The promise of regulation
2. The first information revolution
The development of telegraph services
The telephone and state regulation
Radio and federal regulation
3. Technological origins of the second information Revolution, 1940-1950
Electronic digital computers
I. The separate worlds of computers and communications, 1950-1968
5. The early semiconductor industry
The creation of a competitive market
Innovation and the integrated circuit
Falling prices, rising output
6. The early commercial computer industry
Vacuum-tube and transistor computers
The system/360 and IBM dominance
Alternatives to IBM computers
7. The regulated monopoly telephone industry
Antitrust and the 1956 consent decree
Microwave technology and potential long distance competition
II. Boundary disputes and limited competition, 1969-1984
Packet-switching and the arpanet
Network protocols and interconnection
Local area networks and ethernet
9. From mainframes to microprocessors
Intel and the microprocessor
Personal computers and workstations
10. The computer-communications boundary
Computer-assisted messages: Communications or data processing?
Smart terminals" Teletypewriters or computers?
Interconnection of customer-owned equipment with the telephone network
The deregulation of terminal equipment
The deregulation of enhanced services
11. Fringe competition in long distance telephone service
Competition in specialized services
Competition in switched services
The transition to optical fiber
12. Divestiture and access charges
The enhanced service provider exemption
III. Interconnected competition and integrated services, 1985-2002
13. Mobile telephones and spectrum reform
Early land mobile telephones
Cellular spectrum allocation
Cellular licensing problems
Spectrum instructional reform
14. Local competition and the Telecommunications Act of 1996
Competitive access providers
Interconnection: CAP to CLEC
The Telecommunications Act of 1996
Implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996
15. The Internet and the World Wide Web
The commercial Internet and backbone interconnection
The development of the Web
The new economy financial boom and bust
Real growth in telecommunication and price benefits
Technological progress and policy evolution
The process of institutional change