History of broadcasting in Canada
Radio was introduced in Canada in the late 1890s, although initially transmissions were limited to the dot-and-dashes of Morse code, and primarily used for point-to-point services, especially for maritime communication. The history of broadcasting in Canada dates to the early 1920s, as part of the worldwide development of radio stations sending information and entertainment programming to the general public. Television was introduced in the 1950s, and soon became the primary broadcasting service.
1932 in CanadaAsian Television NetworkBroadcast rangeBroadcast relay stationBroadcasting Act (Canada)Broadcasting in CanadaCNR RadioCanadian Communications FoundationCanadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Canadian HeritageCanadian broadcastingCanadian broadcasting historyCommission for Complaints for Telecom-television ServicesDepartment of Canadian HeritageEvents of National Historic SignificanceHistory of Canadian broadcastingPrix Guy-Mauffette
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History of broadcasting in Canada
Radio was introduced in Canada in the late 1890s, although initially transmissions were limited to the dot-and-dashes of Morse code, and primarily used for point-to-point services, especially for maritime communication. The history of broadcasting in Canada dates to the early 1920s, as part of the worldwide development of radio stations sending information and entertainment programming to the general public. Television was introduced in the 1950s, and soon became the primary broadcasting service.
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Radio was introduced in Canada ...... primary broadcasting service.
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Radio was introduced in Canada ...... primary broadcasting service.
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History of broadcasting in Canada
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