Feature
Story
-
the television screen -- fits the
big picture Google envisions for
its continued success..
Sergey
Brin, Google Co-Founder &
President, Technology
-----Sergey
Brin, a native of Moscow, Russia,
received a bachelor of science
degree with honors in mathematics
and computer science from the
University of Maryland at College
Park. Brin is a recipient of a
National Science Foundation
Graduate Fellowship as well as an
honorary MBA from Instituto de
Empresa.
-----
It
was at Stanford where Brin met
Larry Page, and where they worked
on the project that they name
Google. Together, in 1998, they
founded Google Inc., where Brin
continues to share responsibility
for day-to-day operations with
Larry Page and Eric Schmidt.
-----Brin's
research interests include search
engines, information extraction
from unstructured sources, and
data mining of large text
collections and scientific data.
He has published more than a
dozen academic papers, including
"Extracting Patterns and
Relations from the World Wide
Web"; "Dynamic Data Mining: A New
Architecture for Data with High
Dimensionality", which he
published with Larry Page;
"Scalable Techniques for Mining
Casual Structures"; "Dynamic
Itemset Counting and Implication
Rules for Market Basket Data";
and "Beyond Market Baskets:
Generalizing Association Rules to
Correlations".
-----Brin
has been a featured speaker at
several international academic,
business and technology forums,
including the World Economic
Forum and the Technology,
Entertainment and Design
Conference. He has shared his
views on the technology industry
and the future of search engines
on the "Charlie Rose Show", CNBC,
and CNNfn. In 2004, he and Larry
Page were named "Persons of the
Week" by ABC World News
Tonight.
Back
Issues are now available from
1956 to present
date.
///
Center
Page / Profile
TIMELINE
-
Life
- ACHIEVEMENTS
2004
- Sergey Brin: Age: 31; Marital
Status: single; Hometown:
San Francisco, CA; Graduate:
Stanford University, Master of
Science.
2003
- 2004 - Forbes estimated his
net worth at $550 million.
"Whoops", says Forbes, in 2004,
since taking his Internet search
engine public in August 2004, the
dynamic thinkers behind Google
has seen their combined fortune
soar to $8 billion. Both of the
thinkers, Sergey and his partner,
Larry Page, have math teacher
parents. Brin born in Moscow,
Russia, and emigrated to the
U.S.
1995
March-December 1995
Sergey
Brin and Larry Page meet at a
spring gathering of new Stanford
University Ph.D. computer science
candidates. By year's end, they
collaborate to develop technology
that will become the foundation
for the Google search
engine.
1996-1997
January 1996-December 1997
Sergey
and Larry create BackRub,
the precursor to the Google
search engine.
1998
January-July 1998
Larry
and Sergey continue to perfect
Google's search technology.
Larry's Stanford dorm room
becomes Google's data center
while Sergey's room serves as the
business office. They start their
own company with the
encouragement of Yahoo!
co-founder and fellow Stanford
alum David Filo.
August-December
1998
Sergey and Larry, putting their
studies on hold, raise $1 million
in funding from family, friends,
and angel investors to start
Google. On September 7, 1998
Google is incorporated and moves
to its first office in a friend's
Menlo Park, Calif. garage with
four employees. Google answers
10,000 search queries per
day. PC Magazine includes
Google, which is still in beta,
in the list of Top 100 Web Sites
and Search Engines for 1998.
In
1998 - With partner Larry
page (see), Sergey founded Google
Larry Page grew up in Michigan,
and met Sergey at Stanford while
pursuing graduate degrees in
computer science. Created Google:
Internet gateway uses more than
10,000 networked computers to
comb through 3 billion Web
pages.
-----
They
Raised $25 million from starmaker
venture capital firms Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers and
Sequoia Capital. Recruited
seasoned tech exec Eric Schmidt
(see) to run company
-----Brin
serves as president of
technology, Page heads products
division. Eschewed traditional
Wall Street IPO in favor of Dutch
auction, then riled SEC after
Playboy published interview in
the mandated "quiet period." No
matter. Google founders still
bigger stars than any centerfold.
Title: President (Products) and
Co-founder.
