U.S. Approves IBM/Lenovo Sale 217
MartinB writes with the "Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) review result: unanimous approval for the sale to go ahead, with no further external approvals needed. No compromises were required over the location of Lenovo facilities in sensitive research areas, nor were limits put on Lenovo's ability to sell PCs to U.S. agencies."
Good news for tech (Score:4, Funny)
I should explain.. (Score:5, Insightful)
The only way to make money in the PC biz is by selling directly to consumers, bypassing the supply chain of stores, merchants, etc. But this conflicts with, among other things, IBM's consulting business which relies upon dealing with people, building relationships, rubbing backs, etc., etc.
HP faces a similar problem. The only way for them to make money in the PC biz is to sell directly to consumers. But this conflicts with their need for pushing printers and printer supplies which requires using the supply chain.
Instead HP is shedding money with their PC selling business and not doing so well in the printer biz. Good job Carly! But I digress.
Let the Chinese have the fun task of competing head on with Dell, IBM will do what they do best.
Re:I should explain.. (Score:2)
I dunno, Apple seems to be doing pretty well.
Re:I should explain.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I should explain.. (Score:1)
Re:I should explain.. (Score:2, Insightful)
IBM makes a great deal of their PC sales through business/government contracts in which X machines are purchased and supported for X number of years.
Their business image has faded in late and their contracts have migrated to other vendors. I provide hardware support within a large corporation. Our IBM contract was nixed a long time ago for Dell whom has served us much better.
IBM... China can keep 'em
You just need to learn the Company Anthem... (Score:1)
Happy times are here again.
Words can be found here [pythonland.com]
Re:You just need to learn the Company Anthem... (Score:2)
Dragon eating the eagle (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Dragon eating the eagle (Score:2)
In Other News... (Score:5, Funny)
The delicate art of landing in Elbonia... (Score:2)
PowerPCs here we come (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:PowerPCs here we come (Score:2, Funny)
Re:PowerPCs here we come (Score:3, Informative)
x86-64 doesn't leave anything behind. It just adds 64-bit registers and addressing to the existing x86 architecture. It carries all the ugly x86 baggage right along with it. Very similar to the transition from "real mode" (16-bit) to "protected mode" (32-bit), except that x86-64 is actually even less of a transition. Protected mode brought with it lots of new stuff, besides just 32-bit registers and addressing.
Windows is done (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Windows is done (Score:2)
Previously Sun was really the only big computer maker without an OEM relationship with Microsoft (still true), but now it appears IBM is wrestling themselve out, too? That would be great for Microsoft's karma (approaching -MAX_INT, I believe). If this allows them to push Linux over Windows, then we'll finally start seeing a really big push for more open standards--that is if IBM doesn't muck it up with 'custom solutions'.
Re:Windows is done (Score:2)
Well...I think that IBM's Business Consulting Services will still have the Windows image for their laptops. Most client sites use Microsoft application to communicate. Applications such as Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and Outlook. I don't think that IBM will be letting loose of its Microsoft business applications anytime soon.
Re:PowerPCs here we come (Score:1)
What about the Dragon [theinquirer.net] CPU? You know, the homebrew one which will keep China free from IP shackles in the Santa Clara?
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:PowerPCs here we come (Score:2)
Re:PowerPCs here we come (Score:1)
Strange that (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Strange that (Score:1)
I for one welcome our Communist Overlords. Hail Mao!
Re:Strange that (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Strange that (Score:2)
No biggie... (Score:5, Insightful)
In truth, most all of the materials are now made in China, Taiwan, Korea, Malaysia, etc.
So in such light PC and component manufacturering really doesn't pose a "security" risk. Which is what this was ALL about.
The jobs aren't there to begin with...so no worry over loss of jobs moving to China.
Re:No biggie... (Score:2, Interesting)
What could happen. Well thousands of PC's delivered with back doors embedded. Possibly like a number of Electronic voting machines that do not disclose their source code.
We of course are economic partners with China, well maybe not on the issues of Taiwan independance or North Korean behavior or Tibet. Wasn't there
PC makers have no technology (Score:2)
the hard drives from Maxtor or Seagate or WDC
The software is mostly from Microsoft.
I could go on and on here.
the only real technology challange is the thermal design. How do you get the heat out.
IBM is not selling technology to China.
