IBM, which sold its PC and ThinkPad notebook business to Lenovo nine years ago, has now agreed to sell its x86 server business to the Chinese computer giant in a $2.3 billion blockbuster deal. The ...
With a new penchant for sharing and a willingess to look outside its walls, Big Blue has largely been able to contain its biggest problem in the server market: itself. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET ...
IBM sold off its x86 server business two years ago to Lenovo, thinking it was exiting a cut-throat, low-margin business. But the cloud has only intensified x86 server chip sales, and IBM is paying ...
IBM has largely been able to contain its biggest problem in the server market: itself. For a decade, IBM's server group was losing ground to competitors because of a fragmented product line, political ...
Big Blue will announce its first servers using its new Power5 chip, along with a new branding strategy highlighting the blurring lines between IBM's current server lines, CNET News.com has learned.
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Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Well, well, IBM is trying to get rid of its low-end server business again ...