1995 to 2000 Highlights
-
Sergey
Brin, along with Larry Page came
up with the idea for a better
search engine while working on
their Ph.D.s in computer science
at Stanford. Since then, the
company has expanded to more than
1,900 employees worldwide, with a
management team that represents
some of the most experienced
technology professionals in the
industry. Dr. Eric E. Schmidt
joined Google as chairman and
chief executive officer in
2001.
1999
February-June 1999
Google
moves its headquarters to
University Avenue in Palo Alto,
Calif. with eight employees and
answers 500,000 search queries
per day. Red Hat becomes
Google's first commercial
customer. Google receives $25
million in equity funding from
Sequoia Capital and Kleiner
Perkins Caufield & Byers.
Sequoia's Michael Moritz, Kleiner
Perkins' John Doerr and angel
investor Ram Shriram join
Google's board of directors.
AOL/Netscape incorporates
Google's search technology into
its Netcenter portal.
August-December 1999
Google moves its headquarters to
Mountain View, Calif. and
officially launches its
destination site. The company
performs 3 million searches
per day and has 39 employees.
Virgilio, the leading online
portal in Italy, selects Google
to provide Google WebSearch
services. Google wins a number of
awards less than four months
later, including PC
Magazine's Technical
Excellence Award for Innovation
in Web Application Development,
Shift and P.O.V.
magazines' list of 100 Best Web
Sites for 1999 lists, and
TIME magazine's Top Ten
Best Cybertech list for
1999.
2000
January-April 2000
Google
introduces the first
comprehensive wireless search
technology for WAP phones and
handheld devices, and launches a
full suite of automated, highly
customizable Google WebSearch
services. Google also
incorporates Netscape's Open
Directory Project, which expands
and augments Google's web search
results with hand-selected
directory listings. Yahoo!
Internet Life magazine names
Google the Best Search Engine
on the Internet; Smart
Computing magazine names
Google to its 50 Hot Technologies
list.
May-June 2000
Google launches search
capabilities in 10 non-English
language versions, and wins the
prestigious Webby awards for Best
Technical Achievement for 2000
and People's Voice Award in the
Technical Achievement category
for 2000.
Google becomes the largest search
engine on the web, with a new
index comprising 1 billion URLs.
Yahoo! selects Google as its
default search results provider
to complement Yahoo!'s web
directory and navigational guide.
Google answers 18 million
search queries per day.
August-October
2000
Google signs
agreements with leading portals
and websites in the United
States, Europe and Asia; launches
advertising programs to
complement its growing search
services business; and introduces
a number of expanded search
features including Google Number
Search (GNS) which makes
wireless data entry easy and
faster on WAP phones. Forbes
includes Google in its Best of
the Web round-up, PC World
calls Google the Best Bet Search
Engine; and Google is awarded
WIRED Readers Raves for
Most Intelligent Agent on the
Internet.
November-December
2000
Google answers
more than 60 million searches
per day. The Google index
comprises more than 1.3 billion
web pages. Google launches the
Google Toolbar, a
downloadable browser plug-in that
increases users' ability to find
information from any web page
anywhere on the web. PC Magazine
UK honors Google with Best
Internet Innovation award.
2001
January-February 2001
Google
answers more than 100 million
searches per day. Google
acquires Deja.com's Usenet
archive dating back to 1995.
Google releases new wireless
search technology specifically
designed for i-mode mobile phones
in Japan. Vizzavi's European
multi-access portal chooses
Google for its search engine.
Google also launches Google
PhoneBook, which provides
publicly available phone numbers
and addresses search results.
March-April 2001
Dr. Eric Schmidt, chairman and
CEO of Novell and a former CTO at
Sun Microsystems, joins Google as
chairman of the board of
directors. Google powers search
services at Yahoo! Japan, Fujitsu
NIFTY and NEC BIGLOBE, the top
three portals in Japan, as well
as corporate sites Procter &
Gamble, IDG.net (comprising 300
sites), Vodaphone, and
MarthaStewart.com.
May-June 2001
Handspring integrates Google's
search technology into its Blazer
web browser, available for any
Palm-based handheld computer.
Google powers 130 portal and
destination sites in 30
countries. Google adds Yahoo!,
Procter & Gamble, IDG.net
(comprising more than 300 sites),
Vodafone, MarthaStewart.com,
Sprint and Handspring to its
growing list of search services
customers. Google's advertising
programs attract more than
350 Premium Sponsorship
advertisers and thousands of
AdWords advertisers, and delivers
clickthrough rates four to five
times higher than clickthrough
rates for traditional banner ads.
