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4590.1 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon May 13 1996 16:08 | 3 |
| See HUMANE::DIGITAL_INVESTING 10.2025
It can probably be reposted here if the author of 10.2025 wishes
(and maybe even then it doesn't need permission).
|
4590.2 | alpha is digital's future | COPS01::JNOSTIN | | Mon May 13 1996 16:46 | 25 |
| It is important that everyone read the note referenced in -.1 This
article hits at the heart of digital's future success or lack of.
Just some significant highlights of the article:
1. The Alpha Chip is not being adopted as much as it should in
the marketplace
2. The new Hudson, MA chip plant is only running at 30% capacity.
Digital needs to find a partner soon, since the Cirrus deal
fell through.
3. Intel and HP are co-producing a chip (P7) that will be a real
threat to Alpha
4. Digital is coming out with some software (FX!32) that will
enable Intel based SW to run under ALPHA
Bottom line is that if digital does not market the ALPHA technology to
gain more acceptance, if the P7 does "beat out" ALPHA in the coming
years, and if digital doesn't find a chip partner; digital is in deep
trouble for any future beyond the year 2000. On the other hand, if
ALPHA does become an accepted "winner" and gain market share, things
look bright for digital.
|
4590.3 | | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Harpoon a tomata | Mon May 13 1996 16:59 | 8 |
| >> See HUMANE::DIGITAL_INVESTING 10.2025
>> It can probably be reposted here if the author of 10.2025 wishes
>> (and maybe even then it doesn't need permission).
Or some enterprising person can extract it again from http://www.boston.com and
post it again.
Brian
|
4590.4 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 13 1996 20:48 | 3 |
| Or wait for tomorrow's VNS.
Steve
|
4590.5 | HUMANE::DIGITAL_INVESTING 10.2025 with paragraphs even | UNXA::ZASLAW | | Tue May 14 1996 15:52 | 246 |
| Back Up and Running: Though on the rebound from
massive losses, company faces tough future
By Jon Auerbach, 05/12/96
Among recent sitings: New York, where the impeccably groomed chairman of
Digital Equipment Corp. shared a stage with Microsoft chief Bill Gates and MCI
chairman Bert Roberts to announce a vaunted business alliance; and at
Cambridge's ultrahip Cybersmith, where a mere video link to a sales pitch by
Palmer drew a media mob.
For a company that just three years ago was teetering on the edge of a steep
cliff (at one point it was losing $125,000 every hour), Digital has once again
found its balance.
But the recovery is far from complete.
While Digital is making money again, it has underperformed the computer
industry as a whole over the last three years. Its sales growth has lagged key
rivals such as Hewlett-Packard Co., Sun Microsystems Inc. and IBM. Products
have been slow to catch on with new customers. And after an aggressive bid to
become a force in the personal computer industry, Digital retreated from the
home PC market and remains a bit player when it comes to business sales.
All of this comes as Digital is paying less attention to the thousands of big
companies it onced called on directly. Analysts say a 1994 decision to turn
over a big chunk of its customers to third-party distributors has left some
questioning Digital's long-term commitment.
``I hear everywhere, `Yeah, Digital has great technology, but I just can't
trust them,''' said John Logan, president of Aberdeen Group in Boston and a
veteran Digital watcher.
To be sure, a company in the middle of a massive restructuring can be excused
for posting sluggish financial results. But the rest of the computer world
hasn't paused while Digital regroups, and the company faces the real danger of
losing more ground to fast competitors.
Analysts warn that if Digital wants to regain a prominent spot in the business,
it must move quickly to boost sales, especially of its most powerful systems.
Stamford-based Gartner Group, a leading research firm, has given Digital just a
60 percent chance of being a viable computer maker five years from now.
``That's not a hearty endorsement,'' said George Weiss, a Gartner vice
president who nonetheless believes Digital has come a long way under Palmer.
The Maynard company, the state's second-largest private employer, has cut its
payroll in half, slashed costs, sold nonessential operations and tried to
define a clear mission. Under Palmer's leadership, Digital has charted five
consecutive quarters of profit - not extraordinary for a company in the heart
of a booming industry, but impressive considering it had racked up $4 billion
in losses just four years ago.
Investor confidence has been restored, sending Digital's share price climbing.
(From a low of 18 in the summer of 1994, its stock has rallied to as much as 76
in February of this year; it closed Friday at 53.)
Financial analysts are generally sanguine about Digital's short-term prospects.
For the fiscal year 1996, which ends June 30, analysts predict earnings of
about $3.23 per share, up from 15 cents a share in 1995, according to Zacks
Investment Research. Estimates for 1997 average $5.25 a share.
After years of trying to compete across all product ranges and in many markets,
Digital has narrowed its focus to building the fastest machines for the most
power-hungry corporate customers. Be first with the speediest, so the argument
at Digital goes, and all the rivals will be playing catch up.
Digital has pegged its future on a tiny piece of silicon the size of a postage
stamp. Called the Alpha, the chip, packed with 9.4 million transistors, is the
fastest processor on the market, and Digital believes it will become the
standard engine inside muscle-bound computers.
If Alpha fails to catch on among large companies, however, it leaves Digital
``at the prom without a date,'' said John McCarthy, a top analyst at Forrester
Research Inc., of Cambridge.
For most people, a computer chip is an invisible bit of confusing technology
stuffed inside computers. But at Digital, the Alpha chip has come to symbolize
the company's momentum. It has given many employees something to be proud of
after years plagued by job insecurity and an institutional loss of confidence.
In most ways, no person at Digital has come to be as closely linked with the
Alpha as Robert Palmer.
In 1985, Palmer, an engineer with years of experience in the chip industry, was
recruited into Digital's semiconductor unit by company founder Kenneth H.
Olsen. Then, most Digital computers ran on the VAX line of chips introduced in
1978.
After a series of misstarts - including the scrapping of a new operating system
program that led to the exodus of about 40 engineers in 1988 - the company
decided to build a chip of its own, based on a design called RISC, for reduced
instructing set computing.
Palmer was chosen to go before Olsen and the Digital executive committee to
peddle the Alpha plan in early 1988. ``Apparently I was persuasive that day,''
smirked Palmer in a recent interview. Design on the Alpha began in 1989.
By the time Alpha rolled off the assembly line in 1992, most competitors had
RISC chips on the market. But being last gave Digital the luxury of learning
from their errors.
With blazing speed and the ability to run advanced software, Alpha quickly
claimed technical superiority. Digital's bet: For companies needing to process
huge databases or analyze billions of bits of information, the Alpha solution
would catch like wildfire.
It has not.
