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I Want My Czech IPTV

August 24, 2006 By Jeff 1 Comment

Telefónica, the Spanish company that owns Telefónica O2 Czech Republic (the renamed Český Telecom), launched an IPTV pilot program in the Czech Republic last month. The “digital television over the internet” offering will initially include 30 channels and around 250 movies for download. Telefónica is planning to expand its offering beyond its employees in the next couple of months.

Cable television is not available in our apartment in Prague. We have a satellite dish, but have not signed up for any packages to increase our selection of English language channels. So the selection remains limited to two news stations – BBC World and EuroNews, which we have named our “disaster channels”. Through our antenna, we get the four Czech stations – ČT1, ČT2, Nova, and Prima. But between the reality TV programming, low budget 1998 German made-for-TV movies and Czech variety-type shows, there is not much to get excited about.

I hope Czech IPTV is available to us soon. It’s about time we had a better selection of entertainment and an added bonus will be playing with the new technology.

Telefonica 02 Czech Republic Launches Pilot Operation of IPTV – 7/19/06

Telecom preps IPTV – 2/20/06

Don’t touch that browser! ČT to launch Internet TV – 8/29/05

Socialist Department Store

August 18, 2006 By Dana Leave a Comment

I finally have to point this out. There has been a really cool thing going on at iDnes.cz. For at least a year, readers have been sending in photos of the products that all of us who grew up in pre-1989 Czechoslovakia know and remember with that inexplicable fondness and nostalgia. The whole project started as a virtual “socialist grocery store” showing a few dozen photos, and has grown into a full-blown department store containing hundreds of pictures.

If you’re Czech and are old enough to remember the times before the 1989 revolution, I’m sure you’ll get a kick out of seeing the milk in plastic bags, the Pedro chewing gum and Vitacit, the Skivo ski wax, the dry shampoo or the Haló sobota newspaper. Everyone else who’s curious to see what it was like to shop in Czechoslovakia in the 1970s and 1980s and what could be found in our pantries, households and garages back then, take a look, too, for this is probably the best overview you can get.

http://ekonomika.idnes.cz/ekonomika.asp?y=ekonomika/od.htm

Just so you know what you’re clicking on:

Potraviny – groceries
Drogerie – drugstore
Trafika – tobacco products, newspapers, magazines, stamps
Mototechna – auto parts, cars and car accessories
Konfekce – clothing and fashion
Elektro – Fotokino – electronics and photo supplies
Papír – Hračky – paper supplies and toys
Hudebniny – music store
Sportovní potřeby – sporting goods
Nábytek – Domácí potřeby – Furniture and home supplies

Welcome to My Server

July 22, 2006 By Dana Leave a Comment

I read an article in the Prague Daily Monitor this week that was overflowing with the word server. There would be nothing wrong with that had the article been about servers, or at least one server. But the article wasn’t about servers. It was about a website. Here are a few excerpts from the text:

“Many mistakes on server promoting Czech Republic”
“The newly-launched internet server www.czech.cz, aimed to promote the Czech Republic…”
“The server is mainly designed for foreign tourists…”

I’d probably leave the article alone had it not become the proverbial last straw. For some reason, Czechs seem to have a particular liking for using the word server when referring to a website, so I read or hear about a server www this or www that or about someone “running a server about something” a lot more often than I’d like to. And now this article comes along…

To rtj/dr with the Prague Daily Monitor and to everyone who doesn’t know what a server is: A server (in Czech server) is a computer that sits in a room somewhere with a bunch of connectors and cables coming out of it. It’s a machine. It doesn’t promote anything, it can’t be launched unless it’s shot into space on a space shuttle, and it’s usually not designed for foreign tourists. The term you want to use is website (in Czech internetové/webové stránky), i.e. an online collection of pages with content.

Definitions of both terms can be found in dictionaries and encyclopedias all over the internet. Such as on that handy server called Wikipedia.

Great Moravian Slivovice in Prague

July 15, 2006 By Dana 2 Comments

The other day I had the pleasure of enjoying excellent, genuine Moravian slivovice at a Prague café. If you like slivovice or would like to know what the traditional Moravian plum brandy tastes like when it’s top notch, try Slivovica Žufánek. You can find it at many Prague restaurants and bars. The plum brandy and other products such as pear brandy, walnut liquor or mead are made by the Žufánek family in Southern Moravia.

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