AT&T Labs

AT&T Labs is the research & development division of AT&T. It employs some 1800 people in various locations, including: Bedminster NJ; Middletown, NJ; Manhattan, NY; Warrenville, IL; Austin, TX; Dallas, TX; Atlanta, GA; San Francisco, CA; San Ramon, CA; and Redmond, WA . AT&T Labs – Research, the 450-person research division of AT&T Labs, is based in the Bedminster, Middletown, San Francisco, and Manhattan locations.

AT&T Labs, Inc.
Subsidiary of AT&T Communications
IndustryResearch & Development
PredecessorAT&T Laboratories (1925)
Founded1988 (1988)
HeadquartersAtlanta, Georgia
Austin, Texas
Middletown, New Jersey
Redmond, Washington
San Ramon, California
Warrenville, Illinois
OwnerAT&T
ParentAT&T Communications
Websitewww.att.com/labs

AT&T Labs traces its history from AT&T Bell Labs. Much research is in areas traditionally associated with networks and systems, ranging from the physics of optical transmission to foundational topics in computing and communications. Other research areas address the technical challenges of large operational networks and the resulting large data sets.

Achievements

Since its creation in 1996, AT&T Labs has been issued over 2000 US patents. Researchers at AT&T Labs developed UWIN a package for running Unix applications on Windows; Graphviz, a graph visualization system; Natural Voices text-to-speech software; speech recognition software; E4SS (open source software for developing telecommunications services); very large databases; video processing software; and other useful open-source tools and libraries. The Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (now operated by the OEIS foundation) is the creation of former AT&T Researcher Neil Sloane.[1][2]

Researchers at AT&T Labs have successfully transmitted 100 Gigabits per second over a single optical link. In 2009, AT&T researchers led the winning team in the Netflix Prize competition.

History

AT&T Laboratories, Inc., known informally as AT&T Labs, was founded in 1996, as a result of the split of AT&T Bell Laboratories into separate R&D organizations supporting AT&T Corporation and Lucent Technologies. Lucent retained the name Bell Labs and AT&T adopted the name AT&T Laboratories for its R&D organization.

AT&T Labs also traces its origin to Southwestern Bell Technology Resources, Inc. (SWB TRI) which was founded in 1988 as the R&D arm of Southwestern Bell Corporation. It had no connection to Bellcore, the R&D organization owned equally by all of the Baby Bells.[3]

In 1995, Southwestern Bell Corporation renamed itself SBC Communications, Inc., resulting in the subsequent name changes of companies such as SWB TRI to SBC Technology Resources, Inc. (SBC TRI).

In 2003, SBC TRI changed its name to SBC Laboratories, Inc..[4] SBC Laboratories focused on four core areas: Broadband Internet, Wireless Systems, Network Services, and Network IT.

In 2005, SBC Communications and AT&T Corporation merged to form AT&T. AT&T Labs, Inc. became the new name of the combined SBC Laboratories, Inc. and AT&T Laboratories along with its research facilities in New Jersey.

In 2006, BellSouth Telecommunications Science and Technology (S&T) was also merged with AT&T Labs. BellSouth Science and Technology had offices in Birmingham, Alabama and Atlanta, Georgia.

Executives

  • Jeff McElfresh (President, AT&T Technology & Operations) (2018-present)[5]
    • Andre Fuetsch (President and CTO, AT&T Labs)
gollark: CC workflow for setting up a computer to do things:- (auto)craft computer- place computer- write code/download code onto computer as startupOC workflow:- figure out what cards/other components it needs- queue autocrafting for everything- wait a while while autocrafting runs, and possibly converts some coal into diamonds- pull autocrafted stuff out of ME network, put into computers, be sure to get the right items- find openOS disk, disk drive- install openOS- write/download code- either move code to `boot` or work out how `rc` works
gollark: I play on servers. I can't just edit the recipes.
gollark: Even with autocrafting I still have to queue up all the parts and fetch them from storage and install them every time I want a new computer.
gollark: I mean, personally I just find it less annoying than OC because I don't have to microcraft (or program AE recipes for) 89126871258 parts.
gollark: > feel free to unleash your wrath on CCNo, I like CC.

References

  1. Neil Sloane (2016-06-29). "Biography". Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  2. "The Achievement of The Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences". article: labs research. AT&T Labs. 2012-03-06. Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  3. "SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO, Form 10-K405, Filing Date Mar 12, 1996". secdatabase.com. Retrieved May 14, 2018.
  4. AT&T - News Room, June 16, 2003
  5. https://about.att.com/sites/comms_leaders
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