King Videocable was a broadcast cable television company based in Seattle, Washington. It was owned by the King Broadcasting Company, owners of Seattle television station KING-TV. The company was sold to Continental Cablevision (since absorbed by Comcast) in 1995.
Cable, satellite, and other specialty television providers in the United States
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Cable |
- Adams Cable
- Advanced Cable Communications
- Astound Broadband
- Atlantic Broadband
- Armstrong Telephone Company
- Allegiance Communications
- Baja Broadband
- Blue Ridge Communications
- Bright House Networks
- Broadstripe
- Buckeye CableSystem
- Cable One
- Cablevision
- Champion Broadband
- Charter
- Cobridge Communications
- Comcast
- Cox Communications
- Emery Telcom
- FairPoint Communications
- GCI
- Hargray
- Knology
- MCV Broadband
- Mediacom
- Midcontinent Communications
- Northland Cable Television
- OneLink
- RCN
- Satview Broadband
- Service Electric
- SRT
- Suddenlink
- Time Warner Cable
- Truvista Communications
- Wave Broadband
- Windjammer Communications
- WOW!
- Xfinity (Comcast)
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Satellite |
- Claro
- DirecTV
- Dish Network
- Glorystar
- GlobeCast
- HITS
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IPTV |
- Claro
- Hawaiian Telcom
- NEP Datastream TV
- Sky Angel
- SureWest
- U-verse
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Fiber |
- FiOS (Verizon)
- FiOptics (Cincinnati Bell)
- Google Fiber
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Defunct cable TV |
- Adelphia
- Alameda Power and Telecom
- AT&T Broadband
- MediaOne/Continental Cablevision
- Tele-Communications Inc.
- Bresnan Communications
- Graceba Total Communications
- Jones Intercable
- King Videocable
- Marcus Cable
- NPG Cable
- Paragon Cable
- Precis Communications
- Rapid Communications
- UA-Columbia Cablevision
- US Cable
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Defunct satellite |
- AlphaStar
- PrimeStar
- USSB
- Voom
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Defunct IPTV |
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Defunct terrestrial |
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- Americas
- Canada
- Europe
- Africa, Asia, and Oceania
- United States
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