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IBM is recognized by the US EPA for its green power purchases in the US and for its support and participation in EPA's Fortune 500 Green Power Challenge. IBM ranked 12th on the EPA's list of Green Power Partners for 2007. IBM purchased enough renewable energy in 2007 to meet 4% of its US electricity use and 9% of its global electricity purchases.
International Business Machines (IBM) is targeting the U.S. government as its next new customer for its cloud-computing services. The company Monday launched its new cloud environment, called the ...
April 2012 – IBM sells its Retail Store Solutions division (Point-of-Sales) to Toshiba TEC [223] January 2014 – IBM sells its IBM System x business to Lenovo for $2.3 billion. [224] October 2014 – IBM sells its Microelectronics (semiconductor) branch to GlobalFoundries. IBM will pay GlobalFoundries $1.5 billion over 3 years to take over ...
Conversational Programming System (CPS), an IBM time-sharing system under OS/360; Michigan Terminal System (MTS) [11] (time-sharing system for the IBM S/360-67 and successors) ITS (MIT's Incompatible Timesharing System for the DEC PDP-6 and PDP-10) OS/360 MVT; ORVYL (Stanford University's time-sharing system for the IBM S/360-67) TSS/360 (IBM's ...
International Business Machines (IBM) is targeting the U.S. government as its next new customer for its cloud-computing services. The company Monday launched its new cloud environment, called the ...
In March of 2011, IBM introduced the IBM SmartCloud framework, designed to support the Smarter Planet initiative. [29] Later that year, the US government established the Federal Risk Management Program, FedRAMP , becoming the first government-wide cloud services accreditation program with standardized risk assessment methodologies for cloud ...
International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) stock soared 13.6% through 11:10 a.m. Thursday morning after the tech giant beat on both sales and earnings last night. Analysts had forecast IBM would ...
Watson built IBM into such a dominant company that the federal government filed a civil antitrust suit against it in 1952. IBM owned and leased to its customers more than 90 percent of all tabulating machines in the United States at the time. When Watson died in 1956, IBM's revenues were $897 million, and the company had 72,500 employees. [12]