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Conference 7.286::digital

Title:The Digital way of working
Moderator:QUARK::LIONELON
Created:Fri Feb 14 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:5321
Total number of notes:139771

5145.0. "Digital spins off San Jose research group" by AZUR::LANGENSTEIN (Hubert Langensteiner, @VBE) Wed Feb 19 1997 04:20

                         [ Reuters Securities News]

Tuesday February 18 7:28 PM EST

Digital( Digital Equipment Corp ) spins off software development unit

MAYNARD, Mass., Feb 14 (Reuter) - Digital Equipment Corp on Tuesday said it
was spinning off its San Jose research group to form TracePoint Technology
Inc, which will design programming tools to be used with the Microsoft Corp
Windows 95 and Windows NT environments.

Digital will retain a majority interest in the new company which received
$2.5 million in venture capital from Sequoia Capital, Stanford Management
and Soundview Financial Group.

  Copyright � 1997 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior
 written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or
    delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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5145.1Tracepoint Technology - DEC spinoffGLRMAI::HICKOXN1KTXWed Feb 19 1997 14:062
    
      Any idea how many employees go with the new spin-off? 
5145.2SMURF::STRANGESteve Strange, UNIX FilesystemsWed Feb 19 1997 14:336
    re: .0
    
    PC Week says there will be '25 workers' at TracePoint.  Doesn't say
    whether they are all coming from Digital or not.
    
    	Steve
5145.3More TracePoint InfoNETRIX::"[email protected]"Harald BinderThu Feb 20 1997 15:15138
This is a press release, from the TracePoint home page, www.tracepoint.com :

  NEW DIGITAL SPIN-OFF EYES HUGE MICROSOFT 
  DEVELOPERS' MARKET FOR X86 PLATFORMS

  ...TracePoint Technology, Inc., Readies Revolutionary
  Software Development Tool Suite to Meet Demand...

  MAYNARD, Mass. - February 19, 1997 - Digital Equipment Corporation today
launched
  TracePoint Technology, Inc., to exploit the skyrocketing demand for x86
leading-edge
  software development tools for Microsoft Windows 95 and Windows NT, known as
the
  Win32 environment. Tools for Intel PCs and clones make up 85 percent of the
current $2.5
  billion Win32 market, expected to exceed $13 billion by the year 2000. 

  TracePoint Technology, an independently operated Digital subsidiary, will be
based in San
  Jose, California. The spin-off capitalizes on the efforts of a research
group at Digital's
  Western Research Laboratories that developed a unique set of highly
successful software
  development tools for the Alpha 64-bit UNIX system platform. TracePoint's
initial thrust is to
  provide Win32 programmers for Intel and other x86-based PCs with similar
robust
  capabilities through the first development tool suite that operates on
binary code for the
  Windows environment. Later offerings may target Java and other development
platforms. 

  TracePoint Leadership 

  Key TracePoint employees include Mike Skelton, president and CEO; Amitabh
Srivastava,
  vice president of engineering and chief technical officer; Dewaine Miller,
vice president of
  marketing and sales; and David Stager, controller. 

  Owners and Directors 

  Digital Equipment will retain a majority interest in TracePoint. A venture
capital group led by
  Sequoia Capital and including SoundView Financial Group and Stanford
Management will
  participate. Employees will own the remainder. TracePoint's board of
directors includes:
  Skelton; Jay Zager, Digital vice president of operations, Corporate Strategy
and Technology;
  Paul Milbury, Digital vice president and treasurer; John Tiberi, partner,
ETEC Business
  Consultants; and Mark Stevens, general partner, Sequoia Capital. 

  First BCI Tools 

  "TracePoint is expected to be the first company to release a suite of C and
C++ software
  developer tools that provide binary code instrumentation to the Microsoft
Windows market,"
  Skelton said. "This suite of tools will quickly deliver precise results for
x86 platforms, and all
  are designed to meet exacting requirements for flexibility and performance."


