Knology

Knology, Inc. was a cable company formed in 1994 by ITC Holding Company, LLC, a telecommunications holding company in West Point, Georgia that also founded Internet service provider Mindspring. In 1999, Knology merged with Valley Telephone Company. The Knology network serves around a dozen cities in the Southern United States, as well as a few in the Midwestern United States.

Knology, Inc.
Public
Traded asNASDAQ: KNOL
IndustryTelecommunications
FateAcquired by Wide Open West
Founded1994
DefunctApril 18, 2012 (2012-04-18)
Headquarters,
ProductsCable television, broadband Internet, landline telephone

Knology also briefly owned the cable franchise in Cerritos, California, which it acquired from GTE, along with a system in Pinellas County, Florida. The Cerritos system was since sold to Wave Broadband.

On March 2, 2000, Knology announced strong performance in connections, revenues and homes marketed for the year and the fourth quarter of 1999.[1]

On March 30, 2005, Knology reported that it narrowed its losses in 2004 and found a buyer for a California cable system it purchased in 2003 at the same time it took over cable operations in some parts of Pinellas County.[2]

On January 9, 2007, Knology announced it had acquired Sioux Falls, South Dakota, based Prairiewave Communications for the sum of $255 million. The merger was officially finalized on April 3, 2007.[3] On January 4, 2008, Knology closed its acquisition of Graceba Total Communications, Inc. in Dothan, Alabama.[4] In January 2011, Knology completed the acquisition of Sunflower Broadband in Lawrence, Kansas.[5]

On April 18, 2012 Knology was acquired by Wide Open West.[6]

Areas of service

gollark: Trouble is that if you do, it'll take much longer, but if you don't, anyone will be able to execute arbitrary code.
gollark: That doesn't need to be in potatOS, but I guess I'll bundle it. Do you care about security at all?
gollark: So... you want a thing to spread tasks across computers or something?
gollark: All potatOS features *do things*. Just not always useful or well-defined things.
gollark: What would it *actually do*?

References


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