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・ Greg Glover
・ Greg Goff
・ Greg Gogan
・ Greg Gohr
・ Greg Golson
・ Greg Goossen
・ Greg Gorden
・ Greg Gorman
・ Greg Gossel
・ Greg Graffin
・ Greg Graham
・ Greg Graham (basketball coach)
・ Greg Grainger
・ Greg Grandin
・ Greg Grant
Greg Green
・ Greg Greenway
・ Greg Griffin
・ Greg Gross
・ Greg Grossman
・ Greg Grossmann
・ Greg Grunberg
・ Greg Guidry
・ Greg Gumbel
・ Greg Gutfeld
・ Greg Guy
・ Greg H. Sims
・ Greg Habeeb
・ Greg Haberny
・ Greg Haddrick


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Greg Green : ウィキペディア英語版
Greg Green

Greg Green (born August 12, 1963) is a Spokane-area based businessman and entrepreneur who got his start in the technology industry in the mid-1980s. He is the founder of Tel-West (now part of XO Communications) and OneEighty Communications (acquired by Avista Corporation and renamed Avista Communications), and the President of Fatbeam, a fiber optic networks provider.
==Telecommunications industry beginnings==
Green began his technology industry ventures when he formed Tel-West, a telecommunications provider of telecommunications services (a competitive access provider), in 1984. In 1995, Tel-West was acquired by NEXTLINK,〔http://www.spokesman.com/stories/1997/sep/27/nextlink-offerings-raise-600-million/〕 a Craig McCaw owned organization. Green was an early pioneer of competitive local exchange carriers, or CLECs, after the Telecommunications Act of 1996. As President of NEXTLINK Washington, now Communications, Green was a part of the senior management team that took NEXTLINK public and raising $400 million in 1997.
After spending three more years with NEXTLINK, Green left in 1998 to found a new company, OneEighty Communications.〔http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=7245154&privcapId=1000140&previousCapId=1000140&previousTitle=OneEighty%20Communications,%20Inc〕 OneEighty Communications was founded in an effort to bring telecom services to underserved markets with populations of less than 500,000. Avista Corporation saw the value in it and purchased a majority share 6 months after Green started the company. It was later renamed Avista Communications. Green stayed on with Avista Communications as its President and CEO until Avista Corp decided to sell the telecom section of its company in 2001.
He continued his work in the telecom industry by purchasing CLEC assets in the Northwest from Avista Communications. Those were later sold to Eschelon Telecom now a part of Integra Telecom.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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