Compaq
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Template:Infobox Company $33.554 billion USD (2001) |
net_income = Template:Loss ($785 million) USD (2001) | homepage = compaq.com
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Compaq was a personal computer company founded in 1982 by Rod Canion, Jim Harris and Bill Murto. During the 1980s Compaq produced some of the first IBM PC compatible computers at a low-cost. The term "COMPAQ" is an acronym for "Compatibility and Quality". It existed as a standalone entity until 2002 when it was purchased by Hewlett-Packard.
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History
1980s
Compaq was founded in February 1982 by Rod Canion, Jim Harris and Bill Murto, three senior managers from semiconductor manufacturer Texas Instruments. Each invested $1,000 to form the company. Their first venture capital came from Ben Rosen and Sevin-Rosen partners. It is often told that the architecture of the original Compaq PC was first sketched out on a placemat by the founders while dining in the Houston restaurant, House of Pies.
Image:CompaqPortable.jpgIn November 1982 Compaq announced their first product, the Compaq Portable, a portable IBM PC compatible personal computer. It was released in March 1983 at $2995, considerably more affordable than competitors at the time. The Compaq Portable was one of the progenitors of today's laptop. It was the second IBM PC compatible, being capable of running all software that would run on an IBM PC. It was a commercial success, selling 53,000 units in its first year. The Compaq Portable was the first in the range of the Compaq portable series. Compaq was able to market a legal IBM clone because IBM mostly used "off the shelf" parts for their PC. Furthermore, Microsoft had kept the right to license the operating system to other computer manufacturers. The only part which had to be duplicated was the BIOS, which Compaq did legally by using reverse-engineering for $1 million. Numerous other companies soon followed their lead.
In 1985 Compaq released the Compaq Deskpro 286, a 16-bit desktop computer using an Intel 80286 microprocessor running at 6 MHz and capable of 7MB RAM, it was considerably faster than an IBM PC and was, like the Compaq Portable, also capable of running IBM software. It cost $2000 for the 40MB hard disk model. It was the first of the Compaq Deskpro line of computers.
Image:CompaqPortable386.jpgAfter making half a billion dollars turnover, in 1986 Compaq released the Compaq Portable II. The Portable II was significantly lighter and smaller than its predecessor, featuring a revised design with an 8 MHz processor and 10MB hard disk. It was cheaper than the IBM PC/AT at $3199, or $4799 with a hard disk. A year later in 1987, Compaq introduced the first PC based on Intel's new 80386 microprocessor, with the Compaq Portable 386 and Compaq Portable III. IBM was not yet using this processor, and subsequently Compaq established what was known disparagingly as the PC clone business.
1990s - Present
In the early-1990s, Compaq entered the retail computer market with the Presario, and was one of the first manufacturers in the mid-1990s to market a sub-$1,000 PC. In order to maintain the prices it wanted, Compaq became the first first-tier computer manufacturer to utilize CPUs from AMD and Cyrix. The price war resulting from Compaq's actions ultimately drove numerous competitors, most notably IBM and Packard Bell, from the marketplace.
In 1997, Compaq bought Tandem Computers, known for their NonStop server line. This acquisition instantly gave Compaq a presence in the higher end business computing market. In 1998, Compaq acquired Digital Equipment Corporation, the leading company in the previous generation of computing during the 1970s and early 1980s. This acquisition made Compaq, at the time, the world's second largest computer maker in the world in terms of revenue. Unfortunately for the company, CEO Eckhart Pfeiffer, who engineered both mergers, had little vision for what the combined companies should do, or indeed how the three dramatically different cultures could work as a single entity, and Compaq struggled as a result. Pfeiffer was forced out as CEO in 1999 in a coup led by board chairman Ben Rosen and was eventually replaced by Michael Capellas, formerly CIO of the company. Capellas was able to restore some of the luster lost in the latter part of the Pfeiffer era, but the company still struggled against lower-cost competitors such as Dell.
In 2001, Compaq engaged in a merger with Hewlett-Packard. Numerous large HP shareholders, including Walter Hewlett, publicly opposed the deal, which resulted in a nasty proxy battle between those for and against the deal. The merger was approved only after the narrowest of margins, and allegations of vote buying (primarily involving an alleged last-second back-room deal with Bank of America) haunted the new company. Capellas left the company after serving less than a year as President of HP. Carly Fiorina, the CEO of HP, added Capellas' responsibilities to her own. Fiorina helmed Compaq for nearly three years after Capellas left. During that time, HP laid off thousands of former Compaq employees, its stock price generally declined, profits did not perk up, and it continued to lose market share to Dell. Facing dismissal from a hostile Board of Directors, Fiorina opted to leave in February 2005 before the board could fire her. Mark Hurd took her place as CEO of HP. Some Compaq products were re-branded with the HP nameplate, while the Compaq brand remained on other products, notably PC, PDA, and server lines.
PC Products
- Compaq Presario
- Compaq Proliant
- Compaq Armada
- iPAQ
- Compaq Deskpro
- Compaq Portable
- Compaq Professional Workstation AP400
- Tc1000, a tablet notebook
Culture
Two sports stadiums were named after the company:
- The Compaq Center, of Houston, Texas, formerly The Summit, lost its sports teams to the Toyota Center. The building became the new home of Lakewood Church, one of the largest Protestant congregations in the United States.
- The San Jose Compaq Center, of San Jose, California, was renamed the HP Pavilion.
Competitors
HP Compaq competes against other computer manufacturers including Dell, Lenovo, Gateway, Sony and Toshiba among others. Originally the company competed against IBM, making affordable IBM PC compatibles often cheaper and faster than the IBM alternative. Lenovo, which purchased IBM's personal computer business in 2005, is a new competitor, especially in China where it is headquartered.
See also
External links
- Compaq official website
- Compaq company history (hp.com)
- HP-Compaq merger (washingtontechnology.com)cs:Compaq
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