T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2429.1 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Meet the new boss, same as the old boss | Wed Mar 24 1993 02:25 | 1 |
| one can only hope
|
2429.2 | ? | GUIDUK::TREMBLAY | | Wed Mar 24 1993 15:37 | 1 |
| who bought it - wang?
|
2429.3 | ? | SPESHR::KEARNS | | Thu Mar 25 1993 20:20 | 2 |
|
Who bought it - KO?
|
2429.4 | One doubting Thomas in Colorado | CSC32::K_HYDE | | Thu Mar 25 1993 21:20 | 10 |
| If it has been sold, ie there has been a real estate closing, it will
be a public record. Just ask the Registrar of Deeds. I doubt if this
could have happened without at least one newspaper reporter's picking
up the story.
If anything less, such as contracts' being signed, has happened, I'd
think it would be in some newspaper by now.
Kurt
|
2429.5 | Opportunity | 42702::WELSH | Think it through | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:33 | 21 |
| If the rumours were true, it would provide a good opportunity
to catch up with reality and move corporate headquarters to
Europe, where the action is.
As I never tire of pointing out - because experience shows you
have to bang the table for years before people learn - Digital
is now doing significantly more business in Europe, and with a
higher rate of growth. This is all the more significant because
Digital has far more resources on the ground in the States, as
well as the inestimable benefit of more direct access to
corporate resources.
So the corporate headquarters should move to be at the centre
of things. Germany, France, or why not Britain? (Wave the flag).
Another advantage would be that making the move would force us
to separate the necessary from the traditional accretions of years.
Just like moving house. "Do we take this?" "No way! We haven't
used it for years..."
/Tom
|
2429.6 | Anything but Geneva ;-) | RANGER::BACKSTROM | bwk,pjp;SwTools;pg2;lines23-24 | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:41 | 14 |
| > So the corporate headquarters should move to be at the centre
> of things. Germany, France, or why not Britain? (Wave the flag).
Naah... Not Britain; it's the suburbs of Europe, not really even
connected (and given that so many Brits refer to Europe as being
somewhere other side the Channel it is even more reason not to ;-)
Instead I'd suggest Finland; it is definitely in Europe, and being
in the northern parts, if it is virtually on top of everything.
(Now, I bet someone from Norway will come and say that Norway is really
the top-most contry in Europe, since they have a little piece of land
north of Finland, but that doesn't count since only reindeer live there ;-)
...petri
|
2429.7 | Is there a Dallas in Finland? | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire. | Fri Mar 26 1993 15:16 | 1 |
| A new ad campiagn: "Finland, gateway to the Former Soviet Union"
|
2429.8 | what about Europe's mid-term outlook? | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Fri Mar 26 1993 16:44 | 23 |
|
Re: a couple back,
Part of the reason Europe has done so well vs. the US over the
past 4 years is the economy in the US has been on a long, slow
slide (while there was optimism in Europe over EC 92).
Another reason is that the wave of downsizing computers
hit here before it hit Europe (which means mini and mainframe
vendors' US businesses took it on the chin here first).
The US economy (IMHO) leads the world into recessions, and it
leads the world out of recessions. 4thQ (Oct-Dec) of last year,
US GDP growth was ~4.7% (~2.2% for the entire year). We're
probably recovering here before Europe does. I suspect that if
our foray into PCs is successful, and if we continue to grow
networking businesses, Digital US will outperform Europe in the
next two years. Certainly, with US labor laws, it's a lot easier
to dump people here than it is in Europe, so US cost structure
will be reduced here first as well. (Not that I find that particularly
heartening.)
Glenn
|
2429.9 | Move yes, Europe...not | FASDER::SHORN | | Fri Mar 26 1993 16:47 | 21 |
| RE: .5
Nice try, but from what I read and haer in the news...Europe is
facing a down turn in business. Germany, for example, is headed
towards a recession.
I will say this, I agree with moving the HQ out of New England.
This would give the powers to be a much needed new perspective on
business. Too often I hear that since 65% of the product is sold
within New England, then that is where Manufacturing, HQ, etc., etc.
should be. A half empty way of looking at the world. I argue that
since 65% of our products are sold within New England, then that is all
the more reason for us to jump in a wagon and move West and South.
Just think about all the opportunity that is out there!!! (Just keep
in mind one thing, we like Arizona just the way it is, so you can drive
through, even take a few pictures, but don't turn off the engine.)
@@
>
\_/
|
2429.10 | You forgot the smileys on .5 | XLIB::BRUNELL | Outlanders MRO D Division Champs, Again | Fri Mar 26 1993 17:02 | 6 |
| I have but one thing to say about moving to Europe, VAT. Taxes are too
damn high in Europe for a multibillion dollar company to want to move
there. Its one thing to start there and have roots, but it makes no
sense to move there. Mass tax on corporate income is only about 6%.
Dave
|
2429.11 | 8^) | NAVY5::SDANDREA | Send lawyers, guns, and money! | Fri Mar 26 1993 17:49 | 5 |
| New rumor...
Mill has been sold, headquarters moving to Dahlgren, VA.....
Steve (looking for a shorter drive to work)
|
2429.12 | Dump the mill | ESGWST::HALEY | become a wasp and hornet | Fri Mar 26 1993 18:06 | 15 |
| How about emulating a better model. ABB has practically no headquarters.
They have only 350 people with corporate functions, everybody else works
for a division. The divisions are measured on profit, and the low
performing divisions are "cleaned up." Dump the Mill, and move the
important 300 people to Manila or some other inexpensive gateway to the far
East.
The Mill is an anchronism of DEC bloated bureacracy. Over large,
disconnected, unsafe in an emergency, in a ethnocentric geography. (Boston
likes to think of itself as "the Hub")
Clean out Valbonne, keep the necessary 30 or 50 fifty people and distribute
the rest to the subsidiaries or divisions.
Matt
|
2429.13 | Read my lips! US revenue is 35% | 42702::WELSH | Think it through | Mon Mar 29 1993 08:12 | 30 |
| re .9:
> Nice try, but from what I read and hear in the news...Europe is
> facing a down turn in business. Germany, for example, is headed
> towards a recession.
Not relevant. Recessions and booms look like ripples on top
of the overall long term trend. It makes sense, as Europe is
intrinsically a bigger market than the USA. Many more people,
and getting to be at least as rich.
> Too often I hear that since 65% of the product is sold
> within New England, then that is where Manufacturing, HQ, etc., etc.
> should be. A half empty way of looking at the world. I argue that
> since 65% of our products are sold within New England, then that is all
> the more reason for us to jump in a wagon and move West and South.
But 65% of the product is not sold within New England. At the risk
of becoming really sickeningly tedious, the reason I keep on and
on and on about this subject is that experience shows it takes
years of tub-thumping to change people's mind-sets.
In fact, going on FY93 figures, the corporate report shows about
65% coming from NON-US revenues. In other words, the whole USA is
down to a shade more than one-third of revenues. New England must
clearly be some (probably quite small) fraction of 35%. At a wild
guess, maybe 10%? That would be very similar to the UK, by the
way.
/Tom
|
2429.14 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Mon Mar 29 1993 11:48 | 7 |
|
But Tom, non-US does not mean Europe. PLease name a country where we
do more business than the US.
Mike
|
2429.15 | Clarification | 42702::WELSH | Think it through | Mon Mar 29 1993 12:22 | 31 |
| re .14:
> PLease name a country where we do more business than the US.
Obviously I can't. Nor is there likely to be one in the foreseeable
future.
However in the past USA has been an "Area", and so has Europe.
GIA or "General International Area" (i.e. the rest of the world)
was the third area.
Europe is about the same area as the USA (smaller without Russia,
much bigger with) so it is a comparable entity. Comparing those
two, we find that Europe does more revenue today, and its revenue
is growing faster than the USA. This has been the direction of the
trend for the past several years.
The point of .13 was to correct the statement that New England did
65% of the revenue (which was probably not meant seriously in any
case).
My previous reply was meant to suggest that we might examine the
problem of where to site the corporate headquarters based on
objective business reasons, not tradition, sentiment or prejudice.
Anywhere in central Europe would place headquarters closer to the
weighted "centre of gravity" of our revenue than its present
location. Of course, the other benefit would be that we would find
large bureaucracies which could be dispensed with.
/Tom
|
2429.16 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:39 | 8 |
|
So let me get this straight. Wherever the geography of a corporations
majority of business is, they should relocate the headquarters to that
location?
Mike
|
2429.17 | Out of the Ivory Towers... | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:54 | 4 |
| Let's see. We do 100% of our business on the planet Earth....Let's move our
HQ there :-)
Bob
|
2429.18 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:58 | 9 |
|
> So let me get this straight. Wherever the geography of a corporations
> majority of business is, they should relocate the headquarters to that
> location?
It usually makes sense in relation to taxes, exchange rates, government
grants, export licencing.............
