Posted on 10/06/2002 9:02:02 AM PDT by Jack Black
Associated Press
HP to Cut Additional 1,800 Jobs Citing Continued Weak Demand, Hewlett-Packard Co. Will Cut 1,800 Jobs Beyond the 15,000 Planned Wednesday September 25, 9:55 pm ET
By MATTHEW FORDAHL, AP Technology Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -- Citing continued weak demand, Hewlett-Packard Co. said Wednesday it will cut 1,800 jobs beyond the 15,000 reductions planned as part of its Compaq Computer Corp. acquisition. In a note sent to employees Tuesday, the company blamed the latest reductions on a "continued market slowdown and HP's clear intent to have a competitive, world-class cost structure."
As of the third quarter, which ended July 31, the company had reduced its net headcount by 4,740. The remaining cuts, totaling about 12,000, are expected to be completed by Oct. 31, the end of the company's current fiscal year.
Like other high-tech companies, Palo Alto-based HP has been hit hard by a slowdown in spending by large corporate customers, a slump that has lasted longer than first expected.
The company's bottom line also has suffered because of weak demand for personal computers. Its printing and imaging division, however, continues to do well despite the economic downturn.
In the letter to employees, HP executives said the company continues to hire in some areas, including printing and services.
The $18.9 billion merger with Houston-based Compaq closed May 3 after one of the most ferocious proxy battles in American corporate history. Combined, the companies had 150,000 employees.
In its first full results since the deal was finalized in May, HP lost $2.03 billion in its fiscal third quarter, compared to a loss of $116 million if the companies had been together last year.
Shares of HP gained 55 cents to close Wednesday at $12.84 on the New York Stock Exchange.
Hewlett-Packard: http://www.hp.com
Agilent was made up, for a hefty sum, by some image consulting firm. It is suppposed to imply "agility". It could also imply "agile NOT". Extra points if you figure out the anagram for Agilent.
I use my 20 year old HP-12C almost daily. It never ceases to amaze me that 20 years after they first came out with that model they are still selling it. I also swear by HP laser printers, which seem to last forever.
I bought an HP notebook computer and it was crap. They need to stick with what they do well rather than try and compete with Dell in the PC market.
I didn't realize this was her strategy at HP - if so it's plain and simple corporate suicide. Gosh, it was the scientific and medical equipment markets that put HP on the market. It's crazy to divest of lucrative niches in exchange for fighting for lowest price in techno-commodities.
My mind still thinks in RPN, so it's painful to use this piece of crap. Mostly I just use it for trig functions these days.
If I ever get another job in engineering, I will have to replace it with a real calculator.
When I was a startup engineer at the Cholla#4 power plant (Joseph City, AZ), I used my HP-45 to do some curve fitting, which was needed to calibrate the "percent load" gage for the steam turbines. It was really cool.
I think that was the only time in my entire career that I actually used any thermodynamics, and also the only time I had to use steam tables.
Surprised the hell out of me when the gage in the control room actually worked!
At that same plant, I saw an H-P instrument that made me want to fall on my knees in reverence: The Structural Dynamics Analyzer. It was a real-time Laplace Transformer.
They had this instrument hooked up to monitor deviations in the shaft frequency of the main turbine/generator, and fed "pink noise" into the exciter. This H-P instrument integrated this data over a period of days, and displayed a frequency response plot of the massive rotating equipment from zero to 60 Hz. They were looking for resonant points that would have to be "tuned out" in the exciter to prevent sub-synchronous oscillation.
If that wasn't impressive enough, you could, with a few keystrokes, enter your compensation parameters and re-plot the frequency response as it would look with the compensation in place.
I have NEVER seen a piece of test equipment so powerful, or so far ahead of it's time.
David L. Formenti, Sage Technologies, will be the featured speaker at the September 18 meeting of the Santa Clara Valley Control Systems Society. He will discuss an approach for troubleshooting structural dynamics problems as they relate to servo controlled mechanisms.Measurement techniques will be discussed and illustrated for the measurement of operational and structural dynamic characteristics for the purpose of diagnosing vibration problems. Formenti will then demonstrate Frequency Response Function measurements and how one can interpret them for an understanding of structures modes of vibration.
David Formenti has been working at Sage Technologies for the last four years as a sales engineer covering Northern California and Nevada. Prior to Sage, he was the applications engineering manager for Data Physics Corporation responsible for customer support, training and software development project management.
Previous to Data Physics he held various engineering and management positions at GenRad's Structural Test Products Division (Spectral Dynamics). He was a co-founder of Structural Measurement Systems (SMS), a producer of noise and vibration analysis software for 10 years. From 1976 to 1979, he was at Hewlett Packard where he was the main product development engineer for the HP5423A, the company's first structural dynamic analyzer.
Most of his practical experience comes from the GM Noise & Vibration Laboratory as a project engineer. Throughout his career, he has had the opportunity to learn from engineers and technicians while lecturing around the world on structural analysis, digital signal processing, and vibration control. He has a BS in metallurgical engineering and an MS in engineering mechanics from Michigan Technological University.
Dell doesn't have a lot of baggage to contend with. While HP and CPQ are sorting things out, Dell is free to concentrate on new products.
When they had the Structural Dynamics Analyzer set up with all the associated amplifiers, cables, etc., somehow they drove the test setup with the "pink noise", and stored the response in the memory of the SDA, which was automatically subtracted from the final data.
I wonder how long the stock will remain at an artifically inflated rate after the reverse split.
Lucent is one f'ed up company...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.