| By Maureen O'Gara | Article Rating: |
|
| June 25, 2008 01:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
2,781 |
Quickie Yahoo Trial
Denied
The two
The latest departures from Yahoo, according to TechCrunch,
which is now sporting a scorecard of ex-Yahoos, are Stewart Butterfield and his
wife Caterina Fake, the co-founders of Flickr, the photo-sharing site Yahoo
bought in 2005; executive VP, engineering for search and advertising technology
(think Panama) Qi Lu; senior VP of communications and communities (mail,
messenger, groups, Flickr, Zimbra) and author of the famous November 2006
Peanut Butter Manifesto Brad Garlinghouse, who observed of Yahoo that “We want
to do everything and be everything to everyone…The result: a thin layer of
investment spread across everything we do and thus we focus on nothing in
particular”; and senior VP of search Vish Makhijani.
Last week Yahoo lost the head of its Network Division Jeff Weiner, the head of research and data mining Usama Fayyad and Yahoo Open Strategy evangelist Jeremy Zawodny.
Makhijani is reportedly going to become CEO of Yandex, the “Russian Google.”
Google Docs is now partially supporting PDF files. Users can
upload, preview and share them but not edit or search them although they can
copy and paste text.
HP has named Marius Haas senior VP and general manager of
its Procurve networking business, reporting to chief strategy and technology
officer Shane Robertson. Haas had been senior VP if strategy and corporate
development, with a hand in all HP’s acquisitions since 2004. He is replaced by
Brian Humphries, responsible for M&A. Humphries had been VP of finance for
HP Services.
Carl Icahn (or his hired clone) has started blogging,
spreading the gospel of shareholder activism. See http://www.icahnreport.com/.
At press time the Wall Street Journal reported that Yahoo is
going to reorganize and centralize product units like mail, search and homepage
in a global organization. The company is still in search of a strategy – beyond
the Google deal – to increase earning and prove it’s worth more than the $47.5
billion it turned down from Microsoft, the paper said. It suggests that the
reorganization is behind some of the recent executive departures at Yahoo.
HP has cuddled up closer to VMware and introduced integrated
management software for heterogeneous environments, basically a bunch of
business technology optimization (BTO) software that’s supposed to automate
management across both physical and virtual environments – plus bundling VMware
Infrastructure 3 with the HP Insight Control Environment. HP is also churning
out VMware-certified consultants.
AMD has named senior vice-president Gustavo Arenas chief
sales officer, a job that’s sort of been open since Henri Richard, head of both
sales and marketing, quit last September to go to Freescale. Arenas reports to
the Office of the CEO. Like AMD CEO Hector Ruiz, Arenas joined AMD in 2003 from
Motorola and was previously responsible for AMD’s sales, business and marketing
for North America, Latin America and the
Micro-Star International (MSI) is going to pre-load SUSE
Linux Enterprise Desktop 10 on its cheap new netbooks starting with a $399
Atom-based model called the Wind Notebook. The Taiwanese company plans to sell
Wind worldwide starting this summer. It will also include OpenOffice. Novell
and MSI have been in bed together since 2006, but this is their first pre-load
agreement. The value of the pact was not disclosed. Wind with XP is $480.
The executive VP of worldwide sales at Novell, Tom Francese,
is leaving the company at the end of July and won’t be replaced. His position
is being eliminated, having reorganized the sales force and broadened the
company’s indirect channels. Regional sales managers remain in place, with Tim
Wolfe as president of the
Although it was the second time in less than a month Novell
found it timely to reaffirm its fiscal ’08 guidance of $940 million-970 million
in revenue and a non-GAAP operating margin somewhere between 7% and 9%.
Published June 25, 2008 Reads 2,781
Copyright © 2008 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.
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