- Fujitsu Siemens Computers
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Fujitsu Siemens Computers B.V. Former type Joint venture Industry Computer hardware Fate Acquired by Fujitsu to become Fujitsu Technology Solutions Founded 1999 Defunct 2009 Headquarters Munich, Germany Key people Richard Christou, Executive Chairman Products Infrastructure Products, Infrastructure Solutions, Managed Infrastructure Services, Infrastructure as a Service Employees ~10,700 (as of March 2009) Website ts.fujitsu.com Fujitsu Siemens Computers B.V. was a Japanese and German IT vendor. The company was founded in 1999 as a 50/50 joint venture between Fujitsu Limited of Japan and Siemens AG of Germany. On April 1, 2009, the company became Fujitsu Technology Solutions as a result of Fujitsu buying out Siemens' share of the company [1].
The offerings of Fujitsu Siemens Computers extended from handheld and notebook PCs through desktops, server and storage, to enterprise-class IT infrastructure solutions and services.
Fujitsu Siemens Computers had a presence in key markets across the EMEA region (Europe, the Middle East and Africa), while products marketed elsewhere were sold under the Fujitsu brand, with the services division extending coverage up to 170 countries worldwide.
Fujitsu Siemens Computers placed a focus on "green" computers [2], and was considered a leader or innovator in Green IT, across a wide variety of ecological and environmental markings such as Energy Star and Nordic swan [3].
Contents
History
On the Fujitsu side, the origins of the company can be traced back to the mid-1980s merger of the PC-divisions of Finnish Nokia and Swedish Ericsson, when Ericsson PCs were known for their ergonomics and bright colors. In 1991, Nokia Data was sold to the British International Computers Limited (ICL). Later ICL was absorbed by Fujitsu. Ironically, Fujitsu was originally the data division of Fuji Electric, whose name was derived from its founders; "Fu" from the Furukawa Electric zaibatsu, and "Ji" from jiimensu, the Japanese transliteration for Siemens.
The Nokia MikroMikko line of compact desktop computers continued to be produced at the Kilo factories in Espoo, Finland. Components, including motherboards and Ethernet network adapters were manufactured locally, until production was moved to Taiwan. Internationally the MikroMikko line was marketed by Fujitsu as the ErgoPro.
The German half of the company, Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme, was the result of the merger of Nixdorf Computer with Siemens' data and information technology branch.
In 2003, the company won the Wharton Infosys Business Transformation Award for their use of information technology in an industry-transforming way.
It was announced in November 2008 that Fujitsu would buy out Siemens' stake in the joint venture for approximately EUR450m with effect from April 1, 2009 [4]. Fujitsu Siemens was the last major European computer manufacturer.
Management
Kai Flore
Former President & Chief Executive Officer.
Kai Flore was appointed CEO and President of Fujitsu Siemens Computers on Nov 3, 2008. He started his career at Siemens AG in 1982 and had been with Fujitsu Siemens Computers since its foundation in 1999. In 2000, Flore became Chief Information Officer, but also held the position of Chief Financial Officer since 2003 and that of Chief Strategy Officer since 2007.
On June 24, 2010, Fujitsu announced that Flore had left the company and his role was replaced by Richard Christou [5].
Heribert Göggerle
Executive Vice President, Supply Operations.
Heribert Göggerle was the executive responsible for supply operations, including managing the company’s manufacturing facilities, leading its Global Sourcing activities and heading up Total Quality Management. Since formation of the company in 1999, Heribert was responsible for the company’s supply operations and led the company to achieve many awards in recognition of manufacturing and process excellence. Heribert was previously a Siemens employee and had been responsible for the Augsburg manufacturing facility since 1997.
Satoru Hayashi
Executive Member of the Board.
Satoru Hayashi was appointed to the executive management team and the Board as Executive Vice Chairman in April 2004. As of November 2008, Satoru represented Fujitsu as Executive Member of the Board. Before joining Fujitsu Siemens Computers, Satoru held various positions at the Software and Services Business Group at Fujitsu Limited in both the United States and Japan. He then became Group President responsible for the Glovia Business Group; the Enterprise Resource Planning arm of Fujitsu. Satoru holds a degree in economics from the University of Tokyo.
Dieter Herzog
Executive Vice President, Technology Solutions Portfolio.
In November 2008, Dieter Herzog was appointed Executive Vice President of the Technology Solutions Portfolio organization. This organization integrated all Fujitsu Siemens Computers’ Dynamic Infrastructures portfolio activities, from infrastructure products and solutions to services offerings, into one integrated portfolio.
Joseph Reger
Executive Vice President & Chief Technology Officer.
As CTO, Dr. Joseph Reger was responsible for understanding and predicting IT trends that will benefit customers most, as well as implementing these trends in the company’s strategy. A renowned industry expert, Joseph was appointed CTO in 2002, and steered the company, as well as customers, in real-life implementations of Dynamic IT and Mobility topics. He joined the company as the Head of Technology Marketing in 1998.
Sabine Schweiger
Chief Financial Officer.
On January 1, 2009, Sabine Schweiger was appointed Chief Financial Officer of Fujitsu Siemens Computers, reporting directly to the CEO and forming part of the Executive Management Committee. With over 15 years experience in multinational technology companies, Sabine started her career in Finance and Treasury at Siemens AG, and joined Fujitsu Siemens Computers in 2002 from Siemens Financial Services.
