British Telecom - meaning and definition. What is British Telecom
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What (who) is British Telecom - definition

BRITISH MULTINATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES COMPANY
British Telecommunications Group plc; British Telecommunications plc; BT (Telecom); British Telecom; BT plc; BT Consulting and Systems Integration; British Telecommunications; B.T; BT Group plc; BT Openworld; BT group; Bt.com; British telecom; Brightview Group; British Telecommunications Group; Btbroadband; Btbroadband.com; Btcentralplus; Btcentral; BT PLC; BT Conferencing; BT-Central-Plus; BTnet UK Regional network; Bt.net; Wlms-broadband.com; British Telecommunications Plc; Eircom uk; BT Yahoo!; BT.com; British Telecommunications PLC; BT.A
  • The [[Adastral Park]] campus at [[Martlesham Heath]] in Suffolk, the principal site of [[BT Research]].
  • The BT Centre was completed in 1985.
  • BT logo used from 2003–2019
  • Logo of the simplified BT logo, used since 2019 for non-corporate purposes
  • British Telecom logo used from 1980–1991
  • Former CEO [[Gavin Patterson]] at the 2016 [[Chatham House]] Corporate Leaders Series.

British Telecom         
<company> (BT) The largest telecommunications provider in the UK. Due to regulatory issues, BT had to sell off its interest in McCaw Cellular. BT sold it to AT&T for something like 4B$. BT then invested that in MCI. As a part of the deal, MCI was given BT North America, which was the old Tymnet. MCI laid off about 40% of the Tymnet staff. http://intervid.co.uk/. (1995-05-09)
BT Group         

BT Group plc (trading as BT and formerly British Telecom) is a British multinational telecommunications holding company headquartered in London, England. It has operations in around 180 countries and is the largest provider of fixed-line, broadband and mobile services in the UK, and also provides subscription television and IT services.

BT's origins date back to the founding in 1846 of the Electric Telegraph Company, the world's first public telegraph company, which developed a nationwide communications network. BT Group as it came to be started in 1912, when the General Post Office, a government department, took over the system of the National Telephone Company becoming the monopoly telecoms supplier in the United Kingdom. The Post Office Act of 1969 led to the GPO becoming a public corporation. The British Telecom brand was introduced in 1980, and became independent of the Post Office in 1981, officially trading under the name. British Telecommunications was privatised in 1984, becoming British Telecommunications plc, with some 50 percent of its shares sold to investors. The Government sold its remaining stake in further share sales in 1991 and 1993. BT holds a royal warrant and has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange, and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

BT controls a number of large subsidiaries. BT Global Services division supplies telecoms services to corporate and government customers worldwide, and its BT Consumer division supplies telephony, broadband, and subscription television services in the United Kingdom to around 18 million customers.

British Telecom microwave network         
  • Backbone as proposed in 1956
Backbone (British radio communications network); British telecom microwave network; General Post Office microwave network
The British Telecom microwave network was a network of point-to-point microwave radio links in the United Kingdom, operated at first by the General Post Office, and subsequently by its successor BT plc. From the late 1950s to the 1980s it provided a large part of BT's trunk communications capacity, and carried telephone, television and radar signals and digital data, both civil and military.

Wikipedia

BT Group

BT Group plc (trading as BT and formerly British Telecom) is a British multinational telecommunications holding company headquartered in London, England. It has operations in around 180 countries and is the largest provider of fixed-line, broadband and mobile services in the UK, and also provides subscription television and IT services.

BT's origins date back to the founding in 1846 of the Electric Telegraph Company, the world's first public telegraph company, which developed a nationwide communications network. BT Group as it came to be started in 1912, when the General Post Office, a government department, took over the system of the National Telephone Company becoming the monopoly telecoms supplier in the United Kingdom. The Post Office Act of 1969 led to the GPO becoming a public corporation. The British Telecom brand was introduced in 1980, and became independent of the Post Office in 1981, officially trading under the name. British Telecommunications was privatised in 1984, becoming British Telecommunications plc, with some 50 percent of its shares sold to investors. The Government sold its remaining stake in further share sales in 1991 and 1993. BT holds a royal warrant and has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange, and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index.

BT controls a number of large subsidiaries. BT Global Services division supplies telecoms services to corporate and government customers worldwide, and its BT Consumer division supplies telephony, broadband, and subscription television services in the United Kingdom to around 18 million customers.

Examples of use of British Telecom
1. Richard van Wageningen, CEO, British Telecom Russia & CIS: British Telecom values a healthy work–life balance and our Russian operation is not an exception.
2. Perhaps, the most famous global telco is British Telecom.
3. British Telecom shut down all telephone lines to the town.
4. British Telecom said there was no conclusive scientific evidence to show that DECTs were unsafe.
5. In early 2003, Telfort was spun off from British telecom firm mmO2.