Despite what Palmer - who took the top spot when Olsen was forced out in July
1992 - refers to as a new Alpha surge generated by the need for big computers
as the Internet grows, Digital has hardly broken into the big leagues, analysts
say. The company has ``one of the lowest unit shipments of any architecture
being promulgated by a major vendor,'' said Nathan Brookwood, a semiconductor
specialist with Dataquest Inc., a San Jose, Calif.-based market research firm.
``Alpha is the low man on the totem as far as building market share.''
Moreover, Alpha has yet to win adoption by other chipmakers, a Digital goal.
For at least a year, Digital has been searching for a partner to help bring its
new semiconductor plant in Hudson, called FAB-6, up to capacity. A preliminary
agreement with Cirrus Logic Inc. of Fremont, Calif., fell through. Currently
the plant is running at about 30 percent capacity, which analysts say is
costing Digital precious dollars and hampering their effort to recoup a $450
million investment.
Palmer will only say that the search for a partner is continuing.
Measuring market share in the high-end computer segment is complex and often
ambiguous. But because Alpha was designed to run most efficiently on what is
known as a 64-bit Unix operating system, analysts say the Unix market is the
best yardstick to measure the chip's success.
In 1994, the most recent year for which complete information is available,
Alpha's Unix sales accounted for 2.8 percent of the market, or $825 million.
That compared with 16.2 percent for both Sun and H-P, 13 percent for
International Business Machines Corp. and 5.4 percent for Silicon Graphics
Inc., according to the International Data Corp. in Framingham.
Analysts had expected Digital's Unix sales to increase significantly in 1995,
the first year in which the company's new line of high-powered computer servers
was widely available. But based on preliminary calculatios, sales climbed only
about $250 million, to $1.09 billion, according to IDC. ``We expected more,''
said Jay Bretzmann, director of systems research at IDC.
Digital is also pumping out computers built around Intel Corp. chips. It struck
a high-profile deal in August to market Microsoft Corp.'s NT operating system
for networks, saying that offering customers a choice between Microsoft and
Digital software would make Alpha more appealing. hinner on the Intel
computers, and analysts say these sales will not provide the steam to fuel the
continued Digital recovery.
The slow adoption rate of the Alpha chip translates almost directly onto
Digital's balance sheet. Over the past four quarters, Digital's quarterly sales
growth averaged 4.5 percent, over the same periods in the previous year. That
pales in comparison with H-P's 25 percent, Sun Microsystems Inc.'s 18 percent
and even IBM's 9.5 percent.
To be sure, many large companies found the Alpha was just what they were
looking for. Pratt &Whitney,for instance, turned to Alpha to handle the
graphics and numbers required to design jets. SmithKline Beecham tapped into
Alpha's power to analyze and store chemical information. General Electric,
Samsung and Mitsubishi found Alpha could handle the kind of hefty number
crunching capabilities they required.
Analysts say Alpha demand may be picking up. ``They are coming in on more and
more short lists,'' said Weiss.
Today, sales of Alpha chips and systems account for roughly 50 percent of
Digital's earnings, according to Vincent J. Mullarkey, the company's chief
financial officer.
Total sales of Alpha systems have grown to $1.9 billion last year, out of
overall sales of $13.8 billion, according to estimates by IDC. (The rest of
Digital's sales come from the VAX line, Intel computers and software and
services.)
Still, industry watchers believe Alpha - with its fatter profit margins -
remains the key to Digital's future. Simply put, they say, Digital needs to
dramatically expand sales, both to existing and new customers. And that
requires basic blocking and tackling: aggressive marketing, continued alliances
with high-profile companies and possibly price cuts.
``This is the time when they should be blowing [Alpha] out the door,'' Logan
said. If not, he added, ``people are concerned that they'll never get out of
the fringe.''
Perhaps the most important threat looming over Digital's shoulder is a plan by
Intel and H-P to co-produce a chip to rival the Alpha. Known by the codenames
P7 and Merced, the RISC-based processor is scheduled to be released in 1998 or
1999. At an H-P meeting in California last week, there were rumors buzzing that
a test version would be out as early as this year.
``Intel has every intention of blowing [the Alpha] away,'' said Weiss, at
Gartner Group.
As the world's largest chipmaker, and a company recognized as brimming with
marketing savvy, Intel has as good a chance as any making the P7 a standard
among big companies, analysts said. Having H-P's proven technical excellence on
its side only increases the odds.
When the P7 comes out, ``everything is up for grabs,'' said Gene Lee, an
analyst with IDC's California office.
Palmer is adamant the P7 will pose no threat. He points out that about half of
Digital's sales are composed of Intel-based systems.
By the time the P7 is released, Digital vows to be making an Alpha that is far
faster. ``We are going to have the fastest microprocessors forever,'' boasted
Ed Caldwell, the vice president who heads Digital's semiconductor unit.
Moreover, Digital plans to roll out software this summer called FX!32 that
Caldwell said will allow Intel-based applications to run on the Alpha system.
Digital plans to give away the product, and some analysts believe it will help
win customers who like Alpha but are swayed by Intel's enormous software base.
For customers that want the best and fastest in computing, Digital will sell
Alpha. For others, it can offer systems with the Intel/H-P processor, Palmer
said. ``It's good for our customers because Digital will continue to offer the
broadest range of performance on both Intel and Alpha architecture,'' he said.
Others are less optimistic.
One of the main problems, analysts said, is that Digital is having difficulty
winning new accounts. Logan, of Aberdeen Group, blames this partly on a 1994
Digital decision to cut the number of companies it sells to directly to 1,000
from around 10,000. The companies that were cut away were handed over to
third-party vendors, a move that Logan believes destroyed the customer loyalty
that Digital salespeople created.
Digital denies there has been any drop in confidence. In fact, the company
says, the switch has made it more efficient and allowed it to focus on the
1,000 biggest accounts. Mullarkey said the direct sales system was costing
Digital ``significant money.'' By cutting down to the most important customers,
Digital has considerably reduced sales and support costs. Similarly, Mullarkey
cited recent customer satisfaction surveys that ``would certainly lead one to
conclude that the situation is not only good but improving.''
Even critical analysts say that Digital is in no danger of financial crisis.
Rather, they point out that if the Intel chip is a big success, it would be
difficult for Digital to continue its expansion in earnest.
``Digital will have had to make some significant moves by 1998 in terms of
market share so that Alpha is a major established technology,'' said Weiss.
``If their strategy is not broadened, they are going to be facing a huge hurdle
around the year 2000.''
