Bell Telephone Laboratories
Autore di Engineering and operations in the Bell System
Sull'Autore
Fonte dell'immagine: By Bell Laboratories - Bell Laboratories, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=76603785
Serie
Opere di Bell Telephone Laboratories
A history of engineering and science in the Bell system. Transmission technology (1925-1975) (1985) 6 copie
Radar systems and components 3 copie
Transistor Technology 2 copie
Quality Function Deployment 1 copia
A Guide to Kwajalein Pacific Missile Range Facility Assignment of Personnel Histotry of the Marshall Islands (1961) 1 copia
Pictorial Directory 1989 1 copia
Directory, Spring 1982 1 copia
The Various Ports 1 copia
The Science of Sound 1 copia
From sun to sound 1 copia
Reporter 1 copia
Reporter magazine 1 copia
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Bell Telephone Laboratories
- Nome legale
- Nokia Bell Labs
- Altri nomi
- Bell Labs
Bell Labs Innovations
AT&T Bell Laboratories - Sesso
- n/a
- Luogo di residenza
- Murray Hill, New Jersey, USA
- Relazioni
- Bell, Alexander Graham (founder)
- Organizzazioni
- AT&T Corporation
Western Electric
Lucent Technologies
Alcatel-Lucent
Nokia
Volta Laboratory - Breve biografia
- Bell Laboratories traces its lineage back to Alexander Graham Bell, who used prize money from the 1880 French Volta Prize for the invention of the telephone to create the Volta Laboratory in Washington, DC. (In collaboration with Sumner Tainter and Chichester Bell.) He continued his research into ways of analyzing, recording, and transmitting sound.
In 1875 an informal trust and partnership was created to manage the patents developed by Bell and Thomas Watson, with the initial partners being Bell, Gardiner Greene Hubbard (Bell's father-in-law), and Thomas Sanders (father of one of Bell's deaf students).
in 1877, Hubbard set up the Bell Telephone Company in Boston, Massachusetts, to formalize the partnership as a joint-stock company, with Thomas Watson as its first full-time employee.
In 1878, Bell Telephone was incorporated in Massachusetts, and merged with the New England Telephone and Telegraph Company (also founded by Hubbard) to form the National Bell Telephone Company, then reorganized as the American Bell Telephone Company. Amongst other subsidiaries, including the American Telephone and Telegraph company (AT&T) (managing long-distance telecommunication) and a controlling share of Western Electric, which manufactured telephone equipment. In 1899, more corporate changes led to AT&T being given control over American Bell and the "Bell System" as a whole.
In 1925, AT&T and Western Electric formed Bell Telephone Laboratories to bring all the research and engineering work together. Its offices were originally in New York City, but in 1967, Bell Labs's headquarters moved to Murray Hill, New Jersey, joining other divisions that had previously moved to New Jersey.
Bell Labs's scientists have both invented and refined many concepts and technologies, including the transistor, and contributed fundamental approaches to mathematics, physics, and computing, including the UNIX operating system and the C programming language.
(Much of this information is based on the Wikipedia articles about Bell Laboratories, American Bell, AT&T, and so on.)
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Statistiche
- Opere
- 43
- Utenti
- 161
- Popolarità
- #131,051
- Voto
- 4.7
- Recensioni
- 2
- ISBN
- 16
Of particular interest is the fact that the system described is undergoing the transition from the old electromechanical system to a moden system of electronic switching and the use of computers for monitoring quality and managing data (one foot on the dock and one foot on the boat, as it were). Many of the diagnostic programs in use are broadly outlined. It is unfortunate that there is no mention of UNIX, which had been under development in Bell Laborties since 1969 and which would revolutionize computer systems beginning just after this book was published.… (altro)