FCW Insider: The talk of FOSE Day 1 -- IBM
There were some really remarkable presentations at the first day of the FOSE trade show and conference on Tuesday -- the head of Google's enterprise operations gave a fascinating talk about cloud computing, Sun's Scott McNealy also spoke about open source, including offering up his own top 10 list of reasons why he is thrilled to be in DC. I hope to get to those soon. But the talk of the show today was IBM -- even for OMB Deputy Director of Management Clay Johnson. When Johnson introduced Microsoft's Steve Balmer as the winner of the CIO Council's prestigious Azimuth Award, he introduced him as Steve Balmer of IBM. Clearly IBM is on just about everybody's mind.
In case you aren't up to date, the story as reported over on FCW's sister publication Washington Technology:
A March 27 posting on the GSA’s Excluded Parties List System Web sites, says that IBM has been suspended for an unspecified reason and for an undetermined length of time.
WT later reported:
A company spokesman said IBM learned of the suspension on Friday. It then obtained a letter from EPA broadly outlining the allegations and spent most of Monday trying to gather more information, said Fred McNeese, an IBM spokesman.
“Prior to Friday there was no hint of any dispute or reason for this step,” McNeese said.
The U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia also served grand jury subpoenas on IBM and on certain employees on Monday asking for testimony and documents regarding interactions between EPA employees and IBM employees, the company said in a statement. The company is cooperating with the investigation.
AP story
The company has 30 days to contest the scope and duration of the suspension. In the worst case, Gardner said, it could last for up to a year....
Goldman Sachs analyst David C. Bailey called the suspension "troubling" but added that the impact on IBM should be small.
The company, he said, is already working on challenging the allegations and suspension, "and, most importantly for the near term, the ban does not seem to have impacted IBM's March quarter close."
Bailey calls IBM's stock a "strong defensive pick" for the first half of this year and said the suspension won't affect his estimates.
GSA press release from 2002 hereone of FCW's stories about the reaction to MCI Worldcom's suspension here
let me know
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