Computing giant IBM has a new name and a new strategy for capturing market share in the PC business
Published:
8 November 2002 y., Friday
Currently, the PC inventor's market share languishes in third place behind Dell and Hewlett Packard with less than half their worldwide sales, writes Steve Malone.
IBM admits that companies like Dell have been better at selling computers at a lower cost and making it easier to buy and has vowed to catch up in these areas. However, like many of the larger vendors, IBM has been talking to its big accounts and has come up with a set of strategies that it claims takes a lot of the pain out of running and maintaining perhaps hundreds or thousands of PCs across a company.
The relaunch of the Personal Computing Division is backed by a renaming of the entire PC product range around its most successful brand name, the ThinkPad. Thus, the NetVista range will now be called ThinkCentres and the monitors ThinkVision.
To that end, IBM has come up with a set of technologies which it claims will make life easier. The services are collectively known as ThinkVantage. The services consist of four technologies addressing four basic problem areas IBM has identified.
Šaltinis:
theregister.co.uk
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Congress is set to more than double the number of federal copyright cops.
more »
Indian hackers always thought they were too sophisticated to fall into the hands of the rough cops in this country, whom various human rights groups routinely accuse of brutality.
more »
One in four Australian households and businesses can't use a phone line to download a simple Web page in less than six minutes, the Australian government's Productivity Commission said.
more »
How Sircam can help turn your most private documents into a worldwide joke.
more »
After months of hullabaloo over online music subscription services, it appears as though the industry big boys are finally ready to test the waters.
more »
The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) is preparing to file a complaint with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) about Microsoft Corp.'s plans to bundle its Passport identification service with Windows XP
more »
SUN MICROSYSTEMS AND Hewlett-Packard are expected to announce separately Monday that they will make projects under development at the companies available to developers under the open-source model, adding further support to the collaborative development mo
more »
Servers Struck by 'Code Red' Virus
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
A malicious piece of software
more »