Heather
|
2429.19 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:07 | 2 |
|
And if the gography changes every 4-5 years?
|
2429.20 | Strated in the USA, Stays in the USA | FASDER::SHORN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 17:36 | 30 |
| I strongly agree that we need to move the Corp. HQ. Then tear down the
building, along with most of the other relics...this will help
stimulate the economy and at the same time clean up and brighten the
country side.
This is an American company, thus the HQ must stay in the USA. This
will ensure American jobs, that profit stays in the USA, any spending
required to run a HQ goes to USA local businesses, etc. We have made
too many transfers of jobs out of the USA already. It's time to keep
US jobs in the US and bring back some of the ones that we tossed away.
I will be interested to see if anyone from overseas tries to argue
against this point. Because, over the past years the US supported most
of the world economies by purchasing overseas at a cost to the USA both
in dollars and jobs, yet the US did not ask their HQ's to move here even
when the US was their major consumer. Now, all of a sudden, a US company
is selling more product overseas than in the US and people overseas
want the HQ of an American company to move out of the USA. Give me a
break!!!
No offense intended, just sticking up for my country and the land I
love. By the way, I even get extreme about this stuff at a state
level. I, unfortunately, live in the Washington, D.C. area (for the
time being), but I'm from Phoenix, Arizona. So, I buy products that
are made by Arizona companies first, other Western states second, other
US third and elsewhere last. I also support Ross Perot.
I'd guess this will spark a comment or two.
Scott
|
2429.21 | Nah, then we'd have to go to war again... | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Father Gregory | Mon Mar 29 1993 17:36 | 5 |
|
...and if the majority of the tourists in England are Americans, then
they should move Parliament to Little Rock, Arkansas.
Greg
|
2429.22 | | MU::PORTER | | Mon Mar 29 1993 18:10 | 22 |
| >I will be interested to see if anyone from overseas tries to argue
>against this point.
Hardly worth wasting the bits...
>Because, over the past years the US supported most
>of the world economies by purchasing overseas at a cost to the USA both
>in dollars and jobs, yet the US did not ask their HQ's to move here even
>when the US was their major consumer.
Aha. I understand! I used to think that all those American consumers
were buying Japanese VCRs, cars, etc., etc., simply because they
wanted better products. I hadn't realised that they were really
taking part in some grand altruistic scheme to help out the rest
of the world!
>and at the same time clean up and brighten the
>country side.
Uh, I know Maynard isn't exactly a metropolis, but it's far
from being "countryside". Besides which, the mill is far more
attractive than any place that DEC's built in the last decade!
|
2429.23 | my thoughts on the mill brought by last caller remarks | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Mon Mar 29 1993 18:43 | 17 |
| >Besides which, the mill is far more
>attractive than any place that DEC's built in the last decade!
i could not agree more with Dave on this, even though i had not had
the pleasure of working in the mill, but when i first moved to
lovely masmssususuhsstes from the west cost 3.5 years ago , the first
thing i did when i arrived is rented a car and immediately went asking
where the mill is! i kept driving around and getting lost many times but
finally i got to the mill, and saw the famous clock tower too that i read
so much about from a far, the nice security guard let me in the gate and
i drove around the parking lot 3 times and then had to go home.
may be one day i get lucky and will work in the mill. it is a very historic
place and we should not sell it to anyone too.
\nasser
|
2429.24 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Mon Mar 29 1993 19:24 | 7 |
| We can't tear down the Mill. What about the endangered Mill Spiders and
Mill Centipedes! (These critters are usually about late at night and
are a sight to behold. I wonder if they bite?) They've been in the
Mill so long that they are, as the saying goes for software,
"no longer bugs -- they are now features!" :)
Steve
|
2429.25 | We can't tear it down | XLIB::BRUNELL | Outlanders MRO D Division Champs, Again | Mon Mar 29 1993 20:43 | 6 |
| I don't think we can tear down the mill. I believe its on one of those
historic place registers. That will make it hard to sell as well
because remodelling would have to be approved by the registration
people.
Dave
|
2429.26 | Modernize!!! | FASDER::SHORN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 21:22 | 26 |
| > ...approved by the registration people. YUK, move government red
tape! This area thrives on Govt. red tape. I've just read where there
are about 40,000 people working for the Washington, D.C. government...
it is taking a city of people to manage (miss-manage) a city of only
600,000 people. I'm sorry, but Govt. "fat" and redundancies drive me
nuts.
As for all the old buildings out here. I suggest this (which I'm
sure will go over real big with the typical Eastern native): Save a
few old, historic buildings -- the top 5 history makers in each major
city. Take pictures of the rest and then turn them over to a
construction crew...tear it down and put up a nice, new, attractive
building or better yet restore the land back to a natural, raw state.
Just think of the number of jobs that will be created...Photographers,
Construction, Manufacturing of construction supplies, etc.
Next, turn the historic buildings still standing into museums to
house the pictures of the buildings that have been leveled.
I know this is a bit radical for alot of you, but seriously folks
Boston, D.C., Phily, etc. are some gloomy looking towns. They need
some life and brightness.
Just stirring the coals in the fire,
Scott
|
2429.27 | Not near me Please | NZOMIS::DUKE | | Mon Mar 29 1993 21:24 | 13 |
| Most business relocate as their customers move. Take retailers moving
from city centres. Its common and quite normal. The average person
moves quite often in their lifetime so maybe this should apply to
companies too.
I wonder if Europe is performing better because Head Quarters is so far
away. Maybe it would be better left that way. Not sure I want them
anywhere near me. Its hard enough now without all the "overheads"
closer.
The world is changing. Just as our industry has changed. Europe has
huge untapped markets opening up and offers a real chance for great
companies to grow.
|
2429.28 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Mar 29 1993 21:59 | 2 |
| At the rate the Asabet's rising we may not have to tear it down.
|
2429.29 | Keep away from *my* neighborhood! :-) | TAMDNO::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ MEL | Mon Mar 29 1993 23:16 | 36 |
| re: .26
> As for all the old buildings out here. I suggest this (which I'm
> sure will go over real big with the typical Eastern native): Save a
> few old, historic buildings -- the top 5 history makers in each major
> city. Take pictures of the rest and then turn them over to a
> construction crew...tear it down and put up a nice, new, attractive
> building or better yet restore the land back to a natural, raw state.
> Just think of the number of jobs that will be created...Photographers,
> Construction, Manufacturing of construction supplies, etc.
>
> Next, turn the historic buildings still standing into museums to
> house the pictures of the buildings that have been leveled.
>
> I know this is a bit radical for alot of you, but seriously folks
> Boston, D.C., Phily, etc. are some gloomy looking towns. They need
> some life and brightness.
Yuck! You must actually *like* the typical industrial park wasteland
where too many of us have to work! Give me an old building with character
over a modern sterile (and boring) one any day! If you are a typical
Washingtonian, then I hope not too many of you come up the parkway to
Baltimore!
Actually, Baltimore went through that dangerous architectural stage when
modern was considered good and old was considered bad. A lot of wonderful
old buildings that could never be built today (it would cost too much) were
lost. Fortunately, in recent years architects and developers (and I guess
the population in general, or the architects and developers wouldn't do it)
seem to be starting to appreciate the irreplaceable beauty of many of the
old buildings. Even when modern buildings are built, there is a tendency
to try to make them fit in with their older surroundings.
-end of rathole-
-Hal
|
2429.30 | explaining the big picture | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Tue Mar 30 1993 00:30 | 31 |
|
.29
i think this is a good point. most people really dont like to work in
big buildings anyway, i think one or 2 story level buildings are
the best, it gives you the feeling of belonging and being there, not
just a number on some paper like you feel in huge big 500 story level
building like they have in NY and Chicago.
We are all human and we need to be treated like humans not robots to
be shoved around in narrow and dark corridors and into corners and little
cubes in a big and cold buildings with number tags over us to tell us who
we are and where we sits and what we do!.
that is why people are moving back away and into the old and simple
ways of doing things, this includes the place of work too, plus we
need more plants in our offices, i dont know how many times i said
this and no one does anything about, green is shown to help the spirit
and improves work productivity and puts you in touch with earth and
nature and this all relates to this issues we are discussing as it
relates to the old vs new methodology, and the MILL is such a
manifestations of this deep rooted problem we see every where, how
to balance progress with keeping the human touch alive and well
between all of us and the place of work is very important in that
regards .
i dont know why i keep saying this, no one will listen to me any ways.
thank you,
\nasser
|
2429.31 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Mar 30 1993 08:36 | 34 |
|
> I will be interested to see if anyone from overseas tries to argue
> against this point. Because, over the past years the US supported most
> of the world economies by purchasing overseas at a cost to the USA both
> in dollars and jobs, yet the US did not ask their HQ's to move here even
> when the US was their major consumer. Now, all of a sudden, a US company
> is selling more product overseas than in the US and people overseas
> want the HQ of an American company to move out of the USA. Give me a
> break!!!