Google
offers country domains in the
U.K., Germany, France, Italy,
Switzerland, Canada, Japan, and
Korea. Users can select Google's
interface in nearly 40
non-English languages. Users
can also restrict their searches
to pages written in any one of 26
languages supported by Google's
language search capability.
Google's automatic translation
feature translates pages found in
the search results into a user's
preferred language.
July-August 2001
Dr. Eric E. Schmidt is appointed
new Google CEO while co-founders
Larry Page and Sergey Brin become
president, products and
president, technology
respectively. Google wins another
Webby, this time in the new Best
Practices category. Google brings
search to Cingular Wireless users
and to more than 300 of Sony's
corporate websites. New Google
Image Search index launches with
250 million images and
date range search becomes
available through the Google
advanced search page. Search
patterns, trends and surprises
are published in the Google
Zeitgeist. Google partners with
Logitech to provide
iTouch-enabled mice and
keyboard users instant access to
the Google search engine.
September-October 2001
Google purchases the technology
assets of Outride, Inc. Universo
Online (UOL) partners with Google
to provide millions of UOL users
throughout Brazil and Latin
America immediate access to the
Google search engine. The new
tabbed home page interface goes
live on Google.com and 25
international sites. With the
addition of Arabic and Turkish,
Google users can now limit their
searches to web pages written in
28 languages. The Google Toolbar
launches versions in five new
languages. Google provides search
to Lycos Korea users. Google
partners with AT&T Wireless
to provide AT&T Digital
PocketNet® customers access
to the world's largest search
engine. Google expands
partnership with NEC to provide
site search for NEC's corporate
website. Google launches
file type search
and expands its search into more
than a dozen formats.
November-December 2001
Google increases the size and
scope of searchable information
available through the Google
Search Engine to 3
billion web documents.
Included in the 3 billion web
documents is an archive of Usenet
messages dating back to 1981.
Google offers users an overview
of the day's news with Google
News Headlines. With the addition
of an advanced search page and a
larger collection of images,
Google Image Search comes out of
beta. Google launches a beta test
of Google Catalog Search and
enables users to search and
browse more than 1,100 mail-order
catalogs. Google continues global
expansion with new sales offices
in Hamburg, Germany and Tokyo,
Japan. Google publishes a unique
retrospective on 2001 search
patterns and trends with the
Year-End Google
Zeitgeist.
2002
January-February
2002
Google
announces the availability of the
Google Search
Appliance, an integrated
hardware/software solution that
extends the power of Google to
corporate intranets and web
servers. To commemorate its third
year of delivering the best
search experience on the web,
Google initiates its first annual
Programming Contest. Earthlink
launches a redesigned search
function powered by the Google
search engine. Google launches
AdWords
Select, an updated
version of the AdWords
self-service advertising system
with a number of new
enhancements, including
cost-per-click (CPC)-based
pricing.
Google
is honored with "Outstanding
Search Service", "Best Image
Search Engine", "Best Design",
"Most Webmaster Friendly Search
Engine", and "Best Search
Feature" (Google Toolbar and
Google Cache) in the 2001
Search Engine Watch
Awards. Google continues
the expansion of its global
capabilities by launching
interface translations for
Belarusian, Javanese, Occitan,
Thai, Urdu, Klingon, Bihari, and
Gujarati, bringing the total
number of interface language
options to 74. Google also
increases the number of languages
restricts to 35 with the
additions of Bulgarian, Catalan,
Croatian, Indonesian, Serbian,
Slovak, and Slovenian.
March-April 2002
Google enhances its search
service with several new features
designed to enrich search and
navigation on the World Wide Web.
A beta version of Google News is
launched which presents
continuously updated information
culled from many of the world's
news sources. The company offers
Google Compute,
a new Google Toolbar feature that
accesses idle cycles on Google
users' computers for working on
complex scientific problems. The
first beneficiary of this effort
is Folding@home, a non-profit
research project at Stanford
University that is trying to
understand the structure of
proteins so they can develop
better treatments for a number of
illnesses.
Google
reaches out to the software
developer community with the
Google Web APIs service, which
enables programmers and
researchers to develop software
that accesses billions of web
documents as a resource in their
applications.
