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Fujitsu was established on June 20, 1935, which makes it one of the oldest operating IT companies after IBM and before Hewlett-Packard, [3] under the name Fuji Telecommunications Equipment Manufacturing (富士電気通信機器製造, Fuji Denki Tsūshin Kiki Seizō), as a spin-off of the Fuji Electric Company, itself a joint venture between the Furukawa Electric Company and the German ...
PFU Limited (株式会社PFU, Kabushiki gaisha Pī Efu Yū) is a Japanese information technology company jointly owned by Ricoh and Fujitsu, formed by the merger of Panafacom and USAC Electronic Industrial in 1987.
Wong, Poh-Kam (July 1999). "The Dynamics of the HDD Industry Development in Singapore" (PDF).Centre for Management of Innovation and Technopreneurship, National University of Singapore: The Information Storage Industry Center, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California.
Fujitsu Siemens: Japan–Germany Fujitsu bought out Siemens's share of the company Gericom: Austria Acquired by Quanmax AG Husky Computers: United Kingdom Husky: Itautec: Brazil Acquired by Oki Electric Industry, PC and laptop division dissolved [6] KDS Computers: United States Subsidiary of Korea Data Systems: Librex Computer Systems: Japan
However, Fujitsu's involvement with ICL at both the financial and the technical level steadily increased over the subsequent two decades, and in 1990 Fujitsu acquired 80% of ICL plc from its parent STC plc, paying US$1.29 billion. In 1998 Fujitsu became ICL's sole shareholder [48] and the ICL brand was dropped in 2002. [49] [50] [51]
Spansion was founded in 1993 as a joint venture between AMD and Japan's Fujitsu Ltd. Spansion was formerly known as FASL LLC. [5] Once AMD took control of the company in 2003, it was renamed Spansion LLC in June 2004 [ 5 ] and officially spun off as an independent maker of flash memory chips in December 2005.
On Sept. 4, ICE bought home loan servicing and data analytics provider Black Knight for $11.9 billion, a price that exceeded the $8.2 billion Sprecher paid for his most famous deal, the 2013 ...
In late 2000, Fujitsu/Amdahl announced that the company had no plans to invest the estimated US$1 billion (or more) to create an IBM-compatible 64-bit system. [ citation needed ] Amdahl also failed in its effort to introduce its ObjectStar software (initially known as Huron) during this period and the product later became the object of a ...