Firstly, having the HQ in America severley restricts our markets
because of the export compliance regulations. This legislation just
doesn't keep up-to-date with the world situation, and is causing us
to have to stand back and watch non-US computer companies grab emerging
markets.
It is loosing us markets, money, and jobs.
Also, Digital has been selling more overseas than in the US for many
years, it is not "all of a sudden".
If we can eventually get some of the market share back from our
compettitors when the US export compliance gets more than 3 years
behind-the-times, then the percentage will increase.
Also, your knowledge of US trade restrictions seem a little lax.
> No offense intended, just sticking up for my country and the land I
> love. By the way, I even get extreme about this stuff at a state
> level.
I agree with you it is extreme, tunnel vision could cause you to cut
your nose off to spite your face.
Heather
|
2429.32 | What consitutes an "American" company? | IOSG::SHOVE | Dave Shove -- REO2-G/M6 | Tue Mar 30 1993 09:57 | 12 |
| I'm not sure that moving the Corporate HQ out of the U.S. would
necessarily exempt us from (U.S.) Export Compliance, Heather. I'm not a
lawyer, so I don't know what the legal definition of "American
technology" is (it obviously doesn't depend on where the technology is
developed, since Export Licensing applies to stuff we develop outside
the U.S.). Is it where the (majority of) the capital is held? Or where
the company is incorporated (in which case, what about subsidiaries?)
Or what?
Anyone know (as opposed to random guesses!)?
D.
|
2429.33 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:44 | 15 |
| > I'm not sure that moving the Corporate HQ out of the U.S. would
> necessarily exempt us from (U.S.) Export Compliance, Heather. I'm not a
> lawyer, so I don't know what the legal definition of "American
> technology" is (it obviously doesn't depend on where the technology is
> developed, since Export Licensing applies to stuff we develop outside
> the U.S.). Is it where the (majority of) the capital is held? Or where
> the company is incorporated (in which case, what about subsidiaries?)
> Or what?
The company is American, if it breaks US compliance, then it doesn't
get export licences to ship kit.
It doesn't matter where the kit/software is built or shipped from.
Heather
|
2429.34 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Tue Mar 30 1993 12:35 | 23 |
| 1) When I hear rumors of the mill being sold, the first question
becomes: To who? There are plenty of more modern business sites
in the area that are vacant. Plenty of vacant mill space, if
that is really what is wanted. Two thirds of the Wang towers.
Who'd want the mill enough to pay us enough for the headache of
moving?
2) Speaking of the Wang towers, if we really wanted to move from the
mill, why not move to the Wang towers. We could probably get it pretty
close to even up for one of the sites we are closing - Wang would get
facilities more suited to their new size, and eliminate the costs
associated with the towers. After all, the prospects of any other
buyers for a facility of that size in that location are pretty small.
We'd get a modern facility... But then, we'd still be stuck with
the mill,. because who would want to buy it, even empty?
3) re .26
>and put up a nice, new, attractive building
Isn't that an oxymoron?
Tom_K
|
2429.35 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Mar 30 1993 12:59 | 5 |
| RE: .26
Bad idea....but, you knew that.
Marc H.
|
2429.36 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Tue Mar 30 1993 13:03 | 9 |
|
Heather, how many is many years? 4 or 5? The previous 30, the US was
at the top. Also, as far as gov't compliance, if we go selling willy
nilly, you might as well write off the GSA schedule (our second largest
customer), not a very wise move.
Mike
|
2429.37 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Mar 30 1993 14:46 | 14 |
|
> Heather, how many is many years? 4 or 5? The previous 30, the US was
> at the top. Also, as far as gov't compliance, if we go selling willy
> nilly, you might as well write off the GSA schedule (our second largest
> customer), not a very wise move.
Yup, about that, definately not "all of a sudden".
I did not say to go selling "willy nilly", I said it would be better if
the export compliance moved with the times a bit more.
It is a system designed for slow movement and different times.
Heather
|
2429.38 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Mar 30 1993 14:55 | 11 |
| RE: .34 by TOMK::KRUPINSKI
>1) When I hear rumors of the mill being sold, the first question
>becomes: To who? There are plenty of more modern business sites
Maybe it won't be sold. That doesn't preclude our walking away from
it. If the Wang towers can be abandoned, so can the mill.
How many mothballs do you think it will take, given that it was once a
woolen mill?
|
2429.39 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Tue Mar 30 1993 14:59 | 8 |
| > Maybe it won't be sold. That doesn't preclude our walking away from
> it. If the Wang towers can be abandoned, so can the mill.
Maybe abandoned in that there will be nothing there. But
unless ownership is transferred, Digital would still be responsible
for the property (taxes, liability, etc)...
Tom_K
|
2429.40 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Mar 30 1993 15:11 | 9 |
| re .27:
> Most business relocate as their customers move. Take retailers moving
> from city centres. Its common and quite normal.
Retail stores obviously have to be near their customers. Their headquarters
don't -- I doubt if very many of Walmart's millions of customers have the
foggiest idea where they are headquartered or even care. For non-retailers
like DEC, the idea of putting HQ near the customer is even less compelling.
|
2429.41 | one comes to mind | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Tue Mar 30 1993 18:49 | 10 |
| re Note 2429.34 by TOMK::KRUPINSKI:
> 1) When I hear rumors of the mill being sold, the first question
> becomes: To who?
Well to KO's start-up, of course!
Some people thrive in that environment.
Bob
|
2429.42 | Where you sit is where you stand ? | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Tue Mar 30 1993 19:13 | 11 |
| re .20
Woweee !
Talk "GLOBAL COMPANY",
Think "US Company"
Act "New England Company" ????
:-)
John
|
2429.43 | Anyone for BXC? | FASDER::SHORN | | Tue Mar 30 1993 21:44 | 3 |
| I just had a phone conversation with someone that was over at BXC
(Boxboro) yesterday and that person said BXC was full of B. Palmer's
people. BXC the new frontier (frontier = HQ)???
|
2429.44 | DEC OWNS THE MILL | AKOCOA::ANDERSON | | Wed Mar 31 1993 15:15 | 3 |
| I called the Board of Assesors in Town Hall Maynard and they indicated
that the Mill is owned by Digital Equipment Corp. So I guess KO doesn't
rent it to the present management.
|
2429.45 | De Jure or De Facto ? | ELMAGO::JMORALES | | Wed Mar 31 1993 15:49 | 12 |
| Headquarters: 1: a place from which a commander performs the functions
of command
2: the administrative center of an enterprise.
(Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary)
Now the questions are:
1) Does BP executes the President/CEO functions from the Mill ? Yes/No.
2) Does the BOD administers DEC from the Mill ? Yes/No.
|
2429.46 | another rumor | MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M | Mark Silverberg MLO1-5/B98 | Thu Apr 01 1993 12:32 | 8 |
| JUST A RUMOR...REPEAT...JUST A RUMOR
Heard this morning here in the Mill that Digital will announce tomorrow
or next week that the Mill will be closed over the next 18 months or
so. No confirmation, just lots of buzzing.
Mark
|
2429.47 | Keep the pewter clock tower anniversary award... | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Thu Apr 01 1993 12:56 | 3 |
| I still want a pewter clock tower for my 25th anniversary award...
assuming I'm still around 1.25 years from now...assuming they're
still giving out 25th anniversary awards 1.25 years from now....
|
2429.48 | Is the date of .46 significant??? | CSOADM::ROTH | ELVIS:: is alive... and reachable!! | Thu Apr 01 1993 13:14 | 0 |
2429.49 | | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Thu Apr 01 1993 14:37 | 9 |
| Micorsoft just announced it bought DEC.
\nasser
April's fool!
almost got you, didn't i ?
|
2429.50 | one down | MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M | Mark Silverberg MLO1-5/B98 | Thu Apr 01 1993 16:16 | 3 |
| you got me for about 10 seconds, then i hit <cr>
mark
|
2429.51 | April fooled! | FASDER::SHORN | | Thu Apr 01 1993 17:46 | 4 |
| Very good Nasser!!! You had me for the same 10 seconds until I hit the
<cr>, also.
Scott
|
2429.52 | Mill not closing but a new use for it...
| SCCAT::HARVEY | | Thu Apr 01 1993 18:05 | 5 |
| I was just told that the mill is not being sold, but that the offices
will be moved to other facilities, then it will be converted into a
hotel/restaurant complex. (like the Boylston project)
Renis
|
2429.53 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | SBS is a crime against mankind | Thu Apr 01 1993 18:18 | 8 |
|
Are we getting into the real estate development business or something?
Why would DEC want to own a hotel/restaurant complex?
Don't tell me.... APRIL FOOL!!!
-Ed
|
2429.54 | Take on this idea and challenge... | FASDER::SHORN | | Thu Apr 01 1993 19:15 | 60 |
| I'll tell you what I'd like to see done with the Mill...no, I'm not
going to say blow it up again. Let me give some background before I
state my suggestion.