This story ran on page 73 of the Boston Globe on 05/12/96.
|
4590.6 | Can you believe this sh**.... | MPOS02::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Tue May 14 1996 18:08 | 13 |
| So is anyone of the Corporate wizards in Communications putting
together a response on this or do I get to hear from my Business
Partner, "Gee, interesting article in the Sunday Globe!"
Didn't someone famous say somewhere, "Never say Never, and Never use
Forever" Ed- Nothing is forever except Death and I suspect if the
politicans have anything to do with it, Taxes. You know it's kinda'
catchy, Death and Taxes both of which are a continum if you assume that
life goes on for those you leave behind after you are out of the canoe.
The lights are on, is anyone home?
Mav
|
4590.7 | Top 100 Accounts | FBEDEV::GLASER | | Tue May 14 1996 18:24 | 6 |
| I heard a rumor that Digital is downsizing our direct channels customer
base from 1000 to 100 accounts.
Has anyone heard this same rumor. If so, it will be an even greater
blow to customer loyalty.
|
4590.8 | So what, I wonder... | WOTVAX::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Wed May 15 1996 03:33 | 6 |
| Whilst the Boston Globe article is being digested with interest in the
GMA and by us reading Notes and VNS, what interest is there in the rest
of the US?
If there's no access to the article or widespread interest in it by the
Wall St. market makers and stock buyers - what's the impact?
|
4590.9 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Wed May 15 1996 09:44 | 4 |
| re .8 You're right: nothing in the Globe article is news to the
market; probably the biggest impact is the eye opening for the
large number of employees in the greater Boston area. .02 K
|
4590.10 | No Marketing... | XANADU::ACRO::rackemann | xanadu::rackemann | Wed May 15 1996 11:03 | 30 |
| >> Re: .5
Everybody seems to be talking about Alpha and yet no one is talking
about Alpha. I read an article a while ago in a prominent daily
investment publication. It was a hot debate over the fastest micro-
processor on the market. The article cited pros and cons for both
the Pentium and the PowerPC - one of these is apparently the fastest
microprocessor on the market. There was *NO* mention of Alpha.
Hello?
This seems to me to be a big problem - and not a new one. Alpha, like
many Digital products, is one of the best kept secrets in technology
today. What is Digital doing to mass market the Alpha chip and Alpha
systems? Why don't I see TV ads all the time about Alpha? How is it
that people on the street have heard of Pentium, and even PowerPC, but
never Alpha? Is there no one in this whole company, starting at the
top, who can see that we need more visibility and marketing? Digital
has always had vastly superior products that no one ever knew about
because Digital never marketed them. This is simply not a new problem.
The bad news is that it seems it also not being addressed.
It's very frustrating to see these fabulous products brought to you
by dedicated and incomparable employees fall into the abyss because
no one knows about them. There are so many great marketing companies
out there, it seems surprising that Digital couldn't learn from them
or even recruit from them, for that matter. To use the age old sports
analogy, Digital needs a goal scorer...
|
4590.11 | The new marketing company?? | SWAM1::WONG_HE | Wong @CSMC for a lifetime | Wed May 15 1996 11:24 | 7 |
| Did'nt we a few months back with to a new marcketing company that was
suppose to do get us in front of the masses??? I do see us in a lot of
the trade, but these are for the more informed!! Obviously somone is
not doing there job!!! And the fustration for me is that I have been
at the customer site generating revenue for the company, I wonder how
the company is spending the hard earned consulting dollars that we
bring in????
|
4590.12 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Wed May 15 1996 11:30 | 9 |
| If the DS pricing committee sets Alpha prices of $1913 per chip
(and that's before chipset cost and lots of expensive fast L2
cache), it really makes marketing difficult, if not impossible
in the NT space. How would you like to try and market a hamburger
stand that sells $40 hamburgers?
Er, bad example, been used recently... how about a lemonade stand
analogy?
;-) K
|
4590.13 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed May 15 1996 11:43 | 18 |
| There's also the slight problem that someone seems to think we're
going to someday make some money selling Intel products, so we must
always be nice and obsequious and never say anything about Alpha that
might cast a pall on our vastly profitable line of Intel products. ~/~
(This is not to deny Kratz's point about pricing, or the point
I've made over the years that lack of Byte/Word operations was
a killer in any market other than the Ivory Tower of Computer
Science Theoreticians.)
*THE DAY* I see a real killer comparison ad *ON TV* showing
an Alpha Rabbit streaking past an Intel Turtle, or an Alpha
F16 streaking past an Intel DC-3, or an Alpha F-1 car streaking
past an Intel Hyundai, is the day I believe that Digital might
actually pull itself out of the mess its created by betting
the corporation on Alpha and then forgetting to watch its
hand of cards.
Atlant
|
4590.14 | unequal playing field | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Wed May 15 1996 12:21 | 12 |
| Atlant,
You do realize that the ABU saleforce gets compensated for selling
Alphas, but not anything from the PCBU? So for our very profitable
server line, our first line of competition is not COMPAQ, not HP,
but ourselves. If this artifical barrier weren't present, the PCBU
would probably make a consistent profit (50% of COMPAQ's latest profit
came from servers that did just 25% of revenue, for example). Quite
frankly, if I were an ABU salesperson and I had a 1% chance of selling
an Alpha and 99% chance of selling an Intel, I'd still bid the Alpha;
there's at least a slight chance it'd put food on my family's table.
Kratz
|
4590.15 | Marketing and Metrics | FBEDEV::GLASER | | Wed May 15 1996 12:28 | 25 |
| Re: .10
>It's very frustrating to see these fabulous products brought to you
>by dedicated and incomparable employees fall into the abyss because
>no one knows about them. There are so many great marketing companies
>out there, it seems surprising that Digital couldn't learn from them
>or even recruit from them, for that matter. To use the age old sports
>analogy, Digital needs a goal scorer...
Hey, we have a goal scorer. It called "metrics" - BP sez make the
numbers I assign to you. If you don't, your successor will!
Metrics is a greate way to measure lots of things. However, it does
not do a good job of measuring "vision". This comapny at one time was
run by a visionary person but he lost the touch. Our current
leadership team seems to have a vision based on Alpha but is this
vision the only one that should drive Digital?
Ultimately, I think that the Alpha vision will not be the success that
everyone hoped that it would be. Everytime I use my PC here at work
and at home, I'm reminded about the difference between a niche and a
broad market.
What is it that HP, SUN, Intel, and other do they makes them grow while
we poke along at a measly single digit grown rate.
|
4590.16 | Constancy of purpose = road to quality = road to success | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Whatever it takes WHOm? | Wed May 15 1996 13:16 | 7 |
| They have "constancy of purpose".
