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SBC Telecom, Inc. d/b/a AT&T Small Business is a CLEC owned by AT&T that offers local telephone service outside the AT&T Bell Operating Company regions. [1] [better source needed] It was formed in 1999 following provisions that required SBC Communications to offer telephone service outside its boundaries in order to get approval to merge with Ameritech.
The Southwestern Bell brand vanished in late 2002 when SBC dropped the names of all its operating companies to use "SBC" as a national brand. Since d.b.a. names weren't approved before publishing deadlines for telephone directories distributed in December 2002 and January 2003, the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. name remained on telephone ...
In many cases the SBC hides the network topology and protects the service provider or enterprise packet networks. The SBC terminates an inbound call and initiates the second call leg to the destination party. In technical terms, when used with the SIP protocol, this defines a back-to-back user agent (B2BUA). The effect of this behavior is that ...
SBC Communications announced its plans for a fiber-optic network and Internet Protocol television (IPTV) deployment in 2004 and unveiled the name "U-verse" (formerly "Project Lightspeed" [23]) for the suite of network services in 2005. SBC eventually became AT&T in late 2005, and the AT&T name was applied for the service.
SBC Cinemas, cinema chain in Taiwan, now part of Vue International; SBC Telecom, a US telecom corporation; Seattle's Best Coffee, American coffee retailer; Security Bank Corporation, Philippines; Service Bureau Corporation, former IBM subsidiary divested in 1973; South Bay Conservatory, a performing arts company, Los Angeles, California, US
SBC Long Distance is a separate subsidiary than AT&T Communications, the incumbent long-distance carrier for most of the country acquired in the SBC merger with AT&T. SBC Long Distance started in 1996 as Southwestern Bell Communications Services, Inc. , created as a result of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 which allowed the Baby Bells to ...
Employers, not employees, call the shots. Not everyone is ready to fight back. A significant share of readers' comments took the stance that what the boss says goes.
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