I owned my own business once, a 45 employee, 7 figure revenue business.
The knowledge that I gained from self-managing that business is equal
to a PhD in Business. Here at DEC I have encountered many "Business
Managers", "Program Managers", "Whatever Managers" that are a tad short
of a half full load of business knowledge. It isn't because they don't
try or have the capacity, DEC has developed them that way.
You see, when you manage your own business, regardless of size, you
become knowledgable in all areas of business and you deal with or
manage all areas of business. YOU are the CEO, Business Manager, Personnel
Dept., Finance Dept., Purchasing Dept., Inventory Control Dept., Marketing
Dept., Sales Dept., Insurance Dept., Government (Fed, state, local)
Issues Dept., Legal Dept., ETC. Get the drift. You know something
about all parts of the business. You become a BIG picture thinker or
else your business fails or you pay alot for consultants. In DEC we
don't get that type of training to become "Business Managers". We may
work in 2 or 3 functions, but there are those that stay stove piped in
one. Plus, our metrics force us to micro-manage our world...we don't
always consider the impact to other parts of the company.
For example: I recently took a finance job in Sales/Services finance,
I left Manufacturing. In budget/forecast meetings I too often hear
folks talk about missing Margin dollars, but they are still able to
make Margin percent...Thus it's OK. WRONG. Dead wrong. They forget
that at the start of the year other parts of the company
(Manufacturing, Engineering, Personnel, Corporate HQ, etc.) set
spending budgets that were based on a certain amount of Sales Margin DOLLARS
that in the end gave the company a certain bottom line profit margin.
So, if Manufacturing, etc. does a good job and spend equal to or less than
their budget, then they have managed well per the plan. Now if
Sales/Services fails to bring in the amount of margin dollars from their
revenue stream, the company will not make the planned profit or could
even loose money. This could all happen while Sales/Services makes the
planned margin percent. The point being ...the person who thought
they managed well because they made margin percent while comin in short
with margin dollars, actually hurt the company. They failed to think
of the "Big Picture".
Now my suggestion...
With all that in mind, I vote yes -- turn the mill into a restaurant
and a hotel, along with shops and whatever else. Use it for a training
ground for future Business Managers and anyother types of Managers. Let
them all learn first hand about what "running/managing" a business
really means. Let them start and run a business for a year, if after
one year their business made a profit, they get the Manager's job that
they are seeking. But, if they have a loss...back to the salt mine and
business class 101...and let them try again until they get it right.
If anyone at corporate has the courage to implement this wild idea, I'll
put my badge on the line to accept the challenge of setting up this
program and managing the program. If I don't show a profit (better
trained managers), then I'm headed to the mine...out'a here.
Scott
|
2429.55 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | SBS is a crime against mankind | Thu Apr 01 1993 19:21 | 9 |
|
I disagree. Managing a restaurant or hotel is not the same as managing
some portion of a computer manufacturer/integrator.
Saying a restaurant manager can run Digital is like saying "Any
cook can run a country" I think I'm quoting Stalin here...
-Ed
|
2429.56 | | ELWOOD::LANE | Yeah, we can do that | Thu Apr 01 1993 19:39 | 10 |
| >Managing a restaurant or hotel is not the same as managing
>some portion of a computer manufacturer/integrator.
Not, it's not the same - it's a lot tougher.
I think the ideas are great but.... I think the same ends can be met by
hiring from outside or farming talent out to schools and existing businesses
without the expense of owning the businesses. After all, all you want is the
training, right? Why buy the school?
Mickey.
|
2429.57 | Understand the theory. | FASDER::SHORN | | Thu Apr 01 1993 19:51 | 21 |
| Ah, but give this a thought.
In college or whatever level of schooling, they teach you a tool
explaining it in one form or within one topic...this does not mean
that the knowledge gained can only be used in that one topic. Your
professor expects you to be wise enough to apply the theory to a
multitude of topics.
A very simple example, not ment to be degrading, just simple and to the
point:
We learned to count by adding 2 apples to 2 apples which gave us 4
apples. Our teacher then expected us to be able to use the theory of
math to add 2 atoms to 2 atoms to get 4 atoms (or a bomb).
My point is, understanding the theory of business to the degree that you
are able to apply that theory to whatever line of business you are in is
what is important and what give us the knowledge to run or manage a
business, function or deptartment successfully.
Scott
|
2429.58 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | SBS is a crime against mankind | Thu Apr 01 1993 19:52 | 8 |
|
Sorry if this came off like trivializing restaurant or hotel
management.
I do think I have a point though...
-Ed
|
2429.59 | | SU2PLY::MACDONALD | Still crazy after all these years! | Thu Apr 01 1993 20:09 | 23 |
| RE: .43
>> I just had a phone conversation with someone that was over at BXC
>> (Boxboro) yesterday and that person said BXC was full of B. Palmer's
>> people. BXC the new frontier (frontier = HQ)???
Not sure what this means, working for Digital we are ALL
Bob's people. BXC is the HQ for Ed McDonough's Worldwide
Manufacturing and Logistics organization.
Here what the rumor mill :-) is reporting here in BXC
The Mill is under agreement to be sold (don't know to whom)
but not sold yet, thus DEC is still listed as the owner. Also heard
the same rumor cited earlier that plans for the future of the Mill would
be announced tomorrow.
Rumored choices for Bob and HQ folks to move to are
Marlboro, Stow, or Powdermill Rd. Don't know what would happen
to the others in the Mill (workstation engineering etc.)
Mac
|
2429.60 | | EARRTH::ROBERTS | residence not BATF approved | Thu Apr 01 1993 20:39 | 3 |
|
Without digital, Maynard wouldn't have a need for a Hotel. What would
people come here for?
|
2429.61 | Digital Maynard is more than just 146 Main St. | CADSYS::FLEECE::RITCHIE | Elaine Kokernak Ritchie | Thu Apr 01 1993 20:57 | 3 |
| Take a look in the phone book. DEC Maynard is not the same as MLO.
Elaine
|
2429.62 | 'scuse me while i digress | AKOCOA::ANDERSON | | Thu Apr 01 1993 21:14 | 2 |
| Does anyone have the remotest idea of what's being discussed at this
point? Jon (.0) did you get your answer? Hotel managment...????
|
2429.63 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Meet the new boss, same as the old boss | Thu Apr 01 1993 22:31 | 7 |
|
>Without digital, Maynard wouldn't have a need for a Hotel. What
>would people come here for?
why do they go there now is the bigger question.
in fact, do they still do corporate visits there or do they bring a
picture of the Mill to the visit site.
|
2429.66 | going...going... | MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M | Mark Silverberg MLO1-5/B98 | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:07 | 4 |
| meetings are being held, memos are out, MLO is abuzz, Powdermill
Road here we come
Mark
|
2429.67 | Its official | MTWAIN::YOUNG | | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:08 | 5 |
| I have just read a memo that officially announces the closing down of the Mill.
MSO will be the corporate headquarters and the remainder of the population
will be phased over to other facilities over the next two years begining
in late summer. I am sure more information will be posted later today.
|
2429.68 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:11 | 10 |
| RE: .67
That is *REAL* bad news. This company has now lost out on more than a
building....it has lost part of its very soul.
I'm glad that I had at least spent some of my time in the Mill. What a
shame!
Marc H.
|
2429.69 | | ICS::KAUFMANN | Life is short; pray hard | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:16 | 6 |
| More customers come to PKO than any other Digital facility (a factoid I
heard stated by management). All customers taking training at PKO3
stay in hotels 30 minutes or more away (Marlboro, Westford, Framingham,
etc.). A Maynard hotel would be a great help to customers.
Bo
|
2429.70 | | MSD26::WOJDAK | | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:24 | 6 |
| Does anyone know how many people are currently working at the Mill
complex?
Thanks
Rich
|
2429.71 | The official memo and VTX announcement | EMDS::OWEN | You're number 76. Now serving 13 | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:33 | 145 |
| From: MLMAIL::MLMAIL::MRGATE::"MROMTS::NROMTS::MRGATE::NEST::CORPEMPCOM" 1-APR-1993 19:55:15.45
To: @Distribution_List
CC:
Subj: URGENT MEETING FOR MANAGERS AT 9AM
From: NAME: CORPEMPCOM <CORPEMPCOM@NEST@MRGATE@NROMTS@NRO>
To: See Below
*** This message is from Corporate Employee Communication ***
As a manager or supervisor in the Mill, you are invited and
strongly urged to attend a meeting at the Doriot Auditorium
(MLO4-5) at 9 AM tomorrow -- Friday, April 2.
This meeting is intended to announce and clarify the company's
decision to relocate operations out of the Mill over the next two
years.
Win Hindle, senior vice president, will be on hand to answer your
questions and materials will be distributed to help you talk
about this with your employees.
