Unisys
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| Unisys Corporation | |
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| Type | Public (NYSE: UIS) |
| Founded | 1886 as American Arithmometer Company 1986 as Unisys |
| Headquarters | Image:Flag of the United States.svg Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, United States |
| Key people | Joseph W. McGrath, President and CEO Ric Duques, Chairman |
| Industry | Computer Services |
| Products | Computer Servers and Solutions |
| Revenue | ▼ $5.65 billion USD (2007) |
| Employees | ~31,000 |
| Slogan | Imagine it. Done |
| Website | www.unisys.com |
Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS), based in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, United States, and incorporated in Delaware[3], is a global provider of information technology services and solutions.
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History
Unisys was formed in September 1986 through the merger of the mainframe corporations Sperry and Burroughs, with Burroughs buying Sperry for $4.8 billion. The name was chosen after an internal competition. The merger was the largest in the computer industry at the time and made Unisys the second largest computer company, with annual revenue of $10.5 billion[4]. At the time of the merger, Unisys had approximately 120,000 employees.
In addition to hardware, both Burroughs and Sperry had a history of working on U.S. government contracts. Unisys continues to provide hardware, software, and services to various government agencies.
However, the company failed to foresee and prepare for the open systems revolution from 1989, which saw proprietary mainframe marginalized in favor of Unix-based systems and, later, Microsoft Windows NT. While Unisys developed competing Unix and Windows-based server hardware, industry consolidation largely favored newcomers unencumbered by a proprietary computer heritage, as well as Hewlett-Packard and IBM.[citation needed]
Unisys managed the decline in hardware sales by shifting decisively into computer services, while holding onto the profitable revenue stream from maintaining its installed base of proprietary mainframe hardware and applications.
Important events in the company's history include the development of the 2200 series in 1986, including the UNISYS 2200/500 CMOS mainframe, and the Micro A in 1989, the first desktop mainframe, the UNISYS ES7000 servers in 2000, and the Unisys blueprinting method of visualizing business rules and workflow in 2004.
In 1988 the company acquired Convergent Technologies, makers of CTOS.
In March 2006, Unisys sold its Japanese distributor stake for $374 million. The sale was intended to help fund 3,600 previously announced employee layoffs, accounting for about 10% of the Unisys employee workforce at that time.
The company's slogan is: Unisys. Imagine it. Done.
Products, services, and customers
Paralleling larger trends in the U.S. information technology industry, an increasing amount of Unisys revenue comes from services rather than equipment sales. In 2006, the ratio was 83% for services, up from 65% in 1997. [5]
Unisys clients are typically large corporations or government agencies, and have included Washington Mutual, the New York Clearinghouse, Dell, Lufthansa Systems, Lloyds TSB, EMC, SWIFT, various state governments (for services such as unemployment insurance, licensing, etc.), various branches of the U.S. military, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), numerous airports, the General Services Administration, U.S. Transportation Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, Nextel, and Telefonica of Spain.
Unisys systems are used for many industrial and government purposes, including banking, check processing, income tax processing, airline passenger reservations, biometric identification, newspaper content management and shipping port management, as well as providing weather data services.[1] Unisys operates the world's largest RFID network for the U.S. military, tracking 9 million containers yearly to 1,500 nodes in 25 countries. It also created the universal identification card for citizens of South Africa.
The company engages in consulting, one-time contract jobs, and contracts for ongoing outsourced IT services. Services include building and integrating hardware and software systems, providing ongoing hosting and management of data, planning operational processes and changes, and providing security.
Its equipment line includes the ES7000 server family, which uses Intel processors such as Xeon or Itanium chips. The servers run Microsoft's Windows Server 2003 and other Windows operating systems, and/or Open source Linux operating systems from Novell or Red Hat. The ES7000 is also certified by the Guinness Book of World Records for hosting the largest number of concurrent gamers ever recorded on a single game server.[2]
The company's mainframe line, Clearpath, is capable of running not only mainframe software, but both the Java platform and the JBoss Java EE Application Server concurrently. The Clearpath system is available in either a UNISYS 2200-based system (Sperry) or an MCP-based system (Burroughs).
Controversies
Unisys created a controversy in 1994 by enforcing its patent on the LZW data compression algorithm, which is used in the common GIF image file format. For a more complete discussion of this issue see Graphics Interchange Format#Unisys and LZW patent enforcement.
Unisys was the target of "Operation Ill Wind", a major corruption investigation in the mid-to-late-1980s. A number of employees were imprisoned as a result. As part of the settlement, all Unisys employees were required to receive ethics training each year, a practice that continues today.
In 2003 and 2004, Unisys retained influential lobbyist Jack Abramoff, paying his firm $640,000 for his services in those two years. In January 2006, Abramoff pleaded guilty to five felony counts for various crimes related to his federal lobbying activities, though none of his crimes involved work on behalf of Unisys. [6] The lobbying activities of Abramoff and his associates are now the subject of a large federal investigation.
In 2005, there was further trouble for the company related to consulting work it was doing for the U.S. Transportation and Security Administration. In October, federal auditors announced that the company had overbilled on the $1 to 3 billion contract for almost 171,000 hours of labor and overtime. Unisys denied wrongdoing. [7]
In 2007, the FBI began investigating Unisys for allegedly botching its duties under a contract with the United States Department of Homeland Security. A number of security lapses supposedly occurred during a period in which Unisys was supposed to be improving the security of DHS networks, including incidents in which data was transmitted to Chinese servers [8]. Unisys denies all charges, but would not comment on details because of classified information.[9].
In 2007, Unisys also had to pay the Australian Department Of Immigration and Citizenship large sums of money due to numerous security breaches including a volatile email sent by a staff member to the Secretary Of Immigration.[citation needed] The Immigration project was intended to be their red ribbon project in the Asia-Pacific region and also was the project they implemented in the hope of bringing themselves out of default in the Asia-Pacific region.[citation needed]
In 2007, after 3 years of massive losses and consecutive losing quarters, Unisys spun off one their service divisions to remain in business. Since the loss of Larry Weinbach the company has been in a free fall. Its Blue Bell Headquarters is already on the auction block and stands to bring in 100-150 million dollars to help stem the blood loss. In other cost cutting measures employees mileage reimbursements have been slashed and wages frozen. Outsourcing almost all administrative and technical positions to India has led to the loss of more customers.[citation needed]
Community and environment
Unisys was named the industry leader for corporate sustainability (including environmental, social, financial, human resources, and corporate governance factors[10]) in the computer services and internet industry.
Unisys has a 100% rating from the Human Rights Campaign for its policies regarding LGBT employees.[11]
See also
- Burroughs Corporation
- CANDE
- Convergent Technologies (Unisys)
- Eckert-Mauchly Computer Corporation
- Elliott ALGOL
- ES7000
- HOLMES2
- J. Presper Eckert
- LINC 4GL
- List of UNIVAC products
- NEWP
- Remington Rand
- Robert (Bob) Barton
- Sperry Corporation
- TeamQuest
- UNIVAC
- Whitpain Township, Pennsylvania
- Work Flow Language
Notes
- ^ Unisys developed the software for NEXRAD, the original doppler weather radar, and has since provided weather data consisting of radar, satellite, lightning, etc. See [1]
- ^ Unisys ES7000 Server Powers World-Record-Breaking Gaming Event. See [2]
External links
- Unisys Official Web Site.
- Unisys profile at Yahoo.
- Unisys profile at the Center for Public Integrity.
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Categories: Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since December 2007 | Companies established in 1986 | Companies based in Pennsylvania | Montgomery County, Pennsylvania | Computer companies of the United States | Information technology consulting firms | UML Partners


