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By Colin Barker
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 3, 2005 11:27:00 PM

Open source is now "a mature technology" and the right cost-effective option for many companies, said Peter Blackmore, president of worldwide sales at Unisys.

Blackmore, a former Hewlett-Packard executive who masterminded the company's Adaptive Enterprise strategy, outlined Unisys' strategy for growth at a meeting in London on Wednesday. He said the enterprise services company is now focused on four core areas: Enterprise security, real-time infrastructures, open source and the Microsoft market.

Unisys, based in Blue Bell, Pa., is now working with some major companies to deliver open-source solutions, Blackmore added.

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"Linux is really in demand now," he said. "We are working with one client, a major European travel business, where we are pitching open-source in a large server environment. We can prove the reliability and the maturity, and it will save them 30 percent off the bottom line."

Blackmore also said that outsourcing--much of it desktop outsourcing--is now 50 percent of Unisys's business. The combination of Microsoft Windows on the desktop and open-source software on the server can be the most successful strategy for the company, he said in an interview.

Blackmore believes that the main problem for Unisys has been to find ways to successfully market itself. One issue is that the company does not have great visibility outside its core markets. "Customers say, 'We wish you were better known,' and we have to address that," he said.

Blackmore has come full circle in his career after starting with Burroughs Machines, which then merged with Sperry-Univac to become Unisys. Blackmore moved on to Compaq and then joined HP in the merger of those two companies, before returning to Unisys.

Colin Barker of ZDNet UK reported from London.

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LOL!!
Not if you don't want the Blue Screen of Death interrupting your victory. I like the solitaire games on my Linux (KDE 3.3) desktop much better than windows solitaire, thank you very much.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: horusfalcon Posted on: 11/06/05 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Here's an observation  defconvegas | 11/03/05
Oh, losing companies like HP, IBM, Dell??  DonnieBoy | 11/03/05
I see. If it's not on a super computer then  John Zern | 11/03/05
LOL  Benton Rich | 11/04/05
Minesweeper  M_N | 11/04/05
LOL!!  horusfalcon | 11/06/05
how many desktops in the world are running Linux?  douglasids | 11/04/05
Absolutely  Richard Flude | 11/03/05
Unisys is going Linux? That's a BIG sign that  michael_t | 11/03/05
A leopard changes his spots....  jgmsys@... | 11/03/05
I think you read into the article way much  John Zern | 11/03/05
Semi-correct....  techboy_z | 11/04/05
Not semi correct - totally correct  John Zern | 11/04/05
Circle the logic wagons, Apache servers attacking!  Still Lynn | 11/05/05
Declaration of war...  Mike Cox | 11/03/05
Thanks a freaking lot Mikey 5.678936745  Squawkbox | 11/03/05
War, huh?  Scottman_z | 11/05/05
unless they swing enough patents  Boot_Agnostic | 11/06/05
Even Microsoft use Linux  whisperycat | 11/04/05
*Yawn* Talk about "Getting the Facts"  John Zern | 11/04/05
Windows is better. For Routers and switches...  douglasids | 11/04/05
No Xbox for YOU!  Still Lynn | 11/05/05
but...but..."We Have A Way Out"!  rbochan | 11/04/05
Same general subject, different joke...  Still Lynn | 11/05/05
Isn't wasn't 'immature', just underrated  Boot_Agnostic | 11/04/05

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