We apologize for the short notice, but to give us an opportunity
to explain the decision to managers in person, and to make sure
employees hear this first from us, rather than through the press,
we had to maintain strict confidentiality. We ask you to please
respect that confidentiality until the 9 AM meeting begins.
We suggest that you arrive early. If and when the room fills,
the doors will be shut. In that case, you can return for a
10 AM meeting with the same content and the same opportunity to
pose questions, and the handouts from the 9 AM meeting will be
available afterwards through Mill Site Personnel.
Meetings will be held throughout the day, simultaneously in both
the Doriot Auditorium and the Sheridan/Hinchcliffe Conference
Room at 10 AM, 1:30 PM, and 3:30 PM, to give employees an
opportunity to hear the full story and ask questions of senior
managers.
Attached is the text of the LIVE WIRE news item which will be
posted at 10 AM (prior to announcement to the press).
****************************************************************
Text of LIVE WIRE Message:
DIGITAL ANNOUNCES PLANS TO RELOCATE HEADQUARTERS TO MSO
AND TRANSFER OPERATIONS FROM THE MILL TO OTHER SITES
Digital today announced plans to relocate the company's
headquarters from The Mill to another site in Maynard and
transfer operations located at The Mill to other Digital
locations. The relocation process will begin late this summer and
extend over the next two years.
In a series of meetings, over 2,100 Mill employees were told that
the decision is part of a comprehensive real estate strategy and
came about as a result of Digital's continuing analysis of the
company's space requirements and efforts to consolidate
activities into more efficient and cost-effective facilities.Most
of the employees and operations now located in The Mill will be
relocated to other Digital-owned eastern Massachusetts buildings.
The company's world headquarters will remain in the town of
Maynard, but move to MSO2 on Powdermill Road, a building that was
opened in 1991. "We considered the strong symbolism of The Mill
as the location where the company began 35 years ago and the
impact that our decision would have on the community," said Bob
Palmer, president and CEO. "Our decision was difficult, but in
light of the information we studied about cost of operation,
functionality and location, we had no alternative but to begin
phasing out operations in the complex and consolidating them
among our other properties."
Bob has appointed a Mill Program Manager, Nancy Salustro. He has
also asked a committee of senior managers to help her work with
town, state and federal government officials, and outside
developers to create plans for a reuse of the complex that will
produce the maximum social and economic value.
Decisions about where to locate other activities from The Mill
will be made by analyzing where they best fit with related groups
at other sites and the effect the moves will have on enhancing
Digital's ability to be customer-focused.
Senior managers explained how Digital's real estate strategy has
resulted in more efficient, cost-effective facilities management
first by moving out of leased facilities into Digital-owned
buildings. The second tier of study is an analysis of future
space needs and criteria for determining consolidation into the
most efficient facilities. The Mill contains approximately 1.1
million square feet of space and includes Corporate executive and
administrative offices, laboratories and manufacturing
operations. Efforts to date have resulted in the reduction 8.7
million square feet of space and an annual savings of $219
million.
The original Mill structure was built in 1847 by Amory Maynard
and William Knight, principals of the Assabet Mills. Reorganized
in 1862 as the Assabet Manufacturing Company, it supplied woolen
cloth, blankets and flannels to the Union Army during the Civil
War. In 1957, Digital began operations in 8600 square feet of
rented space in The Mill. As the company grew, it occupied
greater portions of the available space until the total site was
purchased by Digital in 1974.
VMSmail To information: @089A01_6.DIS;1
To Distribution List:
STEPHEN MORO@MLO,
STEPHEN WEINSTOCK@MLO,
STEVE OLESIN@MLO,
STEVEN AGRAZ@MLO,
STEVEN SEUFERT@MLO,
STEWART JACKSON@MLO,
STUART MORGAN@MLO,
THEODORE HOPSON@MLO,
THEODORE KAUPPI@MLO,
THERESA BUCKLEY@MLO,
THOMAS SURETTE@MLO,
VICKY TIERNEY@MLO,
VINCENT MULLARKEY@MLO,
VIRGINIA BARILONE@MLO,
WALTER PROKOWIEW@MLO,
WAYNE RETT@MLO,
WILLIAM CAPERS@MLO,
WILLIAM HANSON@MLO,
WILLIAM HEAVEY@MLO,
WILLIAM JAMES@MLO,
WILLIAM JOHNSON@MLO,
WILLIAM KOTEFF@MLO,
WILLIAM LOWE@MLO,
WILLIAM MELLO@MLO,
WILLIAM MONAHAN@MLO,
WILLIAM PICOTT@MLO,
WILLIAM SCOTT@MLO,
WILLIAM STEUL@MLO,
WILLIAM STRECKER@MLO,
WILLIAM WALSH@MLO,
WINSTON HINDLE@MLO,
YOGESH PARIKH@MLO
|
2429.72 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:36 | 4 |
| Shoot, with folks here worrying if they'll even have jobs during the
next six months, who cares if the Mill closes in 18?
Steve (at the Mill)
|
2429.73 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:38 | 5 |
| RE: .72
If you don't understand it, I can't explain it.
Marc H.
|
2429.74 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Fri Apr 02 1993 13:42 | 12 |
| re: .73
Well, actually, I *do* understand it. I feel a lot of sentiment about
this building. You have to kind of let out a sigh about having to
leave this place, what with lots of fond memories and all. My point is
that my feelings of sentiment are rudely brushed aside when it comes to
thinking about my future and career at Digital. My attention is
focuses now on what I can do to stay valuable in my job over the next
six months to a year or so. So, the Mill closing in two years seems like
a long way off.
Steve
|
2429.75 | Currently 2100 employees in the mill | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | Alpha Personal Systems Marketing | Fri Apr 02 1993 14:04 | 5 |
| re .70
In the 9:00 a.m. briefing conducted by John Simms and in the handout
that was distributed, it was said that the current Mill population is
about 2,100
|
2429.76 | YACC (yet another cosmetic change) | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Fri Apr 02 1993 14:16 | 25 |
| re Note 2429.74 by ECADSR::SHERMAN:
> My point is
> that my feelings of sentiment are rudely brushed aside when it comes to
> thinking about my future and career at Digital.
If most of us felt that the company were really making
substantial -- and LASTING -- changes to turn its fortunes
around I would agree with you.
However, there is a distinct feeling that while major
cosmetic changes are undertaken, and while a great deal of
real muscle is being lost in the work force, the people who
really run things are mostly people who had been running
things for the past 10-20 years.
Our form, our appearance, and now our headquarters, will be
different, but our way of conducting business, our way of
thinking about what we do and about the markets we serve,
will be the same.
Sentiment may be one of the few things we have going for us
-- that and round dots over the "i"'s in our logo.
Bob
|
2429.77 | | DRIFT::WOOD | Laughter is the best medicine | Fri Apr 02 1993 14:20 | 10 |
| re: .70:
> Does anyone know how many people are currently working at the Mill
> complex?
I believe it was KO who once answered a similar question with:
About half of them.
John
|
2429.78 | 2100 DECies at MLO | VICKI::SMITH | Consulting is the Game | Fri Apr 02 1993 14:43 | 5 |
| re: .77
Today's Livewire article that announces the closure of the Mill
says that there's 2100 employees.
|
2429.79 | sending a message? | ARCANA::CONNELLY | it's Cards-on-the-Table Time! | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:05 | 5 |
|
Interesting symbolism...moving HQ from a building (the Mill) that stands for
most of what is best about the company to a building (MSO) that symbolizes
most of what is worst about the company. :-(
paul
|
2429.80 | Clock Tower | KAOOA::HASIBEDER | Good tea, nice house | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:11 | 7 |
| From what I understand, the old mill clock is an historical landmark,
and therefore will have to stay at the mill (not that it would be
economical to move it). So what symbol are we going to put on the
service awards from now on? Assuming there will continue to be service
awards...
Otto (13 yrs. service and hoping to make it to at least 15!)
|
2429.81 | We ARE the PC company | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:26 | 7 |
| Well, with an opening like that...In place of the clocktower, there
will be either a smiley face or little heart with soft earth tones for
a background. With every service award, you'll receive wax lips and a
hand-written note from BP, with love and kisses.
By the way, it's going to take AT LEAST 18 months just to FIND
everyone in the Mill to let them know that it's closed. Just imagine
who or what they'll find in some of the darkest recesses...
|
2429.82 | | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:27 | 5 |
| >So what symbol are we going to put on the
>service awards from now on? Assuming there will continue to be service
>awards...
Aahh, There you go again making those rash assumptions!
|
2429.83 | MLO <> MSO | FUNYET::ANDERSON | OpenVMS Forever! | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:30 | 12 |
| This is a sad day.
The Mill is the only Digital building I've ever seen that had character. All
our other buildings are modern, boring boxes with no character and no history.
When you walked down the halls of the Mill, you felt that you were the latest in
a long line of people who worked there.
