juan said:bell atlantic mobile merged with a vodaphone to become verizon wireless..this had nothing to due with gte
AndyMon said:It is now in the hands of the legal depts. to cross the T's and dot the I's. The specifics of the arrangement were not relayed to me but logic can only point to a few permutations. This can only be good for us, I hope!
No, how many business arrangements fail at this point? And, I would like an exact figure! <G>snathanb said:Have you any idea how many business arrangements fail at this stage? Lots and lots and lots, that I've been personally involved with in some way or another. And the bad thing is.. it usually boils down to the egos of the CEOs.
That being the case... we are doomed.
no im not..i know pleanty about verizon. I was there when it was nj belll and im still theresnathanb said:you are confusing verizon wireless with verizon wireline. Verizon wireline very much has something to do with gte.
Why is it that most posts that start out "wrong wrong wrong" are wrong?juan said:wrong wrong wrong..
the name changed due to a fcc mandate..
<BLEEP> wrong. The BA/GTE merger was before the FCC at the time. BA and GTE were confident that their merger would go through, confident enough that when GTE purchased Ameritech's Chicago and St Louis markets they kept the Ameritech name ... knowing that a combined BA/GTE name would be right around the corner. The BA/GTE merger took longer than expected, so Verizon Wireless started as just BA (BAM and C1) plus Voda (AirTouch, PrimeCo, and C1). But GTE was *always* part of the master plan.juan said:bell atlantic mobile merged with a vodaphone to become verizon wireless..this had nothing to due with gte
You seem to know as much as the average DNSC tech knows about grounding. Next you will be telling us how Verizon led the way by pioneering the use of 911 as an emergency number in honor of the victims of Sept 11.juan said:no im not..i know pleanty about verizon. I was there when it was nj belll and im still there
oh well since you know everything i will abide with your wishesjustalurker said:Why is it that most posts that start out "wrong wrong wrong" are wrong?
(Snipping the rest does not show agreement. I just wanted to quote the most glaringly wrong part of that post.)
<BLEEP> wrong. The BA/GTE merger was before the FCC at the time. BA and GTE were confident that their merger would go through, confident enough that when GTE purchased Ameritech's Chicago and St Louis markets they kept the Ameritech name ... knowing that a combined BA/GTE name would be right around the corner. The BA/GTE merger took longer than expected, so Verizon Wireless started as just BA (BAM and C1) plus Voda (AirTouch, PrimeCo, and C1). But GTE was *always* part of the master plan.
You seem to know as much as the average DNSC tech knows about grounding. Next you will be telling us how Verizon led the way by pioneering the use of 911 as an emergency number in honor of the victims of Sept 11.
Those that ignore the past are destined to be stupid.
And now we return to our regularly scheduled talk on the future of SATELLITE TELEVISION. Please don't insult us with any more misinformation about wireless and telephone companies.
JL
juan said:bell atlantic mobile merged with a vodaphone to become verizon wireless..this had nothing to due with gte
AndyMon said:No, how many business arrangements fail at this point? And, I would like an exact figure! <G>
I hope your involvement wasn't the reason for the failure of the deals. If it was, then maybe this deal stands a slight chance of coming to fruition since I don't believe you are involved in it, hehehe.
Anyway, it's always nice to think that maybe, just maybe, something good may happen for the poor E* subs. Law of averages, y'know?
Don't take offense at my reply here. It's all tongue in cheek since I'm in a randy mood. Nothing personal, I'm just being a jerk.
Coolsnathanb said:No offense taken at all...
... but it was much more common in situations where the CEO was the original founder and had too much emotional involvement in the company.
Actually Verizon Wireless remains co-owned by Verizon Communications and Vodaphone. IIRC Voda owns 45% of the wireless and has 0% of the control ... and there are options for them to sell their interest in Verizon Wireless to Verizon Communications. Voda has threatened to excersize that option, and would really prefer that Verizon Wireless was GSM to fit in with Vodaphone's international offerings. That isn't going to happen. If Voda could swing the purchase of a major GSM carrier they probably would sell off their interest in Verizon Wireless.juan said:thats not what i meant..verizon wireless is a seperate company within verizon communications(yes it did merge with gte wireless operations later on and it was planned) verizon wireless is (mostly) non union subsideary soon(or was soon) to be spun off as a completely seperate corporate entity I believe its a"272 company" right now..ps please correct me " just a lurker "if any of this info is incorrect
juan said:thats not what i meant..verizon wireless is a seperate company within verizon communications(yes it did merge with gte wireless operations later on and it was planned) verizon wireless is (mostly) non union subsideary soon(or was soon) to be spun off as a completely seperate corporate entity I believe its a"272 company" right now..ps please correct me " just a lurker "if any of this info is incorrect
It all happened at pretty much the same timeGeronimo said:I guess things got a bit confusing. Most posters were talking about how Verizon came into being. But all the talk about "Atlantic Bell" and then throwing the cellular company in made it confusing.