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TelecommunicationsAfter the break of USSR Moldova's telecommunications facilities were very poor and remained like that till 1995 when they were being updated. In 1990 Moldova had an average of 11 telephones per 100 inhabitants, and there were more than 200,000 unfilled orders for telephone installation. In 1994 Moldova installed 23,800 telephone lines, which included public phones with direct international dialing capabilities. Mobile networkIn 2005 overall number of mobile telephone serveices users reached 1,089,767. In 2008 that number increased up to 1,900,000 users. InternetOn September 2007 there were 727,700 Internet users in Moldova with overall Internet penetration of 19.5%. In 2004 there were 183 Internet Cafes registered in Chişinău, that number decreased in later years. TelevisionIn 2007 there are dozens of broadcast companies in Chisinau providing analogue tv - major ones include SunTV (about 70,000 subscribers) and Satellit (about 20,000 subscribers). Smaller ones include Delta and Alfa TV. Starting the mid-2007 - Zebra TV (provided by Arax) introduced first digital cable network in Chisinau. SunTV also launched digital TV. PressThe main daily newspaper in the republic, Moldova Suverana, is published by the government. Sfatul Ţarii is published by Parliament, which also publishes the daily Nezavisimaya Moldova in Russian. Other principal newspapers include Rabochiy Tiraspol' (in Russian, the main newspaper of the Slavs in Transnistria), Ţara, Tineretul Moldovei/Molodëzh Moldovy (in Romanian and Russian), and Viaţa satului (published by the government). The main cultural publication in Moldova is the weekly journal Literatura şi arts, published by the Union of Writers of Moldova. Other principal periodicals include Basarabia (also published by the Writers' Union), Chiparus, Alunelul, Femeie Moldovei, Lanterna Magica, Moldova, Noi, and SudEst . Kishinëvskiye novosti, Kodry, and Russkoye Slovo are Russian-language periodicals. Other minority-language periodicals include Prosvita and Homin in Ukrainian, Ana sözu and Cîrlangaci in Gagauz, Rodno slovo in Bulgarian, and Undzer kol/Nash golos in Yiddish and Russian. In all, 240 newspapers (ninety-seven in Romanian) and sixty-eight magazines (thirty-five in Romanian) were being published in the republic in 1990. Basa Press, an independent news service, was established in November 1992. Related Information
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Mercedes Car
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