Go look up the thoughts of the late J Edwards Deming on the subject.
I'd say more but someone seems to have borrowed my book on the subject.
regards
john
|
4590.17 | Back to the Basics people | MPOS01::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Wed May 15 1996 13:30 | 44 |
| RE: last
I'll tell you what HP, Sun and Intel do to grow their business at the
rates they are. They define a market, identify customers, understand
and learn key applications they want to own, then they build technology
to attack the market and they completely try and dominate that space.
They get all the wood behind the arrow tip, all the powder behind the
bullets and go right to the heart of the market. They design print ads
that support their vision of where they want to be. They design tv
ad's which market their vision to the masses ("Intel inside) such that
it becomes a panacea. "Oh boy, I better take my dose of P6 today or
I'll get sick in corporate land" and everyone from the CEO to the
person screwing it together understands and sings the corporate mantra
of "We are the __________ Company and we do it better than anyone else
in the universe."
Now, along comes the Digital company. And we have hot products. We've
got hot alliances. We've got hot professionals. We have a hot ad
agency (DDB Needham). We've got hot executives that drive hot cars.
Hey lo and behold we're a hot company. Pause.....YAWN...... who cares?
Everyone has hot products, alliances, pro's, exec's, and even cars.
The point is we do not have market share. Once again folks, Market
Share. MARKET SHARE! If you have it you will own the customer's
mindset. ("Intel Inside... Sun, we are the Network....IBM...solutions
for a small planet....HP....well everyone just knows who they are).
And then there's Alpha. Hmmmm what is this Alpha thing? Is it fancy
military lingo for the first letter of the alphabet? Is it a cereal as in
Alpha bits? Is it medicine? Is it a car (Alpha Romeo)? Just pray
tell what is this thing that they call Alpha. How can it help me with
my work? Where can I get some? Who can I talk to? How does it work?
What does it do? and on and on and on.
Market share people. It is Marketing 101. It's Marketing 100. It's
the Basics. So, it's not about running hot dog stands. It's not about
metrics. It's about capturing the lions share of a market. Catering
to the customers needs, under promising and over delivering, and on and
on and on. You won't need metrics. You will only need Brinks trucks
to haul the money away. Lot's of em. HP needs enough to handle $32
billion. IBM needs $70 billion. Digital needs.....oh just put it in
one of the other's there it's less than a truck load.
Mav
|
4590.18 | HP may be the casualty. | ACISS1::ROCUSH | | Wed May 15 1996 13:52 | 22 |
| I agree with the general comments about our almost criminal lack of
advertising and marketing around Alpha and Digital. We ahve a
tremendous product that is languishing because of a lack of
advertising. We have distribution network that is focused on selling
high margin servers that do nothing to get volume Alphas in the market.
we can win the Intel/Alpha wars, but not going about it in the current
fashion.
I wonder why the press is not making much of a story about
the HP/Intel P7 chip. This is a chip that is going to be available to
all Intel OEMs, including Digital. If the P7 is a screamer and
outperforms the Alpha, we can resell this chip as easily as HP. What
will HP offer to their customers to keep them buying HPs? Compaq can
sell the P7 and has a much better record in the Intel space than HP.
It seems as if HP has created a double-edged sword. It has partnered
with Intel to produce a new chip, that may or may not run all HP
software transparently, but this will not be an exclusive agreement.
Why would anyone want to buy from HP when they can buy from anyone to
get the P7 chip. It would seem that HP has a very slippery strategy
with the P7. Also, it would seem to endanger any PA RISC sales as this
is now an obsolete line of processors.
|
4590.19 | How to "get out in front of the masses" | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed May 15 1996 14:25 | 5 |
| Marketing problems? (shock/horrors)
Hayes is getting a big ride out of their Winston Cup stock car.
MadMike
|
4590.20 | Must see Webmaster | VFOVAX::BRAMBLETT | | Wed May 15 1996 15:40 | 8 |
|
As I am the one to sign the "stealth Marketing song" in many
cases, I urge you all to get a copy of Webmaster publication
and see the ad about Webservers and Alpha, you will have a NEW
opinion of our Marketing. It is one of the best ads I have
seen in my life at Digital.
|
4590.21 | | USAT02::HALLR | God loves even you! | Wed May 15 1996 15:43 | 6 |
| the bottom line purpose of an ad is to get NAME RECOGNITION....it's to
make someone in the market for a computer product say"Why not try
Digital?"
to date, our marketing has been woeful lacking in getting that message
acrosss
|
4590.22 | P7 is still only a dream! | STAR::jacobi.zko.dec.com::JACOBI | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS Alpha Development | Wed May 15 1996 15:51 | 12 |
| P7? Which P7? Currently, the P7 has evolved into two seperate devlopment
teams as the Intel/HP alliance has fragmented. The HP developed version of
P7 may -or- maynot run x86 code. Current estimates for some version of P7
are now out to 1998. Most people in the PC world believe P7 is still only
a dream.
I would be more concerned if Intel could bring out a 300-400mhz P6 in the
near future.
-Paul
|
4590.23 | is it just me, or are we in big trouble? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1) | Wed May 15 1996 16:04 | 32 |
| Right now Digital, as a place to work, from the perspective
of an employee, feels like a company in dire financial
condition.
There are layoffs (and rumors of layoffs) of some of the best
people working in what have been proclaimed as some of the
most strategic markets for Digital (internet and intranet,
from where I sit).
I've been with Digital a long time, and I remember the mood
of three years ago, when I was listed "at risk" and nearly
tapped -- it seems worse now. Back then, when we were
bloated and bleeding red ink, it made sense that the most
important thing the company had to do was cut costs and cut
headcount -- even at the expense of supposedly important
work.
But why now, especially when the "Digital Today" headline
boasts "Q3 revenue highest ever, net profit best in 6 years"?
(I can certainly understand, and support, the continued need
to control and reduce costs -- but why is it happening at
this pace and with such priority?)
Is there something happening that we workers just don't know
about? (This mood of a company in dire straits is certainly
reinforced by the building closing and office "densification"
going on all around.)
It's getting really hard to do real work for real customers.
Bob
|
4590.24 | Will the best audience see the ads? | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed May 15 1996 16:11 | 11 |
| re: Note 4590.20 by VFOVAX::BRAMBLETT
You and I use Internet, but many people we want to be reaching
(the big cheese who controls the spending) probably still has a
VT100 on his desk. Maybe not, but you know what I'm trying to say.
I think we need to be in the mainstream, reaching managers and
decision makers who are "too busy to surf" internet. Our internet
ads may be fabulous, but we need to target the people with the cash.
