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Subject: IP: Say Goodbye to AT&T
Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2001 19:14:14 -0400 To: Dave Farber <farber@cis.upenn.edu> From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com> Subject: Say Goodbye to AT&T AT&T Say Goodbye to AT&T It's not your mother's phone company anymore. Someday soon, it may not be anybody's. FORTUNE Monday, October 1, 2001 By Stephanie N. Mehta In a nondescript one-story building off Interstate 78 in New Jersey lies the largest known stash of corporate memorabilia in America. The eyes take a while to drink in what they're seeing, because at first the cubicles and low-pile carpeting bring to mind a suburban insurance agency, not the official archives of AT&T. But then the antique telephone-operator "cord board" comes into view, and the vintage telephones encased in glass, and the temperature-controlled bank vault where yellowing maps of the world's first long-distance network are stored. With luck, the resident historian will don white gloves and unwrap the notebook in which the man who received the most famous phone call in history jotted Alexander Graham Bell's words: "Mr. Watson, come here, I want you." No question, the archive is an amazing treasure trove. But like the great storeroom of Xanadu in Citizen Kane, it also holds clues to the death of the entity that created it. http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=204241
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