PigeonRank, an
April's Fools play on our own
patented PageRank
technology,
is revealed on the Google home
page. Google's founders, Larry
Page and Sergey Brin, are named
to InfoWorld's list of "Top Ten
Technology Innovators" and Google
wins an M.I.T Sloan eBusiness
award as the "Student's
Choice."
May-June 2002
Google and AOL
announce a search services and
syndicated advertising agreement
to provide results to AOL's 34
million members and millions of
visitors to AOL.com. Google
launches Google
Labs (http://labs.google.com),
where users can play with
Google's latest search
technologies while they're still
in the early stages of
development. Google also reveals
several new enhancements to its
popular Google Toolbar software,
including an Experimental
Features page (linked from the
bottom of the Google Toolbar
options page) that offers the
latest search tools developed by
the Google Toolbar team. Seven
new Google Toolbar interface
languages are introduced,
including traditional and
simplified Chinese, Catalan,
Polish, Swedish, Russian, and
Romanian. With the addition of
these languages, the Google
Toolbar is now available in 20
interface languages.
Google
continues its international
expansion, opening an office in
Paris to complement its existing
international offices in London,
Toronto, Hamburg and Tokyo.
Google announces the winner of
the 2002 Google
Programming Contest, its
first. The $10,000 prize goes to
Daniel Egnor of New York, who
created a geographic search
program that enables users to
search for web pages within a
specified geographic area.
July - August
Google and Ask Jeeves announce a
syndicated advertising agreement
to provide Google ads on Ask.com
properties. An agreement is
signed with InfoSpace.com to
provide Google advertising and
search results on InfoSpace.com
and its properties including
Dogpile, MetaCrawler, WebCrawler,
and Excite, among others. And a
syndicated advertising and search
services agreement is inked with
AT&T for its AT&T
WorldNet service. The Google
Index increases in size to nearly
2.5 billion web pages. Google
adds former Sun Microsystems
executive George Reyes to its
management team as Chief
Financial Officer. Google hosts
its first
GoogleDance
at the Googleplex, entertaining
more than 500 attendees from the
Search Engine Strategies
conference in San Jose, Calif.,
with food, drink, music, and
lively conversation.
September - October
Google takes its self-service
advertising program to a global
audience, launching the Google
AdWords service in the United
Kingdom, Germany, France, and
Japan. Google announces the
GB-5005, a midrange Google Search
Appliance that complements the
existing GB-1001 and GB-8008,
launched in February, 2002.
Google also introduces an updated
beta version of its
Google
News
product, bringing to market the
first-ever news service compiled
solely by computer algorithms
without human intervention.
Google News crawls approximately
4,000 online news sources
continuously throughout the
day.
Google continues its
international expansion,
launching Bosnia and Sinhalese
(Sri Lanka) language interfaces
and its Google.ie Irish site,
offering both English and Gaelic.
Google makes available 16 new
versions of the Google Toolbar,
including Czech, Elmer Fudd,
Farsi, Hebrew, Slovak, and Thai.
Google receives the IDGNow! "Best
Search Engine" Internet Award and
the San Francisco Business Times'
"Crowd Pleaser" HotTech Award.
Google remembers to celebrate its
fourth
birthday
with a special home page logo
created by assistant webmaster
Dennis Hwang.
November - December
Google introduces a beta version
of
Froogle,
a product search engine that
enables users to search for
millions of products across the
web. Google further expands by
introducing sites in Australia,
Finland, Greece, Singapore,
United Arab Emirates, Poland, and
Thailand, bringing to 40 the
number of its international
domains. Google expands the size
of its web index to more than
4
billion web
documents.
Yahoo! Japan joins Google's
global advertising syndication
network. Google releases its
second annual Year-End Google
Zeitgeist, highlighting search
trends and patterns that mirror
the key social and news events of
2002.
2003
January - February
Google
acquires Pyra Labs, creator of
web self-publishing tool
Blogger.
International expansion
continues, adding Google Paraguay
and Google Puerto Rico domains to
the list of available countries.
Google releases two new Google
Labs experiments &endash; Google
Viewer, which enables a surfer to
view search results as a
scrolling slide show, and Google
WebQuotes, which incorporates
quotes taken from other sites to
provide third party commentary on
search results. Google introduces
its advertising programs in Italy
and opens a sales office in
Milan. Interbrand, an
international branding
consultancy, names Google the
2002 Brand of the Year. Wired
magazine awards its 4th Annual
Wired Rave "Business People of
the Year" Award to Google
co-founders Larry Page and Sergey
Brin, and CEO Eric Schmidt.
