GammaLink
GammaLink Inc. was founded in Sunnyvale, California by Hank Magnuski and Michael Lutz. The company was the first to invent PC-to-fax communications technology, GammaFax.[1][2][3][4]
The company was eventually sold to Dialogic Corporation which in turn was bought by Intel. It was then bought by Eicon and subsequently acquired by Open Media Labs, which now functions as Dialogic Media Labs.
Footnotes
- Kanzler, Stephen. Firm Offers Link Between PC and Facsimile Machine, PC Week, November 26th, 1985, p. 10
- Dix, John. Gammalink's micro-to-facsimile transmission product debuts, Computerworld, December 9th, 1985, p. 19
- Hindin, Eric. Gamma Technology Unfolds Software To Link IBM PC With Fax Machines, Communications Week, December 16th, 1985
- GammaLink fax board enshrined at Smithsonian, Infoworld, July 20th, 1992, p. 25
gollark: What is it even doing? htop says I'm only doing 70KiBHz of network IO!
gollark: I sure am "connecting" and not "inevitably timing out".
gollark: It does not.
gollark: I wonder if DE counts this as defeating them, such that you can access the chaos crystals.
gollark: Good news: chaos guardians can indeed go in spatial IO.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.