So Blair's a techophobe,
and anyone with even a minor interest in UK Govt IT projects - that's
every UK tax payer - ought to be appalled by the Prime Minister's casual
admittance of incompetance.
Being ignorant of technology isn't big and it isn't clever. If you're the
guy with the ultimate responsibility for signing off the biggest (and to date
least successful) technology projects in the UK you really ought to have at
least an inkling about what you're doing.
Maybe - god forbid - he's got Carly
lined up to hold his hand...
So Carly
Fiorina has left HP, all I can say is about time too.
Maybe i've got the rose-tinted specs on, but in pre-Carly days HP,
Compaq, and DEC were industry giants. HP had the market lead in printers,
they made great Unix workstations, and their instumentation kit was the
best on the market. Compaq too, they had what appeared to be 80% of the
office PC market, reliable, solid well-built computers. And DEC, ok the
VAX and VMS products were long in the tooth (not that IBM aren't still
happily (and profitably) selling dinosaurs from a similar era, but DEC's
crown jewel was the Alpha, a 200+MHz 64bit processor in the days when
Intel were struggling to make innumerate 66MHz Pentiums, 10 years later
and Intel are just about shipping 64bit processors.
Maybe it wasn't Carly's fault, maybe the businesses were all too shaky,
too poor, whatever, but in her tenure at the helm HP have dropped back to
the middle of the pack on printers, the Unix workstation market has become
near invisible, and the famous HP instruments are now named something
surreal and non-memorable. Compaq, well when did you last see a Compaq in
an office? Dell's taken them to the cleaners, and as for the Alpha, that's
history too.
Imagine today if say Sun and Dell merged and turned into a shambling
mess like HP in six years? Well, it'd seem odd, wouldn't it...