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NEC NEAX NDA-24349 User Manual

Page 8

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Chapter 1 Introduction

Page 1-2

NEAX2000 IPS Request for Proposal (RFP) Reference Guide

ND-24349, Issue 4

The Invention Age

NEC began its solid tradition with some of the first manual telecommunications systems in Japan.
During the Invention Age, NEC had achieved the following:

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In 1900 - NEC began manufacturing its own products

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In 1903 - NEC manufactured the first battery phone in Japan

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In 1923 - NEC entered the radio transmission field

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In 1927 - NEC began automatic switching manufacturing

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In 1938 - NEC began manufacturing crossbar switching systems

The Industrial Age

The Industrial Age in America brought great strides in business communication systems with the
development of the electro-mechanical system. NEC successfully delivered step-by-step, crossbar,
and cross-reed technology to the world marketplace. During this era;

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In 1950 - NEC began manufacturing some of the world’s first semiconductors

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In 1952 - NEC won the Deming prize awarded in communications

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In 1956 - NEC introduced step-by-step, cross-reed technology, and crossbar telephone

switching systems to the world marketplace.

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In 1959 - NEC developed one of the first transistorized computers

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In 1963 - January 17, 1963 NEC entered the American marketplace with a sales office in

New York

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In 1965 - NEC became a world innovator in digital transmission equipment

The Electronic Age

NEC entered the Electronic Age with solid-state technology, stored program control, and digital
switching throughout the 1970’s and 1980’s.

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In 1972 - NEC developed the world’s first 10K single element LSI chip

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In 1976 - NEC introduced the first skinny wire system

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In 1978 - NEC introduced the first digital hybrid, the Electra-100

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In 1979 - NEC entered the personal computer market

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In 1980 - NEC patented its Distributor Processor design (US Patent # 4,210,782). This

little known patented process, invented by Kazunori Fujita, ushered in a new era of
business communications systems through the use of distributed processing, modular
building block concept, and fully integrated voice and data switching. Out of this patent
came NEC’s premier flagship product, the NEAX2400 IMS

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In 1983 - NEC introduced the NEAX2400 IMS

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In 1983 - NEC introduced one of the world’s first super computers

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In 1985 - NEC introduced the Electra IMS

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In 1986 - NEC created one of the first 4MBit processor chips

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In 1988 - NEC opened the Software Development Center in the U.S. market

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In 1989 - NEC introduced the NEAX1400 IMS