If someone is worried about security and back doors, their PC is going to be a major security risk regardless of the nationality of the Brand on the box. If someone wants security they should not be buying a
Re:PC makers have no technology (Score:2)
Our FBI has constructed viruses to slip in and tap into a persons key strokes. Our governemt lobbied to use weaker encryption so only they could break it with their computers. They want security key escoroles. Eschalon (http://www.tripzine.com/print.asp?id=eschalon) exists. Not talking about paranoia but just the c
Re:Who invented TPDA / Paladium and DRM ? (Score:2)
What can happen and what I was suggesting that for important industries, there may ba a conflict of interest that comes up between coutnries that effects the companies dealing
Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:1)
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2, Informative)
P.S. doesn't China have at least 4 different dialects and regional cuisines?
how can you tell that 20 yrs ago (Score:2)
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2)
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2)
I dont know why so many people think it would be hard to read a newspaper in an asian language. To read a newspaper in english you have to remember how to spell each word. It is just as complicated to spell a word as it is to read an asian language.
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, they probably don't actually use MSG in all the restaurants over there. You will probably notice the food looks a bit more rustic than the local Ho-Lee Chow [holeechow.com] or a can of La Choy.
The BBC has been carrying a number of analysis articles on China, where the economy is booming and where it isn't. Still shooting for 7% growth this year and they'll probably make it, while the rest of the world scrambles to sell them raw materials. Notice mining and steel companies are suddenly hot items?
MSG (Score:2)
Fat chance! Where do you think the idea came from? They use piles of it, literally. There's often a mound of it next to the stove, where a Western chef would have his salt/pepper/herbs/spices.
Re:MSG (Score:2)
MSG was actually introduced by the Japanese, first as a seasoning, and then in ready-made foods. Now it's just
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2)
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2)
Of course, you do know that Doritios has more glutamate than you'll find in any Chinese restaurant? Lipton soups, progresso soups, McD's chicken sandwiches, KFC, all of these have enough glutamate to trigger reactions for those sensitive to MSG. But of course, none of these products say they contain MSG. More info here. [wholefoods.com]
Of course, MSG is used pretty freely in China and Japan; if you want something without MSG, you'd better ask
Bad generalization (Score:2)
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2, Insightful)
I traveled to China recently. I'll say this: Chinese food in the USA is nothing like real Chinese food.
I particularly remember some sweet/sour chicken I got there. In the US, you get these pretty nuggets of white meat and sauce on them. In China, you get... well pretty much the whole chicken. It's like the took the whole thing (minus the feathers and major organs) and chucked it into a shredder. Spinal cord and all.
It was an odd experience.
One of the best meals I had there was
Re:Wow, I'm moving to China (Score:2)
Surprised (Score:3, Interesting)
Shell Games (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Shell Games (Score:2)
When a large US company is in business, there are certain practices and standards they are held to. They cannot actively have an explioted workforce and they have financial tracking requirements (SOX/COBIT) etc...
With this sale, we will see that in fact this company WILL be able to compete with DELL etc as they will resort to effectual slave labor to build the machines...
Re:Shell Games (Score:2)
Re:Shell Games (Score:2)
IBM Hardware (Score:5, Interesting)
More interestingly, I'd be interested to see if IBM started producing affordable powerpc laptops and desktops running Linux. It seems Microsoft can no longer wield the Windows tax against IBM.
Re:IBM Hardware (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:IBM Hardware (Score:2)
I think Thinkpad will still be what it is as long as they are using IBM logo - I believe IBM would not let lenovo stick an IBM logo on anything that is not up to our standard. Thinkpad has been manufactured in Shenzhen, Southern China since a few years ago and I still drop my thinkpad and not sweating a bit...
Though when they finally removed IBM logo from Thinkpad, I may start to consider whether they still keeping the same quality
Re:IBM Hardware (Score:3, Informative)
Re:IBM Hardware (Score:2)
I don't know if you'll find his reassuring, or if you'll think it's propaganda, but this ad started running a couple of weeks ago in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times:
wow, anti-globalisation theme day on slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)
China and Taiwan ~already~ mass-produce the vast majority of systems components, their final assembly was pretty much the only remaining domestic manufacturing process. Also, IBM is being VERY wise in this regard, cashing in a unit that has very little future projected revenue growth and miniscule profit margins, and will gain the capital for some future expansion. PCs are a commodity business, and with the exception of Dell are probably a loss-leader for most companies now (e.g. IBM, HP/Compaq).
