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Ted Leung on the air: Open Source, Java, Python, and ...
Tue, 06 Jul 2004
Lou on Blue
I recently finished reading Lou Gerstner's
Who Says Elephants Can't Dance? Inside IBM's Historic Turnaround, which is his account of the years that he spent at IBM.
I worked at IBM during the Gerstner years, albeit in a strange sort of way - the IBM Cupertino lab was actually the remnants of the Taligent crew, and we were given more latitude than your typical IBM facilty. Gerstner's book revealed a few things about IBM (it's like learning about a country) that helped explain some things that I observed during my tenure. I definitely agreed with his point that the IBM culture is a big deal. The difference in the amount of cultural change in different parts of the company was evident depending on which lab you were dealing with.
I had some formative career experiences while at IBM, and I look favorably upon the company because those experiences were instrumental in my getting involved with open source, XML, and Java. While the company is far from perfect, I do feel that I got at least as much from IBM as IBM got from me, so it is easy for me to be positive about the company. I was definitely a beneficiary of some of the changes that Gerstner instituted.
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3 Comments |
When you say, "his point that the IBM culture a big deal," I think you may a verb in that sentence. What did you mean to?
Posted by Kragen Sitaker at Wed Jul 7 09:51:29 2004
Posted by Kragen Sitaker at Wed Jul 7 09:51:29 2004
Whoops
"his point that the IBM culture is a big deal"
Posted by Ted Leung at Wed Jul 7 10:44:12 2004
"his point that the IBM culture is a big deal"
Posted by Ted Leung at Wed Jul 7 10:44:12 2004
hello..
i just want to ask you if u can make any comparisons between Gerstner's book and Greiner (Evolution and Revolution as organizations grow) or Chandler (the logic of managerial enterprise)..??
if there is any relationship between the book and the harvard business articles i meantioned?? between
Lou's philosophy and the articles? in 1 word, if you can develop a claim between the two.. thank you..
Rafi Astor
Posted by Rafi Astor at Fri Jun 3 14:02:49 2005
i just want to ask you if u can make any comparisons between Gerstner's book and Greiner (Evolution and Revolution as organizations grow) or Chandler (the logic of managerial enterprise)..??
if there is any relationship between the book and the harvard business articles i meantioned?? between
Lou's philosophy and the articles? in 1 word, if you can develop a claim between the two.. thank you..
Rafi Astor
Posted by Rafi Astor at Fri Jun 3 14:02:49 2005
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