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Carly Fiorina, previously one of America's most powerful businesswomen, resigns her post as CEO of Hewlett-Packard following a dispute with the company's board of directors over future strategy and the firm's profitability. Ms Fiorina pushed through a controversial merger with rival Compaq in 2002 ... |
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Hewlett Packard announces that it will move HP's Itanium processor design team to Intel in January, thus effectively ending the last microprocessor development effort within the company. To date, Itanium has not beed broadly accepted in the market, but has seen some success as a high-end server pr ... |
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In a move to compete with IBM, Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE:HPQ) announces that it's servers will support open-source software products JBoss MySQL. JBoss provides a Java-based application server software and MySQL is the most popular open spurce database management system. |
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U.S. Dow Jones Industrial Average falls 30 points as renewed concerns over the rising price of oil outweighed earlier gains providing by Hewlett-Packard Co.'s earnings and IBM's positive outlook. |
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Hewlett-Packard is confident it can meet consensus projections for earnings for the rest of the year, because of its ability to cut costs and take business from rivals, CEO Carly Fiorina said Tuesday. |
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EIGroup releases a biographical article on Carly Fiorina. |
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It is announced that Hewlett-Packard beat out Dell Computer for the top position in the worldwide server market. |
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Carly Fiorina completes the merger of Hewlett Packard with Compaq. |
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Fiorina and Michael Capella, Compaq’s chief executive, announce the intended merger of Hewlett Packard and Compaq. |
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Hewlett-Packard announces its acquisition of Compaq in $25 billion deal. |
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Carly Fiorina is elected to HPs board of directors. |
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Hewlett Packard becomes the largest business in the country run by a woman. Carly Fiorina is quoted as saying: "I hope that we are at a point that everyone has figured out that there is not a glass ceiling." |
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Fortune Magazine features Carly Fiorina on the cover of their magazine and pronounces her the “most powerful woman in American business.” Patricia Sellers, Fortune magazine writer, wrote: “She is at the center of the ongoing technology revolution that’s changing how we live and work.” |
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Hewlett-Packard introduces a calculator capable of algebraic manipulation and calculus. |
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Carly Fiorina receives a BA in Medieval History from Stanford University. |
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The HP-35, the first scientific hand-held calculator is introduced at a retail price of $395.00 |
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Carly Fiorina is born in Austin, Texas as Carleton (Cara) Sneed. |
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