I suppose the service awards will now use what's on top of our new headquarters.
I can't wait for a tie clip with a picture of an air conditioning box or the top
of an elevator shaft on it.
Paul
|
2429.96 | Mill to Close | NOVA::STATA | | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:47 | 62 |
|
Text of LIVE WIRE Message:
DIGITAL ANNOUNCES PLANS TO RELOCATE HEADQUARTERS TO MSO
AND TRANSFER OPERATIONS FROM THE MILL TO OTHER SITES
Digital today announced plans to relocate the company's
headquarters from The Mill to another site in Maynard and
transfer operations located at The Mill to other Digital
locations. The relocation process will begin late this summer and
extend over the next two years.
In a series of meetings, over 2,100 Mill employees were told that
the decision is part of a comprehensive real estate strategy and
came about as a result of Digital's continuing analysis of the
company's space requirements and efforts to consolidate
activities into more efficient and cost-effective facilities.Most
of the employees and operations now located in The Mill will be
relocated to other Digital-owned eastern Massachusetts buildings.
The company's world headquarters will remain in the town of
Maynard, but move to MSO2 on Powdermill Road, a building that was
opened in 1991. "We considered the strong symbolism of The Mill
as the location where the company began 35 years ago and the
impact that our decision would have on the community," said Bob
Palmer, president and CEO. "Our decision was difficult, but in
light of the information we studied about cost of operation,
functionality and location, we had no alternative but to begin
phasing out operations in the complex and consolidating them
among our other properties."
Bob has appointed a Mill Program Manager, Nancy Salustro. He has
also asked a committee of senior managers to help her work with
town, state and federal government officials, and outside
developers to create plans for a reuse of the complex that will
produce the maximum social and economic value.
Decisions about where to locate other activities from The Mill
will be made by analyzing where they best fit with related groups
at other sites and the effect the moves will have on enhancing
Digital's ability to be customer-focused.
Senior managers explained how Digital's real estate strategy has
resulted in more efficient, cost-effective facilities management
first by moving out of leased facilities into Digital-owned
buildings. The second tier of study is an analysis of future
space needs and criteria for determining consolidation into the
most efficient facilities. The Mill contains approximately 1.1
million square feet of space and includes Corporate executive and
administrative offices, laboratories and manufacturing
operations. Efforts to date have resulted in the reduction 8.7
million square feet of space and an annual savings of $219
million.
The original Mill structure was built in 1847 by Amory Maynard
and William Knight, principals of the Assabet Mills. Reorganized
in 1862 as the Assabet Manufacturing Company, it supplied woolen
cloth, blankets and flannels to the Union Army during the Civil
War. In 1957, Digital began operations in 8600 square feet of
rented space in The Mill. As the company grew, it occupied
greater portions of the available space until the total site was
purchased by Digital in 1974.
|
2429.91 | Mill Closing...! | POWDML::BURNHAM | | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:51 | 4 |
| If indeed the Mill is closing as the current announcement today states,
wouldn't it be great for Digital to utilize/rent some of the space and
install a Digital Child Day Care Center for working moms and dads...?
|
2429.84 | | MU::PORTER | | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:54 | 5 |
| Hey, maybe we can boost the bank balance by selling
Genuine Mill Souvenirs?
Bits of lanolin-soaked wood, perhaps?
|
2429.85 | Closing the Mill is WRONG... | RANGER::LTMA2::RACKEMANN | Ford Rackemann - RANGER::RACKEMANN | Fri Apr 02 1993 15:54 | 24 |
| I agree with .68 about the soul thing. Digital *is* the Mill. Closing this
facility to save a few bucks is wrong and is not a solution to our problems.
In fact, it simply compounds them.
The problems in Digital are related to the terrific waste. Decisions are
made every day that waste everything from precious human resources to real
live dollars. Addressing these problems will result in ongoing savings, not
the silly one time bump we'll get from throwing away our heritage.
This "Black Friday" is truly a sad day for Digital and the hundreds of
thousands of men and women who have laboured to make this company a success
over the past 35 years. It's really a sad commentary that it's come to this.
It's too bad there is no time to rethink this one and start addressing some
of the real problems around here - many of which cost no money to fix and
would result in saved funds. It boggles the mind. If there were something to
do to stop this closure, I'd sure be for it.
My vote is "Don't close the Mill"
Ford
...in a deep blue funk...
|
2429.92 | Hope they are there to use the service | FASDER::SHORN | | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:21 | 1 |
| It'll be great if there are any working mom's and dad's still around!
|
2429.86 | Hope :-) was missing... | KAOOA::HASIBEDER | Good tea, nice house | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:22 | 12 |
| RE: .82
>Aahh, There you go again making those rash assumptions!
Hope you were joking, since I didn't do it AGAIN, it was the first
time, and it's not RASH, since in the current cost-cutting structure, I
CAN see the service awards going the way of other programs (we recived
no turkeys for Christmas in Canada last year; that's been permanently
cancelled).
Otto.
|
2429.93 | | RTL::LINDQUIST | | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:29 | 10 |
2429.94 | If its such a great idea, why don't YOU do it! :-) | ASDG::FOSTER | radical moderate | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:34 | 10 |
| While your idea is an interesting one, I think that the idea of
DIGITAL sponsoring Day Care is not in keeping with the spirit of
enterpreneurship and downsizing that is a cornerstone of the '90's.
Instead, what would be much more viable would be for some of the
people at DBM to decide to form a day care center, and to solicit
Digital for start-up funding. Keep in mind, though: a Day Care
Center at the Mill would only draw Digital employees from MSO and
PKO. I don't know if this would be sufficient to keep the business
in operation. They might need to draw business from elsewhere.
|
2429.95 | It's strictly business now. | XCUSME::HATCH | On the cutting edge of obsolescence | Fri Apr 02 1993 16:50 | 10 |
| Last I checked, Day Care was not on the core business units list.
DEC is not in the business for watching children. And the DEC of today
is not about to *spend* money doing warm & fuzzy things like worrying
about the day care needs of it's employees.
The Mill is closing, it's like the last chapter for the book about
the family we used to know as Digital. Everything is now pared down
to bottom line thinking. To the "leaders" of DEC nothing else counts.
Gail
|
2429.87 | We need to do more than sell a building | FASDER::SHORN | | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:00 | 16 |
| RE: .80
Otto, you make me feel better when you say you are hoping to make it to
15 years, now at 13 years. I'm 2 months away and I'm hoping to make it
to 6 years.....after surviving 2 plant closings and a total of 7
layoffs.
.83
Otto, I agree with you, but what really hurts is when you hear about
all the people spending big $$$ in places like Hawaii for COE, DEC 100,
etc. and the other weekend outings that sales and services puts on...
like a weekend for you and the spouse funded by DEC for a grand total
of $104,000.00 (or 2 jobs for one year).
Scott
|
2429.88 | RUMOR to FACT in only 10 days! | JACOBI::JACOBI | Paul A. Jacobi - OpenVMS AXP Development | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:02 | 6 |
|
From .0, this went from RUMOR to FACT in only 10 days! It looks like we have
almost as many leaks as Washington!
-Paul
|
2429.89 | Heard rumor in Sept. 92 | AIAG::MASON | | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:06 | 4 |
| Heard rumor Mill was closing in September of 1992. I was just waiting
to find out how long it took management to tell us the facts.
Jean
|
2429.90 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:17 | 8 |
| Yes, it's sad that the mill is closing. I regret that I never
worked there. I heard from someone today that the mill would
not meet OSHA standards in 1995 or so, and that had a big
impact on the decision to close it. If true (or something similar)
I can understand the decision and accept it, but still be
saddened that Digital is loosing yet another facet of DEC.
Tom_K
|
2429.97 | what about Texas? | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:50 | 15 |
| hi!
since they have chosen MSO to move the Mill to , does this means the
other rumor about us going to Texas was all wash hash?
or you think we still might go to Texas even though the Mill was not
moved to Texas?
you think it is possible for the Mill (which will be in MSO by then)
to still make another move to Texas too?
does any one knows what is going on here?
thank you very much,
\nasser
|
2429.98 | mho | SCCAT::SHERRILL | | Fri Apr 02 1993 18:00 | 6 |
|
RE.91
No a day care center would not be great. This company is fighting for
its LIFE. I think that managment has a lot of other things to worry
about like the SURVIVAL of this company.
|
2429.99 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Fri Apr 02 1993 18:45 | 10 |
|
Even with today being my last day at Digital (leaving voluntarily
for new adventures in more stable environments), the news of the Mill
being closed down is, well, I'm at a loss for words but it certainly
shows that not only from a business perspective, but now from a deep
"soul" perspective the Digital that I joined in 1981 is totally different
from the DEC I'm leaving in 1993. I suspect I'm not going to be the
only person to remember today.
