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Sony denies report it will promote No. 2 Kazuo Hirai to run company from April

Posted: January 9th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Personal Electronics | Tags: , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Sony on Saturday denied a report that it has decided to promote the head of its consumer product division, Kazuo Hirai, to lead the company from April.

The company was responding to an article in Japan’s main business newspaper, the Nikkei, that Hirai would replace current President Howard Stringer. Sony issued a terse press release that it had made no official announcement or decision.

Questions over the leadership of Sony, viewed domestically as a barometer for Japan’s tech industry, have surfaced as the company struggles with deep financial losses. The firm said in November it was on course to lose over a billion dollars for the current fiscal year, weighed down by its TV business and the strong yen, after predicting just months earlier it would make a hefty profit.

Hirai, 51, who led a turnaround in Sony’s PlayStation video game business, is widely seen as next in line to lead the company. The charismatic executive, who is fluent in English, would become its youngest leader since the late founder, Akio Morita, according to the Nikkei.

In the announcement of his promotion to his current role from April of last year, Sony said its management changes were aimed at “empowering the next generation of Sony’s management.”

Hirai has recently appeared at many key events for the company, including the announcement of its second-quarter results in November and the launch of its PlayStation Vita in Tokyo last month.

Japanese companies often make key management changes in April, when most begin their fiscal year.

Last month, Sony said its financial forecast may change again, due to the sale of its share in a joint venture with Samsung Electronics to produce LCD panels.

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Inside Nivarox, The Most Important Company You’ve Never Heard Of

Posted: December 6th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Gadgets | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

nivarox-parts-3

In the strange, small world of watchmaking, there’s lots of money to be made on items that we would call, at best, totemic. To make those items, you still need small mechanical parts. That’s where Nivarox comes in.

Nivarox makes balance springs. The name stands for “ni variable, ni oxydable,” which translates to “neither variable nor oxidable.” These tiny springs swing the balance wheel in almost every mechanical watch and the goal of invariability coupled quality metals made Nivarox one of the most important companies in the world during the 20th century. Now they’re owned by the Swatch Group, a company that has a virtual monopoly on the high-end watch market. And, interestingly, most competitors are just fine with that.

Ariel Adams at ABlogToRead went to visit the factory where he saw how the smallest widget can make or break a mechanical watch.

It wasn’t always thus. In the 1980s, Nivarox almost dissappeared. Ariel writes:

Listening to watch industry insiders who lived through this era in the 1980s is interesting. The tale they share is akin to retelling the story of apocalypse. For them a foreign terror and technology came in to wipe out an industry they held so dear, that held so many people together in the watch manufacturing hubs of Switzerland. Nivarox was about to be the heart of a dying creature. In 1983 the various arms of Nivarox consolidated and later in 1985 it became part of the Swatch Group that was at first a merger of the ASUAG and the SSIH. Many people of course know that the Swatch Group was started by Nicolas Hayek (who recently passed away). Many people credit him for saving the Swiss watch industry.

If you’ve noticed I keep referring to the fact that the Swiss watch industry is kept together by a series of suppliers who produce the necessary parts that go into watch movement. There are zero totally vertically integrated watch makers in Switzerland even today. The whole system of manufacturing could be halted if just one supplier stopped supplying materials or parts. This is why Mr. Hayek instructed Nivarox to produce its own metal for the balance springs. Originally sourced from a metal producer in Germany, there was just too much fear that if the supplier didn’t want Nivarox as a client anymore (which of course could happen on a whim), the entire industry would supper as watches could not be produced. Hayek’s ongoing mantra to Nivarox was “product, product, product, product.”

Read the full article if you want to learn about one of the most important mechanical manufacturers in the world and how so much of the watch industry depends on one invariable hairspring.



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Page looks to ‘transform’ company with Google+

Posted: October 17th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Networking | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Forget about building a popular social network. Google CEO Larry Page wants to use Google+ to transform the entire Google experience.

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Dell as a services company? Maybe, say customers

Posted: October 14th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Hardware Systems | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

Dell’s decision to hold its first-ever enterprise conference this week may have helped some of its customers see it as more than just a hardware company.

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Cisco loses out as Brocade wins healthcare software company business

Posted: October 4th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Virtualization | Tags: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

A healthcare software provider has upgraded its Gigabit Ethernet network to improve service to customers and reduce errors during backup.

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Vending machine company announces major data breach

Posted: September 13th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Security | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

A company that supplies vending machines and games to entertainment venues has disclosed a data breach affecting about 40,000 people who visited waterpark resorts in Wisconsin and Tennessee between December 2008 and May 2011

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What Facebook Ruling Means for Social Media at Your Company

Posted: September 10th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Internet | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

It has been widely accepted by both employees and organizations that what you say on a social media network about a company where you’re working could get you fired. A recent decision by a judge in New York may have changed all that after he ordered five people who were fired over comments on Facebook to go back to work.

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How To Prevent IT Sabotage Inside Your Company

Posted: August 19th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Security | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

Preventing external attacks to IT systems is a huge and critical task for most companies, but what are businesses doing to stop similar attacks when they come from within? That’s a question that more companies should be asking themselves as internal IT sabotage cases regularly hit businesses hard, causing big monetary losses and often knocking companies offline for days or weeks.

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RSA warns SecurID customers after company is hacked

Posted: March 18th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Security | Tags: , , , , , | No Comments »

EMC’s RSA Security division says the security of the company’s two-factor SecurID tokens could be at risk following a sophisticated cyber-attack on the company.

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Man charged with stealing secrets from wireless company Sirf

Posted: November 17th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Security | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

A San Ramon, California, man is facing charges he stole valuable technology from his former employer in hopes of building competitive location-aware products.

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