MadMike
|
4590.25 | Its the sense of purpose, not the cpu | FBEDEV::GLASER | | Wed May 15 1996 16:16 | 26 |
| Re: .20
Hmmmm, well it shows that at least one group has a sense of purpose in
this company. Now what BP needs to do is hire more Ilene Langs to turn
this company around. I get the feeling that she is out to dominate the
internet market. The idea of leveraging the Altavista name was a good
idea.
Re; .22
Regarding the P7. Is the P7 effort really important for HP to succeed?
Right now they are eating our lunch without one. The trick is that
they are more diversified than we are and those other divisions don't
sell "technical workstations". They sell "solutions".
Clearly, for Intel, the P7 is important but they will keep on producing
faster chips. After all, they do have more chip designers and fabs
than we do.
So we have chosen a winning strategy we got rid of all our application
software groups (health care, manufacturing, on and on) and instead we
are concentrating on high end processors. So, we can't compete with HP
and I don't see us taking on Intel because we don't have the size.
Am I missing someting?
|
4590.26 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Wed May 15 1996 16:24 | 12 |
| RE: .22 and .25
While we understand (or think we do) the reasons why P7 will/will not
deliver as promised, the fact is that people are talking about it
in the press. Do we need to revisit Beta vs VHS? Technical
superiority without discussion or widespread availability won't cut it.
VHS served a purpose and was easier to get/use than Beta. Thats
why it won. Only dweebs like me still have Beta machines :-)
[I would guess that the percentage of engineers who own Beta machines
ia MUCH greater than non-engineers.]
-John
|
4590.27 | What DOES marketing do different than INTEL's? | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification Takes Too Long. | Wed May 15 1996 19:20 | 18 |
| re .19
Not only Hayes Modems, but Prodigy, too.
I read all these "You have to read *THIS* ad" comments, and pardon me
<Yawn>
I don't want to READ it, I want to see it on TV, worldwide every day.
I want to see a Winston Cup TEAM with a big old ALPHA logo on the hood,
I want customers to say "Hey! Cool commercial the other night",
I want Stealth Marketing to GO AWAY (TFSO anyone?)
I know we have cool<er> products and lots of other do too, but we need
more - WE NEED VISIBILITY AND WE NEED IT NOW!
and to think that this has been going on for decades now.
.mike.
|
4590.28 | Couldn't resist! | CHEFS::RICKETTSK | Rebelwithoutapause | Thu May 16 1996 06:16 | 9 |
| Re. .16
> They have "constancy of purpose.
> Go look up the thoughts of the late J Edwards Deming on the subject.
> I'd say more but someone seems to have borrowed my book on the subject.
Obviously not someone of any importance within Digital! 8*)
Ken
|
4590.29 | video rathole | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu May 16 1996 09:48 | 19 |
| > <<< Note 4590.26 by TLE::REAGAN "All of this chaos makes perfect sense" >>>
>
> Do we need to revisit Beta vs VHS? Technical
> superiority without discussion or widespread availability won't cut it.
> VHS served a purpose and was easier to get/use than Beta. Thats
> why it won.
VHS beat Beta because standard VHS tapes were 120 minutes long, long enough
for most movies, and standard Beta tapes were only 75 minutes, NOT long
enough for most movies. Movie rentals made the early home video market,
ergo VHS rules.
> Only dweebs like me still have Beta machines :-)
> [I would guess that the percentage of engineers who own Beta machines
> ia MUCH greater than non-engineers.]
(Why, do we have shorter attention spans?)
- tom]
|
4590.30 | comment | ACISS2::SEIBERTR | | Thu May 16 1996 09:50 | 9 |
| Digital has had some good Ads over the years, but one thing
they seriously lack is frequency. Having a good campaign that
only shows a couple times and goes away doesn't cut it. Its almost
better to have a simpler, cheaper campaign and put the dollars into
more air time. How many days go by that you don't hear an ad for
McDonalds? You have to keep bombarding the crowd to make your ads
start to pay off or your basically throwing your money away.
RS
|
4590.31 | | DYPSS1::SCHAFER | Character matters. | Thu May 16 1996 11:37 | 3 |
| RE: frequency
i'd add "consistency" to that list.
|
4590.32 | HP! | CFSCTC::PATIL | Avinash Patil dtn:227-3280 | Thu May 16 1996 11:59 | 96 |
|
More on HP in the press recently:
HEWLETT-PACKARD
HP CONTINUES TO EXPAND INTO NEW MARKETS
CMP Publications via FIRST! by Individual, Inc., April 23, 1996
* In this decade of downsizing, rightsizing, and mega-mergers, HP is
emerging as an industry powerhouse. The company is recognized as:
-- The world leader in printers
-- The top revenue generator in UNIX workstations and servers
-- The leading tape storage products supplier in the U.S.
-- A growing PC giant
* Last year, HP moved from ninth to seventh place on the list of leading
worldwide PC manufacturers.
* HP has demonstrated its ability to adapt, respond, and grow like a small
Fortune 1000 company, even though it is actually a $31 billion giant.
"What we have learned to do is to fly the divisions in formation without
destroying their fundamental independence." (Brice Clark, Director of
Strategic Planning, HP's Networks Division, Roseville, CA)
* A look ahead to HP's future prompts the following questions:
-- Will collaboration with Intel produce the world's most powerful and
most popular generation of microprocessors?
-- Can HP hold its own against IBM, a company that sells twice that of
HP every year?
-- Will its slow entrance into the Internet market force HP to play
* Once defined by calculators and printers, HP is aggressively expanding
its product focus to include a wide array and computer products, medical
instruments, and innovations for new markets, culled from core research.
* Innovative, new products introduced since 1993 were responsible for more
than half of the company's orders for 1995.
* HP's 1995 milestones include:
-- A 27-percent increase in component product orders
-- Introduction of a new PA RISC processor
* Although it engages in ambitious partnerships, HP has managed to avoid
any problematic initiatives. In fact, the company has never faced an
economic crisis resulting in massive layoffs.
* Dick Watts, Vice President and General Manger, HP's Computer Systems
Organization: "Safe not only means secure in the sense of a reliable
vendor that is financially sound and able to stand behind the product
and support it. It also means addressing some of the future questions
that our customers have."
* A good example of HP's pragmatism is its collaboration with Intel.
-- A solo attempt to develop a competitive, next-generation
PA-RISC chip would have cost the company about $2 billion.
-- With Intel on-board, HP may net better price/performance that RISC
and compatibility with the world's most popular chip architecture.
