Format:
Online Ressource (xiv, 322 p.)
Edition:
Online-Ausg.
ISBN:
9780674011786
,
0674011783
,
9780674028791
,
0674028791
Content:
1. Introduction -- The promise of regulation -- Conceptual framework -- 2. The first information revolution -- The development of telegraph services -- The telephone and state regulation -- Radio and federal regulation -- 3. Technological origins of the second information Revolution, 1940-1950 -- Radar -- The transistor -- Electronic digital computers -- 4. The SAGE project -- I. The separate worlds of computers and communications, 1950-1968 -- 5. The early semiconductor industry -- The creation of a competitive market -- Innovation and the integrated circuit -- Falling prices, rising output -- 6. The early commercial computer industry -- Vacuum-tube and transistor computers -- The system/360 and IBM dominance -- Alternatives to IBM computers -- 7. The regulated monopoly telephone industry -- Antitrust and the 1956 consent decree -- Microwave technology and potential long distance competition -- Central office switches -- Terminal equipment -- II. Boundary disputes and limited competition, 1969-1984 -- 8. Data communications -- Packet-switching and the arpanet -- Network protocols and interconnection -- Local area networks and ethernet -- 9. From mainframes to microprocessors -- Intel and the microprocessor -- Personal computers and workstations -- 10. The computer-communications boundary -- Computer-assisted messages: Communications or data processing? -- Smart terminals" Teletypewriters or computers? -- Interconnection of customer-owned equipment with the telephone network -- The deregulation of terminal equipment -- The deregulation of enhanced services -- 11. Fringe competition in long distance telephone service -- Competition in specialized services -- Competition in switched services -- The transition to optical fiber -- 12. Divestiture and access charges -- The divestiture -- Access charges -- The enhanced service provider exemption -- III. Interconnected competition and integrated services, 1985-2002 -- 13. Mobile telephones and spectrum reform -- Early land mobile telephones -- Cellular spectrum allocation -- Cellular licensing problems -- Spectrum instructional reform -- PCS and auctions -- 14. Local competition and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- Competitive access providers -- Interconnection: CAP to CLEC -- The Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- Implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- 15. The Internet and the World Wide Web -- The commercial Internet and backbone interconnection -- The development of the Web -- The new economy financial boom and bust -- Real growth in telecommunication and price benefits -- 16. Conclusion -- Technological progress and policy evolution -- The process of institutional change -- Final comment
Note:
Includes bibliographical references (p. 305-310) and index. - Description based on print version record
,
1. IntroductionThe promise of regulation -- Conceptual framework -- 2. The first information revolution -- The development of telegraph services -- The telephone and state regulation -- Radio and federal regulation -- 3. Technological origins of the second information Revolution, 1940-1950 -- Radar -- The transistor -- Electronic digital computers -- 4. The SAGE project -- I. The separate worlds of computers and communications, 1950-1968 -- 5. The early semiconductor industry -- The creation of a competitive market -- Innovation and the integrated circuit -- Falling prices, rising output -- 6. The early commercial computer industry -- Vacuum-tube and transistor computers -- The system/360 and IBM dominance -- Alternatives to IBM computers -- 7. The regulated monopoly telephone industry -- Antitrust and the 1956 consent decree -- Microwave technology and potential long distance competition -- Central office switches -- Terminal equipment -- II. Boundary disputes and limited competition, 1969-1984 -- 8. Data communications -- Packet-switching and the arpanet -- Network protocols and interconnection -- Local area networks and ethernet -- 9. From mainframes to microprocessors -- Intel and the microprocessor -- Personal computers and workstations -- 10. The computer-communications boundary -- Computer-assisted messages: Communications or data processing? -- Smart terminals" Teletypewriters or computers? -- Interconnection of customer-owned equipment with the telephone network -- The deregulation of terminal equipment -- The deregulation of enhanced services -- 11. Fringe competition in long distance telephone service -- Competition in specialized services -- Competition in switched services -- The transition to optical fiber -- 12. Divestiture and access charges -- The divestiture -- Access charges -- The enhanced service provider exemption -- III. Interconnected competition and integrated services, 1985-2002 -- 13. Mobile telephones and spectrum reform -- Early land mobile telephones -- Cellular spectrum allocation -- Cellular licensing problems -- Spectrum instructional reform -- PCS and auctions -- 14. Local competition and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- Competitive access providers -- Interconnection: CAP to CLEC -- The Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- Implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- 15. The Internet and the World Wide Web -- The commercial Internet and backbone interconnection -- The development of the Web -- The new economy financial boom and bust -- Real growth in telecommunication and price benefits -- 16. Conclusion -- Technological progress and policy evolution -- The process of institutional change -- Final comment.
,
1. Introduction -- The promise of regulation -- Conceptual framework -- 2. The first information revolution -- The development of telegraph services -- The telephone and state regulation -- Radio and federal regulation -- 3. Technological origins of the second information Revolution, 1940-1950 -- Radar -- The transistor -- Electronic digital computers -- 4. The SAGE project -- I. The separate worlds of computers and communications, 1950-1968 -- 5. The early semiconductor industry -- The creation of a competitive market -- Innovation and the integrated circuit -- Falling prices, rising output -- 6. The early commercial computer industry -- Vacuum-tube and transistor computers -- The system/360 and IBM dominance -- Alternatives to IBM computers -- 7. The regulated monopoly telephone industry -- Antitrust and the 1956 consent decree -- Microwave technology and potential long distance competition -- Central office switches -- Terminal equipment -- II. Boundary disputes and limited competition, 1969-1984 -- 8. Data communications -- Packet-switching and the arpanet -- Network protocols and interconnection -- Local area networks and ethernet -- 9. From mainframes to microprocessors -- Intel and the microprocessor -- Personal computers and workstations -- 10. The computer-communications boundary -- Computer-assisted messages: Communications or data processing? -- Smart terminals" Teletypewriters or computers? -- Interconnection of customer-owned equipment with the telephone network -- The deregulation of terminal equipment -- The deregulation of enhanced services -- 11. Fringe competition in long distance telephone service -- Competition in specialized services -- Competition in switched services -- The transition to optical fiber -- 12. Divestiture and access charges -- The divestiture -- Access charges -- The enhanced service provider exemption -- III. Interconnected competition and integrated services, 1985-2002 -- 13. Mobile telephones and spectrum reform -- Early land
Additional Edition:
0674011783
Additional Edition:
9780674011786
Additional Edition:
Print version Second information revolution
Language:
English
Keywords:
Electronic books
;
Electronic books
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