Dish TV India

Dish TV is the first DTH home entertainment service in India. It is a Zee Network Enterprise. Dish TV packages offer state-of-the-art television viewing experience through digital technology. Dish TV network enables high quality broadcast of programs with absolute control over the daily TV viewing experience. Dish TV DTH service gives you the freedom to choose and control what you want to watch, straight from the satellite.

Any high-end television set is incomplete without a well-organized and complete Satellite TV Service and what could be more than what Dish TV DTH offers. Get Dish TV Pay Per view (PPV) facility where you can choose and pay only for the channels you wish to view. Another added feature would be Dish TV Movie on Demand and the various Hindi Channels dedicated to exclusive Hindi programs – a favorite among most Indian households.

 

Dish TV Channels

Through the Dish TV official website, you can download the Dish TV schedule and get the listings of the various channels available and the individual channel guide citing the timing of various shows. All is required is you contact the nearest Dish TV dealers or buy online through the Dish TV official website. Their network in India provides 24 hour customer care service for any tech support or troubleshooting.

Get a Dish TV set up box installed and avail the benefit of up to 400 channels, interactive Television programs, games, movies on demand, parental lock and complete electronic Dish TV channel guide. Dish TV Channel listings now extend to national as well as international channels that makes it parallel to any global entertainment services providers. Whats more, the Dish TV bill payments and renewals have been made easy with online bill payment solutions.

Satellite Television in India

Satellite Television in India dates back to January 1991 when Transnational Satellite Broadcasting debuted in India with reception of CNN (Cable News Network) covering the Persian Gulf War. The foremost among satellite channels in India was Star TV that initialized broadcast of serials like “The Bold and the Beautiful” and some MTV programs in India. This pioneered the revolution of Satellite broadcasting with local entrepreneurs entering the markets and erecting Dishes as satellite receivers and transmitting the signals via cable television.

Doordarshan was the only free to air satellite channel in India, with advent of Star TV and Zee TV, Sun TV and various other satellite channels, its market was majorly captured by the private channels for Satellite TV in India. Then came DD metro, the entertainment based channel by Doordarshan that became a rage in places that did not receive cable TV.

In India, Direct-to-home or DTH Satellite Television is a recent phenomenon. The key players in the market for Satellite TV in India include DishTV and Tata Sky . These dish satellite television are becoming increasingly popular due to the several problems cable television had been giving in large doses. The quality of signals, availability, pirated channels, and professionalism prevalent among Cable service networks and providers had become a nuisance. The Dish TV, Tata Sky and other such DTH service providers would provide an efficient solution to this problem.

The first satellite television signal was relayed from Europe to the Telstar satellite over North America in 1962. The first geosynchronous communication satellite,Syncom 2, was launched in 1963. The world’s first commercial communication satellite, called Intelsat I (nicknamed Early Bird), was launched into synchronous orbit on April 6, 1965. The first national network of satellite television, called Orbita, was created in Soviet Union in 1967, and was based on the principle of using the highly elliptical Molniya satellite for re-broadcasting and delivering of TV signal to ground downlink stations. The first domestic North American satellite to carry television wasCanada’s geostationary Anik 1, which was launched in 1972. ATS-6, the world’s first experimental educational and Direct Broadcast Satellite, was launched in 1974. The first Soviet geostationary satellite to carry Direct-To-Home television, called Ekran, was launched in 1976.

Free-to-air

Free-to-air (FTA) describes television (TV) and radio services broadcast in clear (unencrypted) form, allowing any person with the appropriate receiving equipment to receive the signal and view or listen to the content without requiring a subscription (or other ongoing cost) or one-off fee (e.g. Pay-per-view). In the traditional sense, this is carried on terrestrial radio signals and received with an antenna.

FTA also refers to the concept of channels and broadcasters providing content for which no subscription is expected, even though they may be delivered to the viewer/listener by another carrier for which a subscription is required, e.g. cable, satellite or the Internet. These carriers may be mandated (or opt) in some geographies to deliver FTA channels even if a premium subscription is not present (providing the necessary equipment is still available), especially where FTA channels are expected to be used for emergency broadcasts, similar to the 112 emergency service provided by mobile phone operators and manufacturers.

Free-to-view (FTV) is, generally, available without subscription but is digitally encoded and may be restricted geographically.

These channels are described as free, but are more accurately described as free to receive. In many cases the viewer does in fact pay for them, by various means:

  • Directly
    • by levy of a license fee (as in the case of the BBC) or
    • voluntary donation (in the case of educational broadcasters like PBS)
  • Indirectly
    • Consumer products and services where part of the cost goes toward television advertising and sponsorship (in the case of Japanese television broadcasters like TV Asahi and TV Tokyo which relies on sponsorship heavily, similar to Philippine Television like ABS-CBN, and GMA)
  • Direct & Indirect
    • One further variation is in Canada, where the CBC Television/Télévision de Radio-Canada network is partly funded by taxpayer dollars, and otherwise supports itself with commercial advertising revenues as it competes with other free over-the-air commercial networks.

Free-to-air is often used for international broadcasting, making it something of a video equivalent to shortwave radio. Most authorized FTA retailers list free to air channel guides and content available in North America for free to air use.