-craig
|
2429.100 | Detach the symbolic from the literal! | NEST::WHITE | | Fri Apr 02 1993 18:53 | 43 |
| Curiously, I was just listening to a tape of Joseph Campbell. This is
from the "jacket" from the 5th tape of Vol, 1 tape 5 of Transformations
of Myth through Time.
"The main problem with symbols," says Joseph Campbell, " is that
people do not view them as symbols." Too often, people take symbols
literally - believing for instance, that they must physically go to
Isreal to get to the Promised Land in a spiritual sense. In this
lecture, Campbell contrasts this mind-set with one that arose in India
around 900 B.C.. Quoting from the Upanishads, he says, " The source of
the gods is in your own heart. Follow the footsteps to that center and
know that you are that of which the gods are born." This is the basic
theme of the perennial philosophy.
SOOOO, bringing some of this heady stuff to the topic at hand....
We have here a real crisis of symbols. And people are identifying the
meaning of the Mill, the symbol, with the literal building. But,
the best of the OLD DEC was not in the building. It was in the people
in the building and their sense of being part of a shared business
adventure. Many of us have been side swiped by the changes and knocked
far away from the core of our creativity and initiative, but we can
find our footsteps back to it again, because it is still a valuable
part of our work. Even the new brand theme - "putting imagination to
work" recognizes that the Mill's style of working is not exactly out of
style.
Whether or not we can bring that kind of energy to our work will depend
on our ability to do two things - to quench the fear of losing our
jobs, which stunts our individual creative spirits, and oddly enough,
to also quench the desire to win, which means making decisions at
the expense of each other (politics, n'est-ce pas?). We need to focus
on the process, neither winning nor losing, but putting one foot in
front of the other on the way back to our best, and here's the tricky
part, _collective_ work.
A tall order, but I would say one that embodies the spirit of the MILL.
The Mill is dead, long live the Mill!
Be Bold!
--Catherine--*
|
2429.101 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Apr 02 1993 18:59 | 3 |
| > Last I checked, Day Care was not on the core business units list.
That's right. It doesn't begin with S.
|
2429.102 | | SFC01::SFC01::SMITHP | Written but not read | Fri Apr 02 1993 19:11 | 2 |
| Does this mean my 5 year, 10 year, etc pins with the clock tower on them are now
collector's items? :-)
|
2429.103 | how much do you bet? | MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M | Mark Silverberg MLO1-5/B98 | Fri Apr 02 1993 19:26 | 6 |
| Since we still own the building with the clock tower, and might own
it forever (if no one wanted to buy it), the symbol is still valid &
may not become a collectors item. On the other hand, someone might
snap it up real soon & off we go. Like any investment, it's a risk.
Mark
|
2429.104 | has any waste EVER been dumped there? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Fri Apr 02 1993 19:49 | 19 |
| re Note 2429.103 by MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M:
> Since we still own the building with the clock tower, and might own
> it forever (if no one wanted to buy it),
This is a very real possibility: any old property --
especially a factory -- is very difficult to sell these days
if it ever was the site of any waste dumping. Cleanup can be
very expensive. This may be opening up a real can of worms.
> On the other hand, someone might
> snap it up real soon & off we go.
On my 10-year award clock, the clock tower emblem literally
did snap off. Does this mean that I can not get it replaced?
:-)
Bob
|
2429.105 | | VFOVAX::OUTMAN | | Fri Apr 02 1993 20:51 | 12 |
| <<< RE: Note 2429.93 by RTL::LINDQUIST >>>
> Many of the digital employees I've encountered would benefit
> from this. They suffer from poor social skills, inability to
> communicate, and don't play well with others. Child Day Care
> would be ideal.
>
> Or, did you mean for their children?
Thanks, call me sick , but I had the best laugh that I've
had in a long time. Thanks...
|
2429.106 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Meet the new boss, same as the old boss | Fri Apr 02 1993 21:46 | 5 |
| >Does this mean my 5 year, 10 year, etc pins with the clock tower on
>them are now collector's items? :-)
if you can find the guy who listed his ford escort in CLASSIFIEDS
a few months backas a collector's item you might have a buyer. ;)
|
2429.107 | Sold to Mitsubishi? | GUCCI::HERB | Al is the *first* name | Sat Apr 03 1993 10:21 | 5 |
| A customer told me yesterday that he heard the Mill was being sold to a
Japanese concern.
As to what happens to the Mill as a symbol? Why it's replaced by the
Alamo of course.
|
2429.108 | | AOSG::NORDLINGER | Send handguns back to Virginia | Mon Apr 05 1993 03:12 | 9 |
| Two years ago, someone on the West Coast (J.L.) told me that
if DEC didn't take Open Systems seriously then DEC would be
displaced from the mill, just as the textiles industry was before.
John
|
2429.109 | local reaction analysis in the local newpapers around | STAR::ABBASI | i am therfore i think | Mon Apr 05 1993 03:45 | 14 |
| i was sitting doing my laundry in the local laundry facilities place
and minding my own business and the guy next to me was reading the local
newspaper waiting for his spin cycle to finish then he flipped to the
business section and i could not help but see the big headline in
front of the page was "DEC shutter down the MILL" (or something like that),
it was huge headline, filling up the whole front of the page in thick
big black print across the head, did not get the name of the paper (may
be the Boston Herald?), any way, this just shows how important this event
locally here in masshsususates, and that allot of people out there must
be talking about it because it such a big headline in this local paper.
\nasser
|
2429.110 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Apr 05 1993 08:47 | 15 |
| >re: <<< Note 2429.85 by RANGER::LTMA2::RACKEMANN "Ford Rackemann - RANGER::RACKEMANN" >>>
>
>I agree with .68 about the soul thing. Digital *is* the Mill.
I read this, and really coudn't believe it.
To a large part of the company the mill doesn't mean anything, I hadn't
even heard that our head-office was in a mill, called the mill, until
I'd been here over 5 years.
I understand that many people may be attached to this building, but
it is definatley not the soul, and it is definately not Digital.
Heather
|
2429.111 | What to do with the "tower".. | SOLVIT::DESMARAIS | | Mon Apr 05 1993 11:35 | 7 |
| I think DEC should consider "donating" the tower and an associated
building to the Town of Maynard for a museum. DEC to still own the
right to use the clock tower as a symbol.
Or it could be given to the Computer Museum..
Try and sell the rest.
|
2429.112 | More Symbolism | SUBWAY::WORTNER | Computers Are Mistake Amplifiers | Mon Apr 05 1993 13:33 | 11 |
| Re: several notes
If we're talking about symbolism, think of the symbolism of a company
that has been forced to close its headquarters building. I can look
out the window and see a reminder of a similar event: the former Pan
Am (now MetLife, but marketed as 200 Park Avenue) building. Companies
that are doing well do not move HQ from large, famous buildings (like
the Mill or the Pan Am building) to obscure ones. In the case of Pan
Am, they moved to a building in/near Miami's airport; in our case,
we're moving to MSO2.
|
2429.113 | SPO is another Historic Landmark | GNPIKE::MIKELIS | Construction means Destruction | Mon Apr 05 1993 13:48 | 9 |
| >The Mill is the only Digital building I've ever seen that had character. All
>our other buildings are modern, boring boxes with no character and no history.
Well let's not forget the Springfield Digital Plant - a former armory -
where i spent many years of my long career at Digital. Unfortunately,
it too has met its demise...and will be closed soon.
/james
|
2429.114 | RE: 2429.110 | RANGER::LTMA2::RACKEMANN | Ford Rackemann - RANGER::RACKEMANN | Mon Apr 05 1993 14:19 | 29 |
| Re: .110
> To a large part of the company the mill doesn't mean anything, I hadn't
> even heard that our head-office was in a mill, called the mill, until
> I'd been here over 5 years.
> I understand that many people may be attached to this building, but
> it is definatley not the soul, and it is definately not Digital.
Heather,
Don't be silly - of course the mill represents the soul of the company,
to many many employees, but much more importantly, to the rest of the world.
The mill is all that some cutomers know. You know, the clock tower that
everybody in here is talking about? This is the building in which Digital
was started. This is the building in which Digital became a one million
dollar company. The very same building in which Digital became a one billion
dollar company. It is the facility in which Digital became a dominating
player in the computer industry. How does it look to the rest of the worlkd
- customers and competitors - when we throw away our roots and abandon our
heritage? I think it is short sighted of you to write off the mill in such a
cavalier way. Closing the mill is a very bad thing - for Digital's
employees, for Digital's customers, for Digital's image, for the local
economy, and even for the state economy. The only possible benefactor of
this poor decision is our competition. It's almost the same as the US
government selling The White House to the Japanese to clean up the deficit.
I hope you wouldn't be ready to embrace that idea so quickly.
Ford
|
2429.115 | I hope the mill can have a new life - again. | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Mon Apr 05 1993 14:19 | 10 |
| I was around for the first exodus from the mills of New England - when
the textile industry moved out. I was pretty young at the time, and
most of the resulting hardships were lost on me, but I do remember the
great decay of the textile cities. The effects of the mill closing
will be nothing compared to that, but the symbolism and feelings of
deja vu are a trifle unsettling.