Products
Brands included:
- Media Center
- ACTIVY
- Notebooks
- AMILO
- AMILO PRO
- CELSIUS Mobile
- ESPRIMO Mobile
- LIFEBOOK
- Liteline
- PCD[disambiguation needed ]
- SCENIC Mobile
- Desktop PC
- SCALEO
- SCENIC
- ESPRIMO
- AMILO DESKTOP
- Workstation
- CELSIUS
- Tablet PC
- STYLISTIC
- Convertible PC
- LIFEBOOK
- Handheld
- Pocket LOOX
- Industry Standard Servers
- PRIMERGY
- PRIMERGY BladeFrame
- Mission critical IA64 servers
- PRIMEQUEST
- UNIX system based servers
- SPARC Enterprise Servers
- PRIMEPOWER 250, 450, 900, 1500, 2500
- S/390-compatible Mainframes
- S- series, SX- series
- Flat panel displays
- Myrica
- Liquid crystal display televisions
- Plasma display televisions
- SCALEOVIEW
- Liquid crystal display computer monitors
- SCENICVIEW
- Liquid crystal display computer monitors
- Myrica
- Operating systems
- SINIX - Unix variant, later renamed Reliant UNIX, available for RISC and S/390-compatible platforms
- BS2000 - EBCDIC-based operating system for SPARC, x86 and S/390-compatible systems
- VM2000 - EBCDIC-based hypervisor for S/390-compatible platform, capable of running multiple BS2000 and SINIX virtual machines
Full acquisition by Fujitsu
The Fujitsu takeover went ahead as planned on April 1, 2009 - with the company renamed as Fujitsu Technology Solutions. The old FSC website is no longer available.
See also
References
- ^ Fujitsu: "Fujitsu Technology Solutions will drive transformation for Fujitsu", April 1, 2009
- ^ The Green IT Review: "Fujitsu Siemens Steams Ahead" September 24, 2008
- ^ The Industry Standard: "Fujitsu Siemens goes seriously green", November 8, 2007
- ^ Fujitsu: "Fujitsu to Acquire Siemens's Stake in Fujitsu Siemens Computers" November 4, 2008
- ^ Fujitsu: "Kai Flore to Leave Fujitsu Technology Solutions" June 24, 2010
External links
- Fujitsu Technology Solutions official website
- Fujitsu Siemens Computers website - website now down - no redirection to ts.fujitsu.com
Fujitsu Divisions and
subsidiariesCurrentAmdahl Corporation · Fujitsu Computer Products of America · Fujitsu Consulting (Fujitsu Consulting India) · Fujitsu Laboratories · Fujitsu Semiconductor · Fujitsu Technology Solutions · Fujitsu Ten · Glovia Services · Nifty CorporationFormer and defunctJoint ventures and
shareholdingsCurrentGeneral Airconditioners · TranSys (20%)Former and defunctFujitsu Siemens Computers2 · Spansion3Products, services
and standardsCurrentDefunctCorporate Headquarters Office Technology System · DC/OSx · FM Towns (FM Towns games) · Fujitsu Eagle · Fujitsu iPAD · Fujitsu Micro 16s · Fujitsu VP · Fujitsu VP2000 · JEF codepage · Pocket LOOX · SINIX · SPARC64 · TurboSPARCPeople Places Shiodome City CenterOther Atlas Consortium · Fujitsu's Application · Fujitsu Cup · Fujitsu Ladies · Fujitsu V8 Supercar Series · Furukawa Group · Kawasaki Frontale
Siemens Divisions and
subsidiariesCurrentEnergy Sector (Siemens Wind Power · Solel) · Industry Sector (Siemens Milltronics Process Instruments · Siemens Mobility · Siemens PLM Software · Siemens VAI · Osram · Osram Sylvania) · Siemens Financial Services · Siemens Healthcare (Siemens Hearing Instruments) · Siemens Limited · Siemens PakistanFormer and defunctAcuson Corporation1 · C. A. Parsons and Company1 · Dispolok2 · Helios AG2 · Infineon Technologies2 · Roke Manor Research Limited2 · Siemens Communications1 · Siemens Dematic2 · Siemens Home and Office Communication Devices2 · Siemens IT Solutions and Services2 · Siemens mobile2 · Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme2 · Siemens Plessey2 · Siemens VDO2 · Wincor Nixdorf2 · ROLM1Joint ventures and
shareholdingsCurrentA2SEA (49%) · AREVA NP (34%) · Atos (15%) · BSH Bosch und Siemens Hausgeräte (Gaggenau Hausgeräte · NEFF · Pitsos) (50%) · German Shanghai Metro Group · Nokia Siemens Networks (49.9%) · Siemens Enterprise Communications (51%)Former and defunctPredecessors Products, services
and projectsCurrentFINEX · Locomotives · Multiple units · Siemens Modular Metro · Software products · Tram vehicles · Transportation Systems projectsDefunctPeople Wilfried Feldenkirchen · Joe Kaeser · Karlheinz Kaske · Klaus Kleinfeld · Peter Löscher · Bernhard Plettner · Heinrich von Pierer · Jim Reid-Anderson · Erich Reinhardt · Ernst von Siemens · Carl Friedrich von Siemens · Carl Heinrich von Siemens · Hermann von Siemens · Peter von Siemens · Werner von Siemens · Georg Wilhelm von Siemens · Carl Wilhelm Siemens · Gerd TackePlaces Other Siemens Competition · Siemens Foundation · Siemens Open · Siemens scandal (1914) · Siemens scandal (2008) · Werner von Siemens Ring
- Media Center
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