|
CALL
Glue: Scripting Languages for Computer Aided Language Learning
Systems - Text processing using the computer programming
languages Perl, Tcl/Tk, and Python, Perl scripts for extracting
sentences out of HTML web pages.
Optimum Designs Inc. -
Manufacturers computer based digital oscilloscopes.
Australian Seniors
Computer Clubs Association (ASCCA) - Public benevolent
institution offering barrier-free information, advice on
starting a club, tips and hints for seniors and people with
disabilities.
Computer and
Telecommunications Equipment Recycling - Links to companies,
associations and publications related to the computer and
telecommunications recycling industry in general.
Mint Computer - Buys,
sells, rents and leases new and refurbished midrange hardware,
peripherals and printers.
Savvy
Shopping: Personal Computer Buying Guide - Article discusses
the major computer components and advises what an average user
needs to purchase. Site also offers coupons.
|
You'll find the most legitimate computer opportunity,
best online computer job and insightful resources on this site.
Join Now
#1 Income Generating Computer Business In 2003
|
Digital Equipment
Corporation
DEC
American manufacturer that created a new line of low-cost
computers, known as minicomputers, especially for use in
laboratories and research institutions. Founded in 1957, the
company employed more than 120,000 people worldwide at its peak
in 1990 and earned more than $14 billion in revenue. It was
bought by Compaq Computer Corporation in 1998.
Digital was founded by Kenneth Olsen and Harlan Anderson,
electronics engineers at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), with the idea of building a family of
high-performance, low-cost computers that could receive and
analyze data from a wide array of scientific instruments. The
influential business magazine Fortune had published an article
showing that few companies were making any profit selling
computers, and so Olsen's first business plan referred to
building electronic "modules" in order to appeal to
his nontechnical investors. Digital's first computer, the
Programmed Data Processor, or PDP-1, was sold in November 1960.
Eventually 50 PDP-1s would be sold, nearly half to International
Telephone and Telegraph for message switching systems.
Based on technology developed at MIT for the Whirlwind
Project (1944) and Project Lincoln (mid-1950s), the PDP-1 had
one of the most advanced memory systems of its time and brought
many innovations to the commercial marketplace. For example, the
PDP-1 incorporated the transistor-driven core memory design of
the TX model computers built by Olsen during Project Lincoln,
and the machine improved upon the Whirlwind computer's
timesharing capability--i.e., the ability to be used by more
than one person at a time. This capability made the PDP the
first machine employed for multiuser computer games when
MIT students created SpaceWar! in the early 1960s.
The PDP line of computers sustained Digital's growth for
nearly 20 years. The PDP-8 was the first minicomputer to achieve
significant market success. When it shipped in 1965, it offered
the first viable alternative to mainframe computers--the
powerful, but expensive, machines built by companies such as the
International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) and the Sperry
Rand Corporation (makers of the UNIVAC computer). The
entire PDP line had advanced features that appealed to a variety
of technical markets. For example, the PDP-11, introduced in
1970, was the first computer to ship with a separate data
communications path, called the UNIBUS, that did not require
using the resources of the central processing unit to move data
inside the system. Moreover, Digital competed on price with
other minicomputer competitors (such as the Hewlett-Packard
Company) by reducing its manufacturing costs through various
innovative programs, including building assembly plants in inner
cities where it hired and trained only local residents. In 1971
Digital set up its European manufacturing operation in
Ireland--a move that paid off in 1973 when Ireland was admitted
into the European Common Market, helping the company quickly to
seize a sizable market share in Europe.
Between 1960 and 1970, Digital grew from a local computer
company with 117 employees and $1.3 million in revenue into a
global company with 5,800 workers generating $135 million in
sales. By the mid-1970s, however, the company's leadership in
the minicomputer market was being challenged by IBM and other
companies. In 1978 Digital introduced the VAX (Virtual Address
eXtension) computer, arguably the most successful
minicomputer in history. The VAX line of systems ranged from
low-cost desktop workstations to high-end computers that
challenged IBM's most powerful mainframes. Its operating system,
known as VMS (Virtual Memory System), became popular among
software developers, giving VAX users a large selection of
software applications. In the early 1980s, Digital also helped
to develop a version of the UNIX operating system to run on the
VAX, in part to appeal to university departments where UNIX was
popular but also to compete against Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
Silicon Graphics, Inc., and other computer vendors who
sold systems using UNIX. By 1990 VAX sales had propelled Digital
into the number-two computer sales position (behind IBM).
However, Digital's success throughout the 1980s did not
continue in the next decade. Hit hard by the 1991-92 general
economic recession in the United States, Digital lost market
share to Hewlett-Packard and Sun, companies whose adoption of
the nonproprietary UNIX operating system made far more software
applications available than Digital's proprietary VMS. The
company did not make a profit at all between 1990 and 1995. In
response, the board of directors removed Olsen as top executive,
replacing him with Robert Palmer, an executive at Digital since
1985. In 1995 Palmer succeeded Olsen as chairman of Digital.
Meanwhile, the company continued to introduce a variety of
new products. Its Alpha microprocessor was possibly the fastest
chip in the world when it began shipping in 1994; its search
engine for the World Wide Web, Alta Vista, became one of the
most frequently visited Internet sites; and the company's
services division was one of the most respected and profitable
in the industry. Despite these advantages, Digital's efforts to
counter competitive pressures in its main business of
minicomputers and workstations were insufficient. Likewise, its
personal computer business failed; beginning in the early
1980s with its Rainbow PC, Digital never succeeded in earning
money in this fastest-growing segment of the computer
market. By 1997 it became a target for acquisition, and in 1998
it was purchased by Compaq in a cash and stock transaction
totaling $9.6 billion. By that time Digital had 53,500
employees, less than half of its 1990 peak.
|