Word: compaq
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...remind us. The personalities driving HP's long-running and very public merger debate are larger than life, and the whole of Silicon Valley is riveted by the story. Which, if you haven't been paying attention, goes like this: CEO Carly Fiorina wants a $25 billion marriage with Compaq--the largest tech merger ever--to avoid being squeezed between Dell (the personal-computer giant) and IBM (a leader in tech services and server computers). But certain key shareholders--including the children of HP's garage-dwelling founders and geek-world deities Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard--think the proposed...
...merger debate rushes toward a March 19 shareholder vote, both sides have engaged in a nasty nationwide campaign of name calling. Last week Walter Hewlett, Bill Hewlett's son and the HP board member leading the fight against the Compaq merger, released a report on what the company should really be doing. Its main proposal: dump Fiorina. "She's burned a lot of bridges," Hewlett told TIME. "It's hard to see how she would survive." This came after the rest of the board, which backs Fiorina, drafted a blistering open letter to Hewlett: "You have insulted our personal commitment...
...unusual in the technology world in that they are basically commodity products—with Intel and Microsoft controlling the technological innovation, the “box makers” like Compaq and Dell have little basis on which to differentiate their products. In a sagging economy, conditions are ripe for a devastating price war and a consolidation of the industry, which we have in fact seen in the last year. Two of the major players—Hewlett Packard and Compaq—are doing everything wrong in response to this situation, while two of the others?...
...thousands of engineers the pink slip soon after taking the helm at HP. Then, believing that the best way to fix an ailing, giant company is to merge it with another ailing, giant company and hope for “synergy,” she announced a merger with Compaq, a move that is generating boardroom chaos even now, eight months after the announcement. Whatever happens, HP and Compaq are two companies whose core products—printers for HP and services and consulting for Compaq—are under attack or not growing. Merging the two to wring some...
...between January and mid-July as the share price fell from $80 to less than $50. And at the end of 2001, according to public records, he owned stock that today is worth more than $11 million in companies for which he was either an officer or director, including Compaq, Eli Lilly and a bevy of start...