39. EcoTV (Mongolian)
  40. Royal TV (Mongolian)
  41. Pink Pearl (Mongolian)
  42. Star TV (Mongolian)
  43. Dream Channel (Mongolian)
  44. Shuukrhai TV (Mongolian)
  45. Shonkhor TV (Mongolian)
  46. Odon TV (Mongolian)
  47. TV-1 (Mongolian)
  48. MME TV (Mongolian)
  49. NTN TV (Mongolian)
  50. Olloo TV (Mongolian)
  51. City channel (Mongolian)
  52. HTV (Mongolian)
  53. Fashion TV (English)
  54. Kidsco (English)
  55. Bloomberg (English)
  56. Outdoor Channel HD (English)
  57. BBC World (English)
  58. Al Jazeera (English)
  59. DW-TV Asien (German)
  60. Channel One (Russian)
  61. Australia Network (English)
  62. AIST Mongolia (Russian)

On July, 2010, DDishTV began airing free FM radio channels. As of November 2010, there are three FM channels, including Mongolian National Radio Program 1, Mongolian National Radio Program 2 and "Lavain Egshig" Radio.

Satellite link

DDishTV uses Apstar 5 a.k.a. Telstar 18 to broadcast its programmes. Telstar 18 was launched in June 2004 by Sea Launch, as a replacement satellite for APSTAR-I. It has an estimated operational lifetime of over 15 years.

External links

  • Official Site [1]

References