T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1947.1 | | CREATV::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Wed Jun 17 1992 00:32 | 6 |
| But this is not the only media related tool that we are associated
with. I seem to recall us doing a deal with the software house, that
runs the applications, that run on the CNN news terminals....
q
|
1947.2 | how does this wholly owned subsidiary within Digital stuff work? | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Jun 17 1992 10:23 | 6 |
| How are is being a "wholly owned subsidiary within Digital" different
from being Digital? Do those employees have Digital badges and Digital
benifits or are those things seperate and different? How about network
access? Are these companies totally seperate in the management chain?
Alfred
|
1947.3 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney VMS/WNT/XOU... | Wed Jun 17 1992 10:50 | 10 |
| The subsidiaries seem to have the best of both worlds:
(a) Integration into the Digital networks (tangible and intangible)
(b) Freedom of action that comes from full financial accountability and
discretion.
(c) They have a far fewer levels of management from individual
contributor to CEO.
|
1947.4 | | CREATV::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Wed Jun 17 1992 11:14 | 4 |
| WHat we need to do, (a la Claris) is split off some of existing most
profitable entities, and let them run autonomously...
Q
|
1947.5 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Wed Jun 17 1992 13:53 | 8 |
| .4> WHat we need to do, (a la Claris) is split off some of existing most
.4> profitable entities, and let them run autonomously...
minor nit, perhaps we should split off some of the marginally
profitable units, or those with the greatest unrealized potential.
the most profitable existing units are already successful in
the present structure, why risk screwing them up too?
|
1947.6 | | CREATV::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Wed Jun 17 1992 14:43 | 18 |
| re .-1
I bet your tongue was firmly in cheek on that one, bruce.
Take for example (as Bruce and I have discussed with each other, many
times) the current state of the PDP11 business. People are still buying
them, we are still making them, but where is the DEC commitment on
them. Just how big are the RSTS/RSX/RT11/DSM11/IAS development teams.
or wven the maintenance people assigned to those O/S's.
There are ten's, if not, hundreds of thousands of PDP11's out there,
and the support and maintenance of them, is quite a profitable
business. It could sustain itself, as a profitable seperate operating
entity for several years to come. But, what do with do with that
business? Ignore it, and hope it goes away...
q
|
1947.7 | CNN runs BASYS | BREAKR::ZELLER | | Wed Jun 17 1992 23:28 | 6 |
| re .1
The application running on CNN terminals you see over the air IS
BASYS.
Craig (ex NBC'r)
|
1947.8 | Just a thought | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Thu Jun 18 1992 10:15 | 8 |
| I've heard that's our new strategy. For small companies, we're
going to buy them and then lay off all the people (save the buildings -
like the neutron bomb of the computer industry). For large companies we
can't buy, our TFSOed middle managers will infiltrate and while spewing
forth verbage such as TQM, development processes, CASE, and lots of
other words they like, will introduce enough confusion and poor morale
to bring those companies to a standstill too. Then we'll look good by
comparison.
|
1947.9 | another | GRANMA::FDEADY | | Thu Jun 18 1992 10:22 | 10 |
|
regarding aquisitions...
Is the Philips Electronics in Europe, whose stock dropped 18.2%,
the same Philips we bought last year?
just curious,
Fred Deady
WBC::deady
|
1947.10 | | MAJORS::ALFORD | lying Shipwrecked and comatose... | Thu Jun 18 1992 10:28 | 8 |
|
Re: .8
Have you considered that this is exactly what IBM has already done to us ?
;-)
|
1947.11 | | CHEFS::HEELAN | Verde te quiero verde | Thu Jun 18 1992 11:27 | 4 |
| re .9
No
|
1947.12 | "PDP-11 is alive and well - with SCSI" | ATLANA::SHERMAN | Debt Free! | Thu Jun 18 1992 14:50 | 8 |
| re: .6
See also the "Digital NEWS" issue of May 11, 1992, page 4 for an article
headed "PDP-11 is alive and well - with SCSI".
For your further edification, see the cartoon on page 44 ... 8^)
Ron
|
1947.13 | PDP-11 quality of life is an issue | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Thu Jun 18 1992 19:49 | 55 |
| re .12> -< "PDP-11 is alive and well - with SCSI" >-
PDP-11 alive and well? I hope so, maybe I'll survive the layoff
rumors!
I hate to continue taking this topic down a tangential rathole, but as
one of the last PDP-11 software engineers in the company (as well as the
author of a previous topic to which .6 was directed), I saw a
connection with the base topic and some other recent threads.
BTW, I liked the cartoon, except they omitted one crucial detail:
it was missing the guys running along behind the PDP-11 rabbit,
trying to pull the plug.