March - April
Google surpasses
100,000
active
advertisers
in its Google
AdWords
program. Google announces its new
content-targeted advertising
program and the acquisition of
Applied Semantics, to strengthen
and enhance the program's
underlying technology. Support
for two new languages, Xhosa and
Zulu, and 12 new international
domains are added to bring the
total available to 63 domains and
88 languages. New customers are
announced including Amazon.com
and Walt Disney Internet Group
properties. Google Labs adds
Google Compute, a toolbar feature
that donates a computer's idle
time to scientific research.
Google introduces its advertising
programs in Australia and opens a
sales office in Sydney.
May - June
Google
AdSense,
a program designed to maximize
the revenue potential of a
website by serving highly
relevant ads specific to the
content of the page, launches
with initial partners, including
ABC.com, HowStuffWorks, Internet
Broadcasting Systems, Inc., Lycos
Europe, Knight Ridder Digital,
About.com, CNET and others.
Google and MapQuest sign an
agreement to display Google's
sponsored links on MapQuest maps
and directions pages. Google wins
the
Webby
People's Voice Award for
Technical
Achievement.
BtoB Magazine names
Google the No. 3 top
business-to-business advertising
property. Google News wins a
Webby Award in the News category
and is expanded to local versions
for English-language domains,
including Canada, Australia, New
Zealand, U.K. and India.
Version
2.0 of the Google
Toolbar
is released and includes new
functions such as a pop-up
blocker and autofill, which can
automatically fill in the fields
of a form with a user's
information. Google introduces
its advertising program in the
Benelux region and opens a sales
office in Amsterdam.
July - August
Google announces additional
customers of the Google
Search
Appliance,
including Xerox, Pfizer, the U.S.
Army, Procter & Gamble,
Nextel Communications, Hitachi
Data Systems and others. Google
launches new international
domains including Denmark,
Azerbaijan, El Salvador, Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines,
India, Malaysia and Libya,
bringing the total of Google's
worldwide sites to 82. Google
signs online weather site,
weather.com, as a partner for its
web search, AdWords and AdSense
programs. A calculator function
is launched, enabling users to
solve mathematic problems by
entering numeric expressions into
the google.com or the Google
Toolbar search boxes. The new
version of the Google Toolbar
that includes a
pop-up
blocker
and form autofill, originally
introduced in June 2003, is
launched out of beta. Google News
launches in German and French,
the first non-English language
versions of the news service.
September - October
Google Glossary is launched,
enabling users to use the
Google.com search field to
retrieve definitions that Google
has found on the Internet for a
specific term or concept.
Additionally, two new projects
are made available on
Google
Labs
&endash;
Search
by
Location,
which enables users to find
information by geographic
location, and
Google
News
Alerts,
an automatic news alert system
that notifies subscribers via
e-mail about the latest Google
News listings related to a
specified subject. Google
introduces enhancements to its
AdWords service, including a
conversion tracking tool and
expanded match technology. Google
continues its growth
internationally, opening a new
sales office in Madrid and
introducing a beta version of
Google
News in
Spanish
November - December
The
Google
Deskbar,
a free software download which
enables users to search Google
without using a web browser, is
introduced on Google Labs. Google
celebrates the 100th anniversary
of flight with a special 'Wright
Flyer' logo on its homepage. A
new layout is unveiled for
Froogle, Google's product search
engine (beta) that enables users
to search for millions of
products across the web. Several
new features are made available
to Google AdWords users including
a visual click-through rate
indicator and a refined billing
summary page. Slovakia is the
latest domain to join the growing
list of Google international
domains. Several new search
features are launched on
Google.com that enable users to
search for flight information,
track USPS, UPS or Federal
Express packages, and look up
area codes and VIN information.
2004
January - February
Brandchannel again names Google"
Brand
of the
Year,"
as the site's index increases to
4.28 billion web pages. ABC News
marks the occasion by naming
Larry and Sergey "Persons of the
Week." Google consolidates much
of its Mountain View operations
into a new headquarters
building.
