Television in Austria
Television in Austria was introduced in 1956. The country uses DVB-T for broadcasting. Analog television was completely shut down on June 7, 2011. Austrian television was monopolized by government-owned television stations until 1996. The first private television station in Austria is ATV.
List of channels
Public
- ORF eins (also in HD)
- ORF 2 (also in HD)
- ORF III
- ORF Sport +
- 3sat - public channel in association with ORF, ARD, ZDF and SF DRS
Commercial
Non-Commercial
- Okto
- FS1
- dorf
Affiliates of German TV Channels
- ProSieben Austria
- Sat.1 Österreich
- Kabel eins Austria
- MTV Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
- Nick Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
- RTL2 Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
- RTL Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
- Viva Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
- Vox Austria (only local advertisement-break aways)
Local
- Salzburg TV
- LT1
- Inn-TV
- Steiermark 1
- P3TV
Pay TV
- Sky Austria
- AustriaSat
- HD Plus Austria
- UPC Austria
- A1 TV
Most-viewed channels
The channels with the largest viewing share in 2014 are:[1]
Position | Channel | Group | Share of total viewing (%) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | ORF 2 | ORF | 20.2 |
2 | ORF eins | ORF | 13.3 |
3 | ProSieben | ProSiebenSat.1 Media | 5.1 |
4 | Sat.1 | ProSiebenSat.1 Media | 5.0 |
4 | RTL | RTL Group | 5.0 |
5 | ZDF | ZDF | 4.2 |
6 | VOX | RTL Group | 4.0 |
7 | Puls 4 | ProSiebenSat.1 Media | 3.6 |
8 | Das Erste | ARD | 3.3 |
9 | ATV | Tele München Gruppe | 3.0 |
See also
References
- ↑ "Marktanteile Sender 2014". Arbeitsgemeinschaft TELETEST (AGTT). Retrieved 16 April 2014.
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