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Television in the Soviet Union

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SECAM
SECAM, also written SÉCAM (, Système Électronique Couleur Avec Mémoire, French for electronic colour system with memory), is an analogue colour television system that was used in France, Russia, and some other countries or territories of Europe and Africa. It was one of three major analog colour television standards, the others being PAL and NTSC. Similar to PAL, a SECAM picture is made up of 625 interlaced lines and displayed at a rate of 25 frames per second (except SECAM-M). However, because of how SECAM processes colour information, it is not compatible with the PAL video format standard.
VGTRK
Russian public radio and TV broadcaster
Eesti Televisioon
Estonian national television channel
Soviet Central Television
Soviet public TV broadcaster
International Radio and Television Organisation
alliance of media entities
There is no sex in the USSR
Russian catchphrase
Ekran
For the Soviet animation studio see page Studio Ekran
Ostankino Technical Center
Russian television studio
television in the Soviet Union
overview of television in the Soviet Union
Orbita
Soviet and later Russian satellite TV distribution system
KVN-49
thumb|TV set KVN-49 at Mosfilm museum (Moscow) KVN-49 () or Kenigson, Varshavskiy, Nikolayevskiy Mk. 1949 was a black-and-white TV set released in 1949 and on the market in the USSR until 1960, with some minor modifications. It was the first TV set ever mass-produced in the USSR.
Programme One
Soviet television channel
USSR State Committee for Television and Radio
soviet media broadcast supervisor
Programme Two
television channel of SCTV
U.S.–Soviet Space Bridge