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Nextgen Networks is a wholly owned subsidiary of Vocus Group. Nextgen's Network is based on a geographically protected national network, with the Brisbane to Melbourne link utilising self-healing SDH two-fibre ring architecture.
Crown Castle International Corp. (acquiring Lightower) [8] Frontier Communications [9] Granite Telecommunications [10] GTT Communications (Acquiring Interoute) [11] IDT Corporation [citation needed] Mediacom [12] Telephone and Data Systems (includes subsidiaries TDS Telecom and U.S. Cellular, will be sold to Telenor [13])
Vocus Group Limited, formerly known as Vocus Communications, is an international telecommunications company headquartered in North Sydney, Australia.Founded by James Spenceley [1] as a wholesale, business, government and consumer telecommunications provider, Vocus owns and manages Australia's second largest intercapital fibre network.
The group’s research into X/Twitter found that the volume of tweets containing slurs had risen by up to 202% since Musk’s takeover of Twitter; the number of tweets linking LGBTQ+ people to ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Biden administration is investigating China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom over concerns the firms could exploit access to American data through their U.S. cloud ...
NTT Docomo USA is the fully owned U.S. subsidiary of NTT Docomo, Inc. in Japan.Established on November 1, 1999, its headquarters were originally located in San Jose, California.
Elon Musk completed his acquisition of Twitter in October 2022; Musk acted as CEO of Twitter until June 2023 when he was succeeded by Linda Yaccarino.In a move that, despite Yaccarino's accession, was widely attributed to Musk, [1] [2] Twitter was rebranded to X on July 23, 2023, [3] and its domain name changed from twitter.com to x.com on May 17, 2024.
Twitter acquired Crashlytics, a crash reporting tool for developers, on January 28, 2013, for over US$100 million, its largest acquisition at the time. [124] Twitter committed to continue supporting and expanding the service. [125] In October 2014, Twitter announced Fabric, a suite of mobile developer tools built around Crashlytics. [126]