This is a wise business move by IBM, and it was wise for the US gov't to involve themselves in the sale. The technology is 20+ years old, the industry is commoditised, and its all open-standards based... there is no strategic threat here.
Re:wow, anti-globalisation theme day on slashdot (Score:2)
Well, that's why they should keep the commoditised industry here. Otherwise where will these posters work then?
global goggles (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:wow, anti-globalisation theme day on slashdot (Score:2)
What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:4, Interesting)
1-way SMP with 1.0GHz or 1 or 2-way 1.45GHz POWER4+ microprocessor
1.5MB L2 and 8MB ECC L3 cache
Up to 16GB of ECC SDRAM memory with Chipkill
Up to 4 Ultra320 SCSI hot-swap 10K or 15K RPM disk drives
Six PCI-X adapter slots
Gigabit Ethernet and 10/100 Ethernet standard
Select from 2D and 3D graphics accelerators
IBM's CATIA V4 performance leader.
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
CPU: 1x 1GHz POWER4+ (32-bit, it seems)
GPU: GXT135P (16MB VRAM) (2D GPU)
Net: Gigabit, 10/100
RAM: 1GB DDR
HDD: 36.4GB U320 SCSI 10,000RPM
Optical drive: NONE
Floppy drive: NONE (why bother, though?)
Sound card: NONE
Input devices: Keyboard, three button mouse (no wheel?
As I said, cheaper components. PowerPC 970FX instead of POWER4+, commod
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
Not to mention that to get full performance out of Cell, you have to compile code to yet another assembly language.
Cell = 1 PPC w/Altivec + 8 non-PPC vector coprocessors
I think Cell is a bit overrated. It's a great idea for something like a video game where you're coding to the har
Re:What does IBM know that we don't? (Score:2)
Sounds a bit like (or at least part of) what killed Itanium.
American Manufacturing : RIP (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:American Manufacturing : RIP (Score:2)
Why are ACs always Xenophobic ? (Score:2)
Are they scared to say what they say and put their actual pseudonym or even their name to it ?
Re:American Manufacturing : RIP (Score:2)
PCs (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:PCs (Score:2)
No, they were about the last to jump into the market.
and brought the current rendition to market. Fortunately for us and for all PC users they allowed their designs to be copied (clones anyone)
No, they fought the clones tooth and nail. Several were successfully sued for copying IBM's BIOS. Only those that were able to get a reverse-engineered BIOS survived.
thus putting apple forever in the dark. Since they did this, market forces have determined that IBM should no longer be i
IBM owns Jay Leno?? (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft agreement gone? (Score:4, Interesting)
Chip H.
Why the naysayers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why the naysayers? (Score:2)
Its a house of cards. Lets be carefull that the bottom cards can't be pulled out by somone we don't know, isn't really our friend, and we don't have any controls over. It comes down to who's self interest is in charge. We see that with the current administration that is trying to re-make not only the entire country but then entire world in their own mode
Re:Why the naysayers? (Score:2)
IBM (Score:1, Funny)
America never really got globalisation right... (Score:1, Insightful)
Look at them now. Sure they got cheap labor and upturned local markets everywhere, but globalisation is distributing the riches from the first world countries right down to the poorer nations. They never really figured that out quite rightly.
Yes, yes, the people in control are of course getting richer but the avg guy is actually earning le
Re:America never really got globalisation right... (Score:2)
That comes with a great visual.
The new brand name will be... (Score:1, Funny)
go ahead, all you PC-people... mod me into oblivion, even though you smiled when you read it.
but will the new catalog read (Score:4, Funny)
China is going to be POWERful (Score:2, Interesting)
Peguins in Mao Jackets (Score:3, Insightful)
The funniest irony of all was that the PC Division, that rathole they poured billions down which rarely if ever made a profit finally made a huge chunk of change selling itself off and as a result those employees are getting the largest bonuses in the company, on a division by division basis. Lesson learned? Fuck your business up until someone buys it at firesale prices then claim a huge a victory, rake in your pile of cash. All the other IBM divisions should learn from this.
Re:Peguins in Mao Jackets (Score:2)
All the other IBM divisions should learn from this.
Don't worry; they will.
