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Disputing the Achievements of IBM's CEO, Who Already Terminated Many Jobs at Red Hat (Which He Had Allegedly Suggested Buying)

Posted by Roy Schestowitz on Oct 14, 2024,

updated Oct 14, 2024

IRC Proceedings: Monday, October 14, 2024
Links 14/10/2024: One Year Since Activision Blizzard Demolition 'Officially' Began and Amazon Corporate Layoffs Accelerate

Buying a company to gut it within about a year?

HTTPS image: Terminated by IBM

IBM's CEO Arvind K. (often called "Alvind" by insiders, sometimes just AK, his initials) is nonchalantly attributed or credited with the sale of Red Hat to IBM. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing (to Red Hat? To IBM?) is perhaps not what matters most here, but there's a new sub-thread today that discusses how it came about, mentions "software patents", and whether the attribution for the sale is warranted. Here are three messages that are hours or minutes old (those certainly sound like insiders wrote them):

↺ HTTPS: sub-thread today that discusses how it came about, mentions "software patents", and whether the attribution for the sale is warranted
Alvind was an executive bulls**t artist prior to becoming CEO. He was known for wasting his time and energy on pointless trivial pursuits and wasting money on worthless research projects in various divisions of IBM that he was assigned to. Blame the losers at the top like Palmisano and Rometty for this mess - they gave the crown to this charlatan, since they assumed India was the bright jewel in their crown. It isn't, at last not any more. Alvind the Indian was in the Software group but contributed nothing of value to anything that was going on, except to say he was financing projects as the leading executive of the group. Perhaps you can go and search for any software patents that has his name on it as someone who worked on any important commercial software project. I'll bet that someone else did the background research on Red Hat to evaluate it's potential and Alvind simply took the credit and then became CEO. Happens all the time. IBM was simply bankrolling Red Hat during the good times till they decided to buy it - every IBM executive around would love to claim credit for making that decision. Alvind talks a good game to get onto the New York Bank board but is he capable of doing anything of value there ? Not in this writer's humble opinion, except it makes him look good to show up at photo opportunities. You can be a dullard but still be in the right place at the right time and get your photo in the press to make yourself look important and wise. If you have enough money (and influence) you can buy off people, corporations, and even their silence when you do wrong. If Trump can do it, why not Alvind with the enormous finances from IBM ? Why does IBM buy the silence of the plaintiffs, when they lose age discrimination lawsuits ? Why aren't the NDA's made public ? It's a corrupt corporation and as we know - all bad things come to an end, just like all good things.

The response:

How was a $34B pay good in terms of the ROI so far especially as a huge debt costs paying interest on the equivalent of $34B?!
Looks like the biggest flop in the history of corporate M&A . IBM buys companies then waste them.
How was buying the Weather Company ended...? Just an example...
The crazy IBM's debt looks to me a bankruptcy is close as the interest on such debt could ki-l IBM's cash flow. Next step could be eliminating the dividends just like Intel was forced to do. Intel is like the IBM to be in the near future?

Ana back again:

IBM leadership has always been clueless but there were a few smart executives in the past who knew what they were getting into. You can't say the same for Palmisano, Rometty or Alvind though. Nothing but a bunch of egotistical and greedy fools who have run the company into the ground. It's destined for the scrap heap of history and not for another century of greatness. There will not be a phoenix rising from the ashes either.
Just my rambling 0.02c !

There's another thread about impending layoffs. Some people see some signs or writings on the wall. Posted in the past day are two comments. One said: "Expect at least 2 layoffs in each of the next few years which are typically around the end of the first and third quarters. We will have to see if that changes when the new CEO is announced though it is hard to believe it will change as the new CEO will probably continue on the same track since at this point IBM only has cost cutting as its tool to show that the company is not totally dead."

another thread about impending layoffs

And latest: "It’s IBM - layoffs are ALWAYS on the table every quarter" (remember that IBM and Red Hat are the same thing; with the NDAs, it's hard to differentiate silent IBM layoffs from silent Red Hat layoffs, a la Kyndryl, which has the same issues).

remember that IBM and Red Hat are the same thing; with the NDAs, it's hard to differentiate silent IBM layoffs from silent Red Hat layoffs
↺ HTTPS: a la Kyndryl
↺ HTTPS: the same issues

Red Hat layoffs would be more stubbornly concealed by IBM because the people behind the sale (IBM's CEO apparently) have to justify the considerable spending to the shareholders. If Red Hat was acquired as a "future direction" and valuable "asset", then layoffs there would serve to dispute that hypothesis and signify terrible leadership. █

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