March - April
Google introduces
personalized
search
on Google Labs, enabling users to
specify their interests and to
adjust the level of customization
in their search results, based on
that profile. On April 1, Google
posts plans to open a research
facility on the Moon and
announces a new web-based mail
service called
Gmail
that will include a gigabyte of
free storage for each user. The
service also includes a powerful
search engine to locate and
retrieve messages, which are
displayed in a "conversation
view" that chronologically
arranges all emails sent or
received with the same subject
line. Gmail also includes
relevant advertising delivered
with the same technology that
scans web pages as part of the
AdSense service. The AdWords
program itself is enhanced with
the addition of local search
targeting capability, enabling
advertisers to specify a
geographic range for delivery of
their ads.
///
ByLines:
Editors
Note
-----The
first time I heard the name
Parks, Sergey and Google, was in
1998, when Google's was just a
small search engine, getting
ready for the bit time in
on
Pasadena Avenue, In the begining
the site
looked like a browser catering to
kids. The Pasadena browser
development team guided me to a
story about the rockn roll group
that went with me to China. In
fact the chat room story said,
"In 1991 the band toured the
Peoples Republic of China along
with the Troy Cory Show playing
in front of over 64,000 people in
five shows. The climax of the
tour came when Bonhomie Baby
played two sold out shows at the
Peking Coliseum in front of
22,000 per night."
http://smart90.com/bonhomiebaby/
ABOUT BUSH BABIES Bonhomie Baby
was founded in July of 1988. The
Band was originally called
"Bushbaby" but that name was sold
to Warner Bros. in 1994. The
band's members are: Sam Stavros
(guitar, vocals, songwriting),
Shawn Nourse (drums), and Jeff
Mayer (bass).
MORE
ABOUT SERGEY BRIN, Google and
FAQs
and
his"I think Google wants to be
the place where you store your
life," he said.
"What
they're doing is brilliant. They
are using each of their services
to promote their other services
very well."
Google
reminds Gross of how Microsoft
used the enormous profit from its
Windows operating system to give
away its Internet Explorer Web
browser a decade ago. That move
not only helped Microsoft become
the dominant browser provider but
also let it install its MSN
website as the initial home page
and its Windows Media Player as
the initial online jukebox for
millions of Internet users.
TVI
Magazine ONLINE / IS YOUR
INDUSTRY WEB SITE Ready for the
future?
-----
TVI
Magazine introduces here a new
marketing forum for the
international television
industry: a dynamic online
service on its Web site. TVI
Magazine will now effectively
serve the new marketing needs of
all entertainment companies with
a tool that offers almost
instantaneous promotion updates.
Company promotional material that
appears on TVI Magazine's Web
site can be hyperlinked with the
company's own URL. TVI Magazine
can also link the ads to a
special Web page for the
advertiser and then link that
page to the advertiser's
URL.
-----
To
ensure that visitors find their
way to promotion information and
product updates, TVI Magazine is
listing TVI Magazine Online on
more than 250 of the world's most
popular search engines and
electronic
directories.
-----
Online
ad space can be purchased in
monthly increments (with a
one-month minimum). At renewal
time, advertisers can change
their ad and/or move it to
another space if one is
available. The TVI Magazine Web
site will indicate the total
number of hits on the home page
per month and per day, enabling
advertisers to monitor their
reach and billings regularly.
-----
TVI
Magazine has two key pages for ad
placement: the index page (home
page) and the main page (main
page of articles). Less expensive
ad space is available on article
pages. Advertisers can provide
the artwork and/or logo, either
by submitting the file
electronically or via an existing
graphic on the Web that TVI
Magazine's online team can
grab.
-----
Most
ads can be posted on the TVI
Magazine site within a few hours.
However, in the event that any
graphic manipulation is required,
one must allow more time before
the ad is posted, usually two to
seven business days for a static
banner and up to 10 business days
for an animated banner ad.
-----It
just goes to show you, says Troy
about the TV and Film industry --
"NOTHING IN THIS WORLD IS
PERMANENT" . . . so follow
the
money
- - and
take some advice from a
dinner-time chat with
"Stonehead" --
Disappointments
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TeleComunication Study -
Regulatory Frequency
Seizure
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Converging
News 092006 / TeleCom BuyOuts,
Spinoffs and Asset Seizure
Boom
Respectfully
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