X-Nico

unusual facts about cable company



GameLine

In the early 1980s a cable pioneer named William von Meister was looking for a way to use his innovative modem transmission technology, which previously was acquired in ill-fated attempts of sending music to cable companies.


see also

Bright House Field

The stadium is named after the regional / national cable company, Bright House Networks, whose local head end center is located just to the south of the stadium.

Center for Organizational Performance

Based on empirical research at a cable company and its suppliers (a total of 239 filled-in questionnaires were received back, 46 from the cable company and on average 48 per supplier.), a HPP Framework was developed consisting of nine HPP characteristic: Control, Trust, Commitment, Coordination, Interdependence, Communication, Conflict, Valuing and Diversity.

Commercial Cable Company

The Commercial Cable Company was founded in the United States in 1884 by John William Mackay and James Gordon Bennett, Jr. Their motivation was to break the then virtual monopoly of Jay Gould on transatlantic telegraphy and bring down prices (particularly for Bennett's newspaper empire).

KDSM-TV

Mediacom is the largest cable company in Iowa, and the dispute would have left more than half the state unable to watch the 2010 Orange Bowl set to air on Fox with local favorite Iowa Hawkeyes football team playing the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.

MASTV

The wireless cable company offers service to 11 cities in Mexico; Mexico City, Guadalajara, Leon, Mérida, Monterrey, Pachuca, Queretaro, San Luis Potosi, Toluca, Tuxtla Gutierrez, and Villahermosa.

Sheringham Shoal Offshore Wind Farm

In April 2008, cable company Nexans was awarded the €24m export cable supply contract by Statoil.

Warner-Amex Satellite Entertainment

Warner Amex Cable Company, run by Gus Hauser, would build local cable systems across the United States (today as Time Warner Cable, the second largest cable operator in America), and Warner Amex Satellite Entertainment Company (WASEC), run by former CBS Network President John A. Schneider, to supply programming to the rapidly expanding cable television universe.