The Washington Times

Alcatel-Lucent

Latest Alcatel-Lucent Items
  • Alcatel-Lucent boss leaving as losses mount

    Alcatel-Lucent CEO Ben Verwaayen is leaving the loss-making French-U.S. telecommunications gear maker after a failed four-year bid to turn the business around.


  • Brian T. Moynihan, chief executive officer of the Bank of America, speaks during a panel session on the first day of the 42nd annual meeting of the World Economic Forum, WEF, in Davos, Switzerland, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Keystone, Jean-Christophe Bott)

    CEOs defend capitalism at Davos forum

    Some of the world's top CEOs are admitting that capitalism is worsening inequalities, but they say it's better than any alternative.


  • Chinese tech giants fight over 4G phones

    Two of China's biggest technology companies have launched a court battle in Europe over mobile phone patents in a rare public clash between firms Beijing is promoting as national champions.


  • VERSACE: Look for uptick in mergers, buyouts

    As someone who got started in the investing business by looking at cyclical stocks and later migrated into technology, the predictable pattern of strong growth, followed by slower growth as an industry matures, then eventual consolidation is not a surprise.


  • Associated Press photo
Wim Sweldens, the president Alcatel-Lucent's wireless division, holds a lightRadio cube, a small cell-phone antenna that can be deployed on lampposts and buildings.

    'Small cell' may be next big thing

    As cell phones have spread, so have large cell towers -- those unsightly stalks of steel topped by transmitters and other electronics that have sprouted across the country over the past decade.


  • In this product image provided by Alcatel-Lucent, a number of lightRadio cubes are shown. This small cell-phone antenna can be deployed on lamp posts, buildings, and other places that can't accommodate a full-sized antenna for wireless activation. (AP Photo/Alcatel-Lucent)

    Wireless advances could mean no more cell towers

    As cell phones have spread, so have large cell towers _ those unsightly stalks of steel topped by transmitters and other electronics that sprouted across the country over the last decade.


  • ** FILE ** In this file photo taken April 21, 2010, an AT&T logo and sign are seen on a window at a company store in Brunswick, Maine. AT&T said Wednesday, July 7, 2010, that a software glitch in network equipment made by Alcatel-Lucent is to blame for limiting the upload speeds of the iPhone 4. AT&T says a fix is in the works. (AP Photo/Pat Wellenbach, file)

    AT&T network glitch limits iPhone 4 upload speeds

    AT&T announced Wednesday that a software glitch in its network is slowing things down for the iPhone 4.


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