  According to William D. Strecker, Digital vice president and chief technical
officer,
  "TracePoint technology has played a key role in optimizing Digital's
Alpha/UNIX platform and
  its software applications, enabling customers to achieve major productivity
gains. Now
  developers in the Win32 environment for x86, one of the software industry's
fastest growing
  segments, will be able to take advantage of this robust tool suite." 

  Explosive Growth 

  Industry analysts estimate that more than one-million C and C++ software
programmers
  currently are developing in the Win32 environment, which is projected to
expand at a 68
  percent compound annual growth rate. TracePoint tools will help these
developers improve
  the quality, performance and testing of their final software code. 

  "Using patented core technology called the 'TracePoint Framework,' our
employees can
  design and bring to market new development tools in about half the time
required by
  competing technology approaches," according to Amitabh Srivastava,
TracePoint's chief
  technology officer. "This allows TracePoint to be more responsive to the
changing needs of
  developers and rapidly expanding market opportunities," he added. 

  Marketing On the Internet 

  TracePoint will distribute company and product information, along with
demonstration
  software, through the Internet. It will also market and distribute its
products via two-tier
  distribution and software resellers in addition to the World Wide Web. For
further
  information, see: http://www.tracepoint.com 

  The company name was derived from tracepoints, or probes, that are inserted
into code to
  measure or analyze the functionality of the software. 

  Digital Equipment Corporation is a world leader in open client/server
solutions from personal
  computing to integrated worldwide information systems. Digital's scalable
Alpha and Intel
  platforms, storage, networking, software and services, together with
industry-focused
  solutions from business partners, help organizations compete and win in
today's global
  marketplace. 

  Editorial Contacts: 
  Digital Equipment Corporation
  Ed Canty 508-493-9449 [email protected]
  Sarah Miller 508-493-9448 [email protected]
  Tom Madden 508-493-9437 [email protected] 

  Note to Editors:

  Digital and the Digital logo are trademarks of Digital Equipment Corp. 

  Windows, Windows NT and Win32 are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corp. 

  TracePoint and TracePoint Framework are trademarks of TracePoint Technology,
Inc.
  Java is a trademark of Sun Microsystems, Inc. 

  CORP/97/509
[Posted by WWW Notes gateway]
5145.4HELIX::SONTAKKEThu Feb 20 1997 16:568
    My prediction about "Next one on the block"
    
    FX!32  I bet they would make a bundle as IA-64 is getting warm.
    
    Somebody will pay *BIG BUCKS* to obtain the FX32 technology which will
    be key in migrating the existing X86 applications to IA-64 architecture.
    
    - Vikas
5145.5gemevn.zko.dec.com::GLOSSOPOnly the paranoid surviveThu Feb 20 1997 17:3316
Too bad we couldn't convince Intel that IA-64==Alpha+...  Hmm.

Intel buys Digital semi.  "P7" winds up being existing Alpha architecture
plus hardware assist for x86 emulation.  NT is "already there", MS focuses
efforts on making NT a more transparent replacement for Windows-95 rather
than more porting.

Compaq buys the system business, using consulting, Unix and VMS to get
into the high end in a big way.  (Still has Intel as its main supplier.)

Altavista goes to M$.

(I could potentially believe the last 2.  Given existing circumstances,
I can't imagine the first any more - maybe if ev6 had shipped
at the beginning of CMOS-6 availability, but not with a 2 year gap
vs. PPros.)
5145.6QUARRY::nethCraig NethFri Feb 21 1997 10:0110
I think there is some misconception here on this one.   The folks driving 
Tracepoint have been working on the 'spinoff' for several years now - this
was not a high level 'lets sell something and make some quick bucks'
kind of deal...  The folks working on this realized several years ago that
Digital wouldn't know how to fund or market this effort and so they went
to management with their proposal to spin off and let Digital realize some
benefit from it.   Oldtimers will remember that David Stone wanted to do
something similar years ago...