Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In addition to the radio relay services, MCI soon made plans to offer voice, computer information, and data communication services for business customers unable to afford AT&T's TELPAK service. [2] Hearings on the company's initial license application between February 13, 1967, and April 19, 1967, resulted in a recommendation of approval by the ...
In telecommunications, a cable television relay service station (CARS) is a fixed or mobile station used for the transmission of television and related audio signals, signals of standard and FM broadcast stations, signals of instructional television fixed stations, and cablecasting from the point of reception to a terminal point from which the signals are distributed to the public.
The typical microwave relay installation or portable van had two radio systems (plus backup) connecting two line of sight sites. These radios would often carry 24 telephone channels frequency-division multiplexed on the microwave carrier (i.e. Lenkurt 33C FDM). Any channel could be designated to carry up to 18 teletype communications instead ...
The company emerged from bankruptcy in 2004 with about $5.7 billion in debt and $6 billion in cash. About half of the cash was intended to pay various claims and settlements. Previous bondholders ended up being paid 35.7 cents on the dollar, in bonds and stock in the new MCI company. The previous stockholders' stock was cancelled.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
MCI Inc., formerly called WorldCom, which acquired MCI Communications, and was later acquired by Verizon Communications; MCI Group, a global event, association management and congress management company; Mobile Telecommunication Company of Iran, the largest mobile phone operator in Iran; Motor Coach Industries, a coach/bus manufacturing company
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
A typical relay service conversation. A telecommunications relay service, also known as TRS, relay service, or IP-relay, or Web-based relay service, is an operator service that allows people who are deaf, hard of hearing, deafblind, or have a speech disorder to place calls to standard telephone users via a keyboard or assistive device.