History of IBM From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation‚ search It has been suggested that Computing Tabulating Recording Corporation be merged into this article or section. (Discuss) Proposed since May 2011. This article appears to be written like an advertisement. Please help improve it by rewriting promotional content from a neutral point of view and removing any inappropriate external links. (January 2012) International Business Machines‚ abbreviated IBM and nicknamed
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1890-1938: The early years IBM was incorporated in the state of New York on June 15‚ 1911 as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company. But its origins can be traced back to 1890‚ during the height of the Industrial Revolution‚ when the United States was experiencing waves of immigration. The U.S. Census Bureau knew its traditional methods of counting would not be adequate for measuring the population‚ so it sponsored a contest to find a more efficient means of tabulating census data. The
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International Business Machines‚ abbreviated IBM and nicknamed "Big Blue"‚ is a multinational computer technology and IT consulting corporation headquartered in Armonk‚ New York‚ United States. The company is one of the few information technology companies with a continuous history dating back to the 19th century. IBM manufactures and sells computer hardware and software (with a focus on the latter)‚ and offers infrastructure services‚ hosting services‚ and consulting services in areas ranging from
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CASE 15: THE FALL OF IBM Justin Marc C. Tariman B.S.B.A. MKTG 4 March 14‚ 2013 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Purpose The purpose of this case study analysis report to understand and formulate a set of actions for the case of a company that is experiencing rapid environment changes and difficulty in protecting its core business such as how IBM perceived its mainframes as king of computers. Problem IBM biggest problems include its huge size‚ highly bureaucratic decision making approach‚and
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IBM Corporation In the seven years (since 1994)‚ that Lou Gerstner reigned over IBM‚ the company’s earnings per share increased an average of 27% per year. This remarkable increase in earnings did not go unnoticed by the securities markets. Indeed‚ the company’s market value grew from less than $30 billion to over $200 billion during the period. Use the following financial statement data to: 1. Decompose IBM’s ROE (by quarter) and discuss the factors (and trends) that contribute to Big Blue’s profitability
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Title: Case # 15 The Fall of IBM and Case #16 IBM in 2009 Objective To be the world’s leading mainframe and software Service Company that offers its customers professional innovative services that deliver value by providing them with state of the art solutions that leverage IBM’s industry and business process industries. Problems During the mainframe system era‚ IBM’s competitors began selling cheaper and high performing IBM compatible central processing units that posed a threat
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Hedging Strategies using Futures Introduction to Hedging Hedging refers to reducing risk. Let us take a simple example to understand hedging. A farmer expects to produce ‘X’ quantity of a commodity by the end of the cropping season say‚ October. He has to invest a certain amount of money today from his savings or maybe take a loan in expectation of returns he will get in October. But‚ he cannot accurately predict the prices he will get for his produce. A dip in prices could result in a loss. To deal
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The Wisdom of My Crowd: Motivation and Audience in Enterprise Social Tagging Jennifer Thom-Santelli Cornell University‚ HCI Group 301 College Avenue Ithaca‚ NY USA 14850 +1 607 255 7826 Michael J. Muller IBM Research One Rogers Street Cambridge‚ MA USA 02142 +1 617 693 4235 jt17@cornell.edu michael_muller@us.ibm.com ABSTRACT Social tagging systems allow users to share resources categorized according to community-generated tags. These systems serve to organize personal information
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Summary32.Company Overview43.The Marketing Mix using 4 P ’s64.SWOT Analysis115.Porter ’s 5-Force Analysis146.Distribution Strategy167.Present Scenario188.Big Bazaar and the Retail Life Cycle219.Moving Ahead into the Future2310.Recommendations2411.Future Strategies2612.Bibliography281.Executive SummaryIndian retail sector is witnessing one of the most hectic marketing activities of all times. The companies are fighting for share of mind and heart which can finally be converted to market share. There
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shortest amount of time. 2 3 10 18 26 33 37 Letter from the Editor Bob Kane Get Started with the Eclipse Platform Chris Aniszczyk and David Gallardo A Whirlwind Tour of Eclipse Europa Chris Aniszczyk Installing and Using Eclipse-based IBM Rational Products Khawar Z. Ahmed An Introduction to Eclipse for Visual Studio Users Genady Beryozkin Taking a Lifecycle Approach to Software Quality Testing and Management Rikki Kirzner Rational Application Developer for WebSphere Outshines
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