* Accounting for 80 percent of the company's 1995 revenue, HP's Computer
Organization is comprised of five distinct entities:
-- Customer support
-- LaserJet printers
-- InkJet printers
-- UNIX systems
-- Intel-based computers
* Each entity is headed by a group vice president, who, in turn, reports
directly to Executive Vice President Rick Belluzzo, Computer
Organization General Manager.
* HP hopes to more closely align its various computer properties. However,
the UNIX and Intel computer groups will remain separate entities and
pursue independent channel agendas.
HEWLETT-PACKARD REORGANIZES FORCE; SEEKS NT MARKET
Reuters via First! by Individual, Inc., May 6, 1996
* Two major announcements at Hewlett-Packard
-- The direct sales force will now sell personal computers and laptops,
in addition to workstations.
-- Changes are being implemented to improve sales and service to
customers in commercial and technical markets.
* Industry analysts are saying that these changes position HP as the one
company selling in both the UNIX workstation market and the Windows
NT-based personal computer market.
(HP is leveraging their successful HP/UX direct sales force into the NT mark
et
now that the NT iron is hot. This moves signals they are now ready to
sacrifice HP/UX to NT if necessary and capture these HP/UX customers on NT
before any competitor can move in.)
* Herwick Capital Management take:
-- "There is nothing hotter today ... than people wanting to implement
NT servers and clients. HP very strongly seized on that opportunity."
-- HP is in a "unique or leadership position in terms of having a very
strong UNIX offering as well as putting strong support behind NT."
* HP's direct sales force, previously responsible for selling higher-end
workstation, middleware, and server products, will continue to work
closely with resellers, critical players on the HP sales team.
HP TO STOP USE OF MAINFRAME COMPUTERS
Kyodo via First! by Individual, Inc., April 25, 1996
* HP will discontinue the use of mainframe computers at its facilities in
California during the third week in May.
* Information management will be taken over by an in-house communications
network of server and personal computers.
|
4590.33 | HWP down over 8%, dragging down techs (apparently) | SMURF::STRANGE | Steve Strange:Digital UNIX, DCE DFS | Thu May 16 1996 12:06 | 5 |
| So, what happened to them today??
HP stock is down 9 1/4 to 104 1/2.
Steve
|
4590.34 | | GEMGRP::MONTELEONE | | Thu May 16 1996 13:11 | 9 |
|
>> So, what happened to them today??
They are annoucning earnings today, although I haven't heard what they are...
Bob
|
4590.35 | mindshare | UHUH::JRICHARDS | | Thu May 16 1996 13:14 | 23 |
| The Globe article really echos what I've heard from colleagues
looking to buy development and reselling workstations and servers.
In a nutshell, most think Digital is out of the game. They want
to buy Sun/SGI/HP. They think Digital may go under at any time.
I convince them that we are fast, try one. They try a Digital
workstation. So far, I've seen two results. 1) They decide to
buy Sun anyway (site quality of service, etc...). 2) They compare
to P6, P6 wins price/performance ratio with a 4/1 margin. End
result: these guys/gals try to convince me my job is at risk at Digital!
This happened with 4 places now and a 5th doing evalutations. None
are very large accounts now, 1 could turn out to be large. 2 are
startups, 3 are large companies. Some get a machine to compile on.
Who is our target for the Alpha? People who need it fast at any cost?
Who are these people?
In my limited experience, the poor folks who didn't buy Alpha's, but
bought Sun/HP/SGI instead did so because they thought of Sun/HP/SGI
as better. So my guess is that we lack mindshare in that segment.
|
4590.36 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Thu May 16 1996 13:44 | 7 |
| re: P6 4:1 price/performance advantage over Alpha
Things *are* getting better for Alpha... when it ships, an EV56-based
Alpha XL 366 at <$10k should open quite a few eyebrows and stop the
embarrassing situations we currently send our sales force/resellers
into with the older Alpha products. Alas, you can only embarrass
these folks so often before they give up.
|
4590.37 | References make or break the deal. | EPS::RODERICK | NH - The Asphalt State | Thu May 16 1996 14:03 | 17 |
| re .35
>In my limited experience, the poor folks who didn't buy Alpha's, but
>bought Sun/HP/SGI instead did so because they thought of Sun/HP/SGI
>as better. So my guess is that we lack mindshare in that segment.
And what does better mean? I've seen HP put one or more technical
specialists at the customer site every day to work on their performance
problems. Sun dropships hardware in the customer's data center and has
their people on-site to replicate the customer's environment. Try doing
that with an SBU account.
Right now it's chicken and egg. The customers in the large opportunities
I work on want references. No references, no sale, no sale, no
references.
Lisa
|
4590.38 | | RLTIME::COOK | | Thu May 16 1996 15:05 | 18 |
| > <<< Note 4590.36 by PCBUOA::KRATZ >>>
>
> re: P6 4:1 price/performance advantage over Alpha
>
> Things *are* getting better for Alpha... when it ships, an EV56-based
> Alpha XL 366 at <$10k should open quite a few eyebrows and stop the
> embarrassing situations we currently send our sales force/resellers
> into with the older Alpha products. Alas, you can only embarrass
> these folks so often before they give up.
Is this a first? Kratz actually said something positive about a
non-Intel/MicroSoft product!!!
|
4590.39 | People don't buy "boxes" | VFOVAX::BRAMBLETT | | Thu May 16 1996 16:22 | 9 |
|
Actually, I don't believe that any customer buys strictly on price
performance when deciding on what computer to buy. Customers buy
business solutions from Consulting firms which understand their
business problems and how to solve them. The flavor of the box
under the solution is much less important than the problem which
is being solved.
|
4590.40 | Back to the Future.... | MPOS01::BJAMES | I feel the need, the need for SPEED | Thu May 16 1996 17:11 | 11 |
| Heed me.....read me.......the BOX does not matter. It never did. The
solution matters. If you have *THE* solution on a *FAST CHEAP* box and
can SUPPORT the customer with outstanding SERVICE after the sale then
you will win. If you do it once, jolly good for you. 10 times great.
100 times even better. 10,000 times now you are talking. A 100,000
times boy the trains on a roll now, and a 1,000,000 times, well guess
who owns Everest folks. Market share King.
It's a simple, simple thing folks........sell 'em and keep 'em happy.
Mav
|
4590.41 | boxes & solutions | UHUH::JRICHARDS | | Thu May 16 1996 18:37 | 23 |
| > Heed me.....read me.......the BOX does not matter. It never did. The
> solution matters. If you have *THE* solution on a *FAST CHEAP* box and
> can SUPPORT the customer with outstanding SERVICE after the sale then
In the research and development computing or startup arena,
the solution is sometimes (often?) UNIX + GNU tools. Or NT. Now
it comes down to who has the best bang for the buck. So the PC
wins until the machine Kratz mentioned hits the streets. I hope it
comes out soon!
