Bell Labs

Earlier this week I visited Bell Labs in New Jersey and got a tour from Bell Lab’s new President, Dr. Jeong Kim, a good friend and a partner in my sports teams. He was previously CEO of Lucent’s optical computing division and came into this new position nine months ago. (Bell Labs is a part of the Lucent corporation now).

Earlier this week I visited Bell Labs in  New Jersey and got a tour from Bell Lab’s new President, Dr. Jeong Kim, a good friend and a partner in my sports teams.  He was previously CEO of  Lucent’s optical computing division and came into this new position nine months ago.  (Bell Labs is a part of the Lucent corporation now).

We toured Bell Labs and went for a walk with their archivist through their in-house museum, and it was like a walk through the history of modern technology.  Among other amazing accomplishments, we saw the history of the telephone, the fax machine, the commercial space business, and the first intercontinental phone cable.  And it should have come as little surprise, as Bell Labs has been the home of no fewer than six Nobel Prize winners.   We also looked to the future, and we talked about nanotechnology applications; smell-sensing ID systems (I kid you not); a clean room in which crystals were being made; new techniques in security and encryption; high-speed wireless platform architectures; and video search algorithms.  Bell Labs houses some of the smartest people in the world — more than 1500 PhDs — and they have generated an average of one patent a day, every day, since 1925.   It was really an amazing opportunity to take a look back, as well as explore the future with some world class thinkers.

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