Point is, I think that a lot of the company's problem today is that we
have always been technological snobs.
In the early days that meant we built better mousetraps, and folks
bought them for the advantages they offered.
Unfortunately that outlook turned into NIH, and we fell behind the
curve in things like workstations and RISC architectures.
It also meant that the culture in the corporation turned a successful
product into a backwater, because the PDP-11 was cursed with being
"obsolescent" due to its 16-bit architecture. The facts that it was
our most profitable product in terms of both margin and total net
revenues just a couple of years ago didn't matter as much as the
perception that it was old and doomed. Nobody bothered to ask why we
still sold so many of them. Nobody in power, at least, because a
couple of years ago I asked a customer why he was interested in buying
the 11/94 we'd just introduced. His answer:
"Nothing else does our job as well, even today!"
Our technological chauvinism blinded us to the fact that for some
purposes an existing solution is sufficient or even ideal. A lot of
times we have tried to move customers into answers that we designed for
a different question. A lot of those customers are not ours, now.
Along with this, that NIH syndrome meant Digital was not fertile ground
for innovative ideas about solving market needs. That niche was filled
by others, who started developing marketable technology until we are now
buying them.
I don't think this is necessarily bad, I could even see it providing a
cohesive vision to take the corporation successfully into the future.
But that is not certain, and it could as easily continue to confuse us
all. Personally, I'd like to finish up my PDP-11 work and get on with
creating that vision - but there's this bank using PDP-11s for their
wire transfer link with the Federal Reserve clearing house, and they
seem to think that if we're selling it we should have engineering
resources working on it too.... (but I've got a sucker, er, friend in
CXO lined up to take it off my hands as soon as it's done :-)
--bruce
|
1947.14 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Fri Jun 19 1992 11:58 | 6 |
| .13:
Amen!
Never could understand a company that'd kill a cash cow, just because they
discovered that the cow is mortal.
|
1947.15 | Lets go back to 8-bit! RISC 8080's! | BREAKR::ZELLER | | Mon Jun 22 1992 19:08 | 19 |
| Broadcasting could never be accused of being on the leading edge. There
are still an awful lot of CMX videotape editing systems out there in
TV-land, most based on LSI-11/23's and PDP-11/04's. Grass Valley Group
(a subsidiary of Tektronix) still makes editing systems and TV
station automation systems based on J11 chips. Broadcasting has always
been a business where capital equipment was on-line 'til it burned
to the ground. With economic conditions the way they are, maybe that's
an idea that will catch on in corporate computing. Faced with budget
recisions, a lot of DP managers are just going to decide that they
really don't need the fastest chips on the block.
I think Witek left because he saw Digital trying to put the
developmental bucks into building his Alpha chips into high-end, high-$
replacements for VAX6000 and 9000's; when what's really called-for
is mass-marketed low-cost Alpha PC's, Workstations, and small 4000-sized
servers. This company has certainly learned how to SAY "downsizing",
but I really don't think it fully understands the implications as
regards the products we're trying to sell... to customers with
very limited budgets.
|
1947.16 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | RSX Pro | Tue Jun 23 1992 13:41 | 34 |
| .15> Grass Valley Group (a subsidiary of Tektronix) still makes editing
.15> systems and TV station automation systems based on J11 chips.
hm, wonder where they buy those Jaws chips? More interesting, do they
buy them at the chip level, or do they buy them on boards?
.15> ...what's really called-for is mass-marketed low-cost Alpha PC's,
.15> Workstations, and small 4000-sized servers.
Nah, the success of the 9000 proved there's money to made in high-end
systems!
.15> This company has certainly learned how to SAY "downsizing",
.15> but I really don't think it fully understands the implications as
.15> regards the products we're trying to sell... to customers with
.15> very limited budgets.
I don't think the company fully understands the implications of
organizational downsizing, which has action matching the words (alas!).
We don't fully understand what that sort of thing means for
organizational functions and structure, for our company or customers
who do likewise. So in that sense we are embarked on a grand
experiment, without any controlled scientific method. Thus we seem
certain to have a disconnect between the future organizational model
and the design of our emerging technologies.
We certainly don't know what this organizational evolution (devolution?)
all means for our product directions and technical future. Too bad,
this is an area where we could bring some valuable skills to the table,
if only we applied them in the right direction (instead of turning them
out onto the street).
--bruce
|
1947.17 | I'm missing something here ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Tue Jun 23 1992 13:50 | 12 |
| re: .16
> Nah, the success of the 9000 proved there's money to made in high-end
> systems!
I can only assume this is meant as sarcasm. I've never seen anything
that has indicated we even made our investment back on 9000's, much
less consider them a success. The only 9000 I know of in our city is
one we sold at 80% off to the University.
Geoff
|