As for the rest of your argument, it deals with arenas that I'm
unfamiliar with, but it seems very reasonable. Of course, if they
never call Digital, they'll never know what our solution is. When
we call them, do we have the service & solution they are looking
for?
My guess is that the box+OS is a commodity item. Where can we add value?
Raw speed. Or price/performance. Or the OS. Or service &
solution (or is that a seperate item?). Probably more.
|
4590.42 | Of perceptions, boxes, and solutions | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu May 16 1996 20:36 | 36 |
| Boxes may not matter, but the perception of the boxes w.r.t. the
solution DOES matter.
I have been fighting an uphill battle for YEARS at my current customer.
He is doing true 3D imaging and 3D image manipulation. His peers in
his research keep telling him "You should be using SGI! Alphas may be
fast, but they don't have the leading applications that everyone in
this field uses! SGI _IS_ the graphical research platform!".
I have managed to keep the Alphas and VAXen intact so far, but I go
through this drill every quarter or so. Digital simply doesn't have
the reputation in this field that SGI does. We've managed to make sure
that the Alphas are doing everything that has been needed so far, but
the perception of SGI as a superior graphics/imaging/research platform
simply won't go away.
Also, when I try to pin the customer down on the benefits of SGI versus
Digital, it inevitably boils down to "SGI is a serious player in this
field, while Digital is nothing but hotboxes and empty talk".
We've got to learn how to play this game! We should be putting serious
effort in creating the perception that Digital is _THE_ research
platform for the year 2000 and beyond. If just ONE major new
technology is born on and requires the "hotbox" capability of the
Alpha, we could see this company soar far above the levels of the "old"
Digital.
Instead, we are seen as offering mere hotbox toolkits: a box with an O/S,
networking, and compilers, but NOTHING that really addresses the
direct needs of the customer. The fact that we seem destined to sell
off just about every other piece of software we make is NOT HELPING OUR
PERCEPTION. We are selling the same hotbox toolkits that everyone else
sells; if we want to win market share, we've GOT to sell something
other than the "we're hotter than the other guys" line.
-- Russ
|
4590.43 | Check it out! | PCBUOA::WHITEC | Parrot_Trooper | Fri May 17 1996 10:39 | 11 |
|
Talk to the folks that have the VAN with ALL competetive systems
and ALPHAS for benchmarking.....whenever there is a problem with
customers perception of our equipment against others, they drive this
VAN up, and give the customer a tour and they see for themselves......
I was impressed... Only problem was they needed to keep the chrome
wheels of the tractor-trailer shinier!!! ;^) Upset's us Harley Chrome
freaks!
chet
|
4590.44 | | JHAXP::VULLO | Simplify & Deliver | Fri May 17 1996 11:05 | 5 |
|
I'd say we haven't convinced enough companies to port their
software to the Alpha architecture. This has got to make it
harder to sell Alpha boxes.
|
4590.45 | There is a lot in a name | FBEDEV::GLASER | | Fri May 17 1996 11:25 | 17 |
| Re .42
Interestingly enough, the name SGI sez what that company does best:
graphics!
Now, we may say that we have a blzingly fast machine but BIG DEAL!
What SGI has done is lead the graphics industry. We pushed PHIGS
(pigs) and SGI blew us away with GL, and then OpenGL, which is part of
Windows NT (is it included in W95?).
On top of that, they have some really fancy 3d visualization and
modeling software: Open Inventor comes to mind here.
So we tout our hot boxes but fail to see that SGI has it all WRT high
end graphics.
|
4590.46 | How's our graphics stuff compare to SGI? | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri May 17 1996 12:35 | 7 |
| So, what about our new $10,000 graphics card? How does that compare to
what SGI is peddling?
Maybe we can paint AXP on the back of our stock car and dedicate the
hood to touting how we blow away SGI with our graphics hardware.
MadMike, not all that up on the new hardware kinda guy.
|
4590.47 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri May 17 1996 12:36 | 3 |
| AXP? What's that?
Steve
|
4590.48 | allin1 <---- wind up | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri May 17 1996 12:43 | 2 |
| er, alpha. nevermind, we'll paint "digital" on the side instead.
We make fast watches. that's the ticket.
|
4590.49 | Alpha vs. SGI videotape | ALFA2::ALFA2::HARRIS | | Fri May 17 1996 12:49 | 16 |
| Digital Semiconductor showed a videotape at the Nat'l Assoc. of
Broadcasters show in April that has several of the film and TV
animation industry's hottest video engineers (Amblin Imaging, Digital
Domain, etc.) saying how Alpha blows SGI out of the water in image
rendering and animation using Windows NT, how they get equal or better
results from Alpha systems for a fraction of what comparable SGI systems
cost, and how they can work at home on Intel NT systems and bring the
work to the office and finish it (fast) on Alpha, whereas SGI doesn't
do NT, so it's work at the office or nothing.
Alpha OEM Carrera Computers gets some exposure, but the key words are
Alpha-Alpha-Alpha.
For info call Pat Hart at DTN 225-4767.
M
|
4590.50 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri May 17 1996 13:11 | 24 |
|
re: .49
That's what I wanted to hear. So, the word on the street is SGI
is the hot ticket. They even have the word "graphics" in their name.
But the facts are, we (dec, er, digital) run circles around them.
Another well known secret, or are we blowing our horn about this?
I think my point is, we have a perception problem (horrors). What is true
and what people THINK are not the same. We KNOW we have superior
products/services, but we don't tell anyone. OR, we tell the
wrong people. weenies KNOW we are superior. People who surf
internet know about things, but when push comes to shove, the
boston globe writes us off. This is why I'm thinking about needing
to target a more mainstream audience. I know a housewife isn't
going to buy bazzilions of dollars of stuff from us, but her husband,
the director at the local bank many watch TV with her, and might
accidentally see one of our ads (or, gasp, might even see our
stock car every weekend) and decide to give us a call. We don't just
make alpha, we make a whole line of superior items which make
superior solutions for current and POTENTIAL customers.
Someone should be responding to the Boston Globe.
MadMike
|
4590.51 | It's called marketing... ...AGAIN! | XANADU::ACRO::rackemann | xanadu::rackemann | Fri May 17 1996 13:12 | 14 |
|
>> I'd say we haven't convinced enough companies to port their
>> software to the Alpha architecture. This has got to make it
>> harder to sell Alpha boxes.
