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The
50 most powerful people in networking
Network World staff and trusted advisors voted
to single out 50 individuals who control the network
ball.
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Power
executives
Meet the lesser-known people who lead promising niche markets or those charged with executing top vendors' critical plans.
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Power
users
Smell that, enterprise users? It's your buying power.
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Power
standard-setters
Our network coaches, they help shape vendor strategy and teach vendors to play by the rules.
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Power
in Washington
These big-picture policy players are making decisions that will shape the products and services available to enterprise users.
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Power
thinkers
Venture capitalists and analysts have the power to influence an industry through their actions and their observations.
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AT&T's next-in-command?
AT&T President David Dorman is ready for the challenges presented by the company's dismantling.
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Cisco's development hope
Cisco's ability to shift successfully into technology development depends on how well Mario Mazzola, chief development officer, does his job.
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IBM's CEO-in-waiting
After 28 years at Big Blue, Sam Palmisano, president, is poised to take over the top spot - and lead the company to the $100 billion mark.
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Microsoft's .Net apostle
Eric Rudder, senior VP of developer and platform evangelism, must convert developers to .Net or Microsoft can kiss its Web services future goodbye.
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Verizon's master builder
In July 2002, Verizon co-CEO Ivan Seidenberg gains sole control of the aggressive RBOC and its grand long-distance plans.
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2001
CEO Powerometer:
Tussle for the top Chambers retains his No. 1
title in our annual reader survey on the most
powerful vendor CEOs, but Ballmer closes in on
the gap.
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The
powerful talk to Network World
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Newsletter:
Voices of Networking by the industry's best and
brightest
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