Not again... (Score:2, Interesting)
My POV (Score:5, Insightful)
1. They sell a branch of the company that was often losing money for cold hard cash.
2. They get 19% of a Chinese company, giving them a way past China's trade barriars. They get a headstart on everyone else providing high end technology services to a booming Chinese economy that lacks said expertese and has the means to pay for it. Meanwhile HP languishes under two divisions of PC manufacturing (HP & Compaq.) Way to go Carly
3. Did I mention that this gives IBM a way to sell products and services to the Chinese? Potentially billions to be made before the Chinese technology providers mature to IBM's level. (Note: I'm not saying that China lacks intelligent people, it's just that the US/Western world has spents decades longer training thousands more techs. It won't take them long to catchup though.)
4. If the US screws up their economy too bad IBM has a lifeline! I really hope that letting the dollar fall in value helps with the trade gap and makes it possible for US manufacturing to pick back up. I do not think that the US economy will crash in 10 or 20 years. I do worry that it will crash in 50 to 100 years. I also fear that the US will decide the best thing to do is plunder a few countries via conquest with their surplus military equipment
The Romans were so confident in their legions that they stopped inovating. After all, they conquered everyone worth conquering, right? Wrong, they got beat by wandering nomads who actually fought differently than the Romans were used to: how dare they?! Western based companies, often spear headed by American companies, have dominated the economy for fifty years now, but people are starting to play by their own rules. Will they be able to compete or will the 'barbarians' decimate their legions with unorthodox tactics. I honestly hope something in the middle happens
new twist on an old /. classic (Score:3, Funny)
... China ... (Score:2)
All of the shipments still go through customs. I ordered an Apple PowerBook online to get the cheaper model and upgrade it
Re:Go ahead America (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Go ahead America (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Go ahead America (Score:3, Informative)
Re:sweet now we can be owned by china (Score:3, Insightful)
You don't have to be Carnac to guess most motherboards, CD drives, DVD drives, PSUs, cabinets and wiring is already being manufactured in the PRC.
Chances are the keyboard and mouse you used in your posting, as well as the screen you are viewing, came from there as well.
i for one welcome our new Lenoverlords!
Re:I blame Bush (Score:5, Insightful)
In the larger market sense it may or may not be a good thing, but that certainly depends on your POV. However, I disagree with the prevailing sentiment here that all mergers are inherently evil and motivated by monopolistic greed. Sometimes the logistical considerations are such that a merger can benefit everyone.
Re:I blame Bush (Score:4, Interesting)
However, I also disagree that share price should be taken as the only metric of company success. Any single metric that becomes too dominant will imbalance things and have ultimately negative consequences. In this specific case, I think it's part of the general hollowing out of American industry and strengthening of Chinese industry--which mostly reminds me of what happened in America before the Civil War. The South became a militarily-strong, industrially-weak debtor.
From the more narrow perspective of IBM, my main concern is that this deal could weaken IBM's "empathy" for customers in lower-margin businesses. Unfortunately, the way the numbers work, most companies are average or below by any specific metric, which in this case means that most of IBM's corporate customers are involved in relatively low-margin businesses. IBM won't share that situation with them after this.
One more thing in the "other values" category. For example, one of IBM's other non-share-price values is "supporting diversity" by deliberately hiring many kinds of people. Well, I think that "supporting commodity computers" is also a value that was worth supporting and something that benefits a lot of people, even if the profits are slim. However, in IBM's specific case, all of the high-margin businesses depend on computers, so there's a strong and direct benefit from that support...
Re:I blame Bush (Score:3, Informative)
IBM doesn't have a PAC, which is probably a good move since typically these organizations end up donating to both sides to hedge their bets. But it does participate extensively in lobbying, which I see as just as bad as campaign donations, and have less oversight.
However, I also disagree that share price should be taken as th
Re:I blame Bush (Score:2)
Great example and a point I have been trying to make. Local optimizations sometimes can cause global catastrophe.
Re:I can't wait (Score:1)
Of course it might help if you got the right foriegn language speakers. Japanese is notorious for not having an l/r distinction, not Mandarin (or Cantonese as far as i'm aware).
Distinguish your asians, jerk.
Re:I can't wait (Score:2)
I can take a joke. i won't take easily avoided misinformation.
Re:I can't wait (Score:1)