Hello? We're right back to marketing again. Not sales, Marketing.
Think back to the Pro series in the 80's. That Pro 380 was a rocket
ship on the desktop before it's time. Guess what Digital didn't do?
NO ONE was writing software for it. Sound familiar? Gee, maybe, in
order not to repeat the very same mistake ten years later, we ought
to go out and encourage, court, prod other companies into writing
Alpha stuff??? I can't understand how this gets missed - time after
time...
|
4590.52 | | LEXSS1::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Fri May 17 1996 16:37 | 8 |
| In the case of the PRO there were THOUSDANDS of programs that could
have run on it, but our clever marketing insited we restrict RT-11 and
only allow the wonderfull POS to run.
Nobody wrote code for POS.
When you get into the 'what if' mode, just imagine if we had opend up
the pdp11 chipset and PRO, with an installed base like that.
|
4590.53 | Is 7,384 enough ! | TRLIAN::baudr8.mko.dec.com::LAIL | Robert G. Lail | Fri May 17 1996 16:44 | 15 |
|
RE .44
What's "enough" The current Alpha Applications catalog lists
1741 vendors, 7,384 applications. 2,934 on Digital UNIX, 2,973 on
OpenVMS, and 1,475 on Windows/NT. Maybe their not the "right"
applications or maybe we just don't know how to tell the world !
The statistics are on the web page:
http://www.unix.digital.com/catalog/stats/index.html
\Bob Lail
|
4590.54 | Current NT/Alpha apps catalogue on web for customers? | BBPBV1::WALLACE | Whatever it takes WHOm? | Fri May 17 1996 18:09 | 9 |
| Just where is the current NT Alpha applications catalogue ? The only
one I can find is dated July 95. Doesn't inspire confidence to start
with. Then you call a couple of vendors listed and they say "yeah, we
ported once, didn't sell any, we just do Intel now. But you're the
third person this month to ask, so if Digital would encourage us, maybe
we'd look again". So I could use an up to date version...
regards
john
|
4590.55 | anwser to .33 | SCCAT::SHERRILL | | Fri May 17 1996 18:40 | 12 |
|
Re .33
.33> So, what happened to them today??
.33> HP stock is down 9 1/4 to 104 1/2
It's in the San Jose paper today,profits are up 25% to
to 723 million from 577 million the same period last year.
I guess it wasn't good enough for wall street.
|
4590.56 | Alpha Applications Catalog (all OS) URL | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon May 20 1996 10:18 | 1 |
| http://www.unix.digital.com/catalog/index.html
|
4590.57 | Water over the dam... | CUSTOM::ALLBERY | Jim | Mon May 20 1996 10:24 | 7 |
| Re: PRO
In addition to the mistake of POS, the proprietary bus was stupid--
it should of had a Q-bus. A "personal" PDP with graphics and Q-bus
could have cleaned up in the engineering market.
And we should have sold the uVAX II chipset to anyone who wanted it...
|
4590.58 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Mon May 20 1996 10:58 | 4 |
| > And we should have sold the uVAX II chipset to anyone who wanted it...
Like Apple.
|
4590.59 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon May 20 1996 12:52 | 17 |
| > > And we should have sold the uVAX II chipset to anyone who wanted it...
>
> Like Apple.
Just like we sold our RISC architecture to anyone who wanted it.
Like Apple.
NOT!
Thus was born the PowerPC consortium.
Atlant
P.S.: We can probably do this bone-headed trick at least one
more time before we go out of business.
|
4590.60 | Alpha Applications Catalog on the Web | TRLIAN::baudr8.mko.dec.com::LAIL | Robert G. Lail | Mon May 20 1996 13:56 | 9 |
|
RE .54
Alpha Applications Catalog - World Wide Web (www)
http://www.unix.digital.com/catalog/index.html
\Bob Lail
|
4590.61 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Mon May 20 1996 15:26 | 15 |
| > Just like we sold our RISC architecture to anyone who wanted it.
IMO if Palmer was running the company in 1990 Apple would be using
Alpha in Mac's. Ken just didn't see the need to share.
> P.S.: We can probably do this bone-headed trick at least one
> more time before we go out of business.
Good thing we are willing to sell StrongARM to Apple.
-Bruce
|
4590.62 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon May 20 1996 15:47 | 16 |
| Bruce:
> > P.S.: We can probably do this bone-headed trick at least one
> > more time before we go out of business.
>
> Good thing we are willing to sell StrongARM to Apple.
I'm pretty open about bashing Digital's stupidity but I'm
glad you put your reply in. StrongARM for the Newton PDA
really does represent a departure for us; I hope it's
the beginning of a new trend.
Now if we can just "generalize" the idea to include
widespread OEM sales for Alpha!
Atlant
|
4590.63 | Were we stupid, or just unconvincing? | WIBBIN::NOYCE | EV5 issues 4 instructions per meter | Mon May 20 1996 15:57 | 6 |
| Bruce, Atlant -
I thought we *did* offer Alpha to Apple in ~1991, but they turned it down.
At the time, something based on the successful IBM RS6000 line would probably
have seemed like a much less risky bet than a new architecture from a company
that was clearly falling behind in the performance game.
|
4590.64 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Mon May 20 1996 16:10 | 8 |
| The way I heard the rumor, John Sculley came to Ken Olsen
looking for a RISC architecture, and Ken basically wasn't
interested in talking about it.
But I have no hard facts to support this rumor and I wasn't
a "fly on the wall" at any meeting. :-)
Atlant
|
4590.65 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Mon May 20 1996 17:35 | 4 |
| I heard the same thing as Atlant. I also heard that Apple approached
us on MicroVAX but we were interested then either.
-Bruce
|
4590.66 | We're in the Globe again... | UHUH::JRICHARDS | | Tue May 21 1996 10:31 | 4 |
|
Digital is listed in the Globe's top 100 MA companies today. I don't
know where we place, but I heard it on WBNW.
|
4590.67 | | LEXSS1::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Tue May 21 1996 10:42 | 3 |
| Digital is #52 on the 100 most profitable.
It also gets mentioned on a 'most improved' or some such heading.
|
4590.68 | Another #1 | JUMP4::JOY | Perception is reality | Tue May 21 1996 13:45 | 4 |
| Also got number 1 on highest sales.
Debbie
|
4590.69 | Check out SOFTWARE or INFOWEEK mags! | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | preparation can mean survival | Tue May 21 1996 13:57 | 8 |
|
They *love* us, they *hate* us.
They *hate* us, they *love* us.
At least they *talk* about us!
-Later.
Mike Z.
|