On the other hand, the mill found a new life when Digital took it over.
I hope history can repeat itself in the mill's revitalization as well
as in the mill's closing.
|
2429.116 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Apr 05 1993 15:03 | 19 |
| In my opinion, most of our customers couldn't care less whether Digital's
headquarters is in the Mill or not. Most don't even know about the Mill
and are puzzled beyond words when they see a clock tower used as a symbol
of the company.
Where is IBM's headquarters? What does the building look like? Who really
cares?
Don't get me wrong - I like the Mill; it has a lot of "character". But to
me it symbolizes a "tradition for tradition's sake" mentality that is holding
us back in the industry. Most DEC employees have never even seen the Mill,
much less worked there.
As employees, we are often "too close" to the situation to be able to be
objective about corporate decisions. We should be careful not to let
sentimentality prevent us from becoming stronger as a company. I think
moving on is the right choice.
Steve
|
2429.117 | The Mill IS a Symbol and Closing it is Symbolic Too | CSC32::D_SLOUGH | Buddy Can You Paradigm | Mon Apr 05 1993 17:49 | 20 |
| I disagree with those who think leaving the Mill for MSO is just
another business decision. It IS a symbol (read message to our
customers and ourselves) and leaving the Mill is symbolic too
(another message).
The trouble is, it's not a very bright message. Perhaps the Mill
is not drab, or anonymous enough, for our new Corporate image.
On the other-hand, moving into the Mill was probably a contrarian's
decision and moving out and into an architecturally tedious place at
the very time when old interesting structures are newly valued for
their ability to inspire seems contrarian too. Maybe Digital is
leading, again, by finding value in weary monotony where no one
else is willing to try. Lead on. I could use a nap.
Dennis Slough
PS. A customer reported to me, at the CSC, that he heard about the
move on his radio (in LA, CA, USA) a mere 4 hours after I got the
news via Livewire. Business media noted the significance.
|
2429.118 | If its for sale, there is a reason... | SX4GTO::LIEB | | Mon Apr 05 1993 18:04 | 80 |
| John N. of reply .108 sent his note reply to me asking if I remember.
Unfortunately I do and after looking at the other replies around it I
thought to respond.
What he is referring to is a bit of New England industrial history.
Once upon a time the 'Route 128' area was the machine tool, textile
tool, and Mill capital of the country. It was the high tech of its
day. Over time the various companies developed a textile tooling
business that was carefully crafted to benefit the tool makers.
Although I have forgotten the particulars, the companies were inter-
locked such that their machines were compatible with each other
(but not necessarily with anyone elses) and textile mills that used
the machines from one NE company had to buy from that and its
cooperating tool companies in order to get something that worked.
The textile industry changed and mills needed to change the type of
cloth they wove and the way they did it. Whereas the New England
companies peddled the 'one architecture' story, the English and
German machine companies asked their customers what they wanted, made
a simpler and cheaper machine to do the new job needed and won the
business. There is a lesson there. Those New England companies
never knew what hit them (because they spent all their time in
their mental New England) and went out of business. That is why
Lowell is a museum an little else. The textile industry also left
as the old machines finally wore out.
My premise to John is that there was a reason why KO moved into the
mill. It was cheap because it was empty.
The company STILL needs to understand Open Systems. At its core, it
is finding out what the customer wants first and then building
something to fill that need. The customer tells the vendor not the
other way around. Unix was chosen in this market not because of its
intrinsic technological elegance, although there are a FEW really clean
bits. It was chosen because the folks 'out there' in user land could
control it rather than some unresponsive engineering company that 'knew
better' what the customer should have.
The current rush toward W/NT is yet another example of the attitude.
Microsoft, BTW, is not putting all of its eggs in the NT basket as so
many within Digital seem to be doing. They just announced MS-Dos V6
and plan to continue that diversified path. VAX/VMS has gotten this
company into the trouble it is in today not because it is a poor design
or that it does not work. It got Digital into trouble because it is
the ONLY way Digital has thought for years. This company more than any
other I have worked with/for looks inward, as if the world outside New
England is opaque. There is more to life that VMS and the company is
only lately coming to that understanding. I see the NT frenzy as but
another continuation of that mindset. It is the old Prism/Mica project
resurrected. Even the NT book by Helen Custer has the familiar look of
the Ozix specs I saw years ago. Even Dave Cutler does not get it. The
Intel based software vendors tell him that they need a function added
or changed and he tells them what he as decided they will get...
Alpha will not save this company. Neither will VMS under the new
banner of Windows/NT. Only the company will save the company and only
when it askes the customer first, builds what the customer REALLY asked
for and stops wasting resources on what the customer does not want,
such as DEC{write,present}, CDA, LAT, etc. that have more internal than
external license share.
It is not performance or even price performance. It is appropriately
priced performance that the customer wants and the sales force actually
knows how to sell.
BTW, Sun is moving to new corporate headquarters next year and will
abandon their original corporate site. No one has noticed since they
are looking elsewhere. For example, they recently had a developers
forum and got 1700 people to show up. Most of their vendors are well
on their way to finishing the Solaris 2.1 ports. People call their Sun
reps asking about systems. The Sun reps actually go out and sell, and
can sell what they have NOW in the pricebook.
Enough. I rarely read notes much less write to them. I rarely read
Internet news either since I have to work with ISVs all day although it
is far more valuable since its bulk of articles are from OUTSIDE the
company. Its all your fault John for sending my your note reply... ;-)
Jim
p.s. "Its De'ja Vu all over again" - Yogi Berra
|
2429.119 | The MILL has been TFSO'd | SOLVIT::GRTVAX::THERRIEN | | Mon Apr 05 1993 18:13 | 17 |
| How many people outside GMA and Digital have voiced shock, regret, etc. at
the news that we are moving our corporate headquarters?
What do our customers say about it? Will it cause them to change their
business practices with DEC?
Will the move help or hurt in our market recognition? What business impact has it
had in the past?
The mill does have sentimental value and it's sad to part with it.
However, closing the mill is saving money, we're told, which can be used to
gainfully employ people.
The choice is a no brainer to me.
Gerry
|
2429.120 | Ask not for whom the bell tolls | BWICHD::SILLIKER | Crocodile sandwich-make it snappy | Mon Apr 05 1993 18:50 | 51 |
2429.121 | | THEBAY::CHABANED | SBS is a crime against mankind | Mon Apr 05 1993 19:03 | 9 |
|
All of this reads a hell of a lot like the biography of Thomas Edison
I read last month.
Fact is that inventor/entrepreneurs inevitably are removed from power
by financial interests. Bill Gates will have his day too.
-Ed
|
2429.122 | Product wasn't the problem... | CGOOA::DTHOMPSON | Don, of Don's ACT | Mon Apr 05 1993 19:13 | 31 |
| Wow! And only a month ago, the little clock-tower fell off my business
card case! Psychic vibes or what!
More seriously, i must take issue with some of the reasoning of .118,
in particular his ranting on our software products.
You are using the old KO approach, make it, do nothing and then assume
no-one wants it because they didn't all show up at our unannounced
sale.
NAS is brilliant, but... No one buys on presentations. Demo the
stuff! The volume of folks at the WordPerfect v5 booths watching the
salesman (yes, he could run his own product!!!) cut and paste from
1-2-3 was amazing. What was he demonstrating? The WordPerfect/Lotus
implementation on a PC of the NAS code we had given them about a year
earlier! What were we demonstrating? Well, we weren't.
So DECwrite has a poor market share. Cancel the product would be one
quick (and probably thoughltess) solution. But WHY does it not have
market share? Is it not richly-featured? Yes it is! Is it available
on many platforms, including your very own pc with Windows? Yes it
is! Is it integrated in the various environments? Yes it is! Is it
easy to get and competitively priced? HAH!!!
Under the leadership(?) of Mr. Smith, glowing tributes in the paper
notwithstanding, the Digital sales force got more and more (rewards and
power) for less and less and look where we are! Now you want to pick
on the products!
If our products are not designed for the customers, why is the only cry
I hear "Allowance!"?
|
2429.123 | would be interesting | CSOADM::ROTH | ELVIS:: is alive... and reachable!! | Mon Apr 05 1993 19:26 | 2 |
| I'd love to see the numbers of how much $ we will save by closing the
mill....
|
2429.124 | Mill ponds hold water, not some analogies | KALI::PLOUFF | Lifestyles of the unrich and anonymous | Mon Apr 05 1993 19:29 | 20 |
| re: .118
Two of the analogies in .118 are, unfortunately, false. The textile
business left New England primarily due to labor and transportation
costs. While it is attractive to think of stagnant technology, recent
history says otherwise. A month or two ago, the Harvard (Mass.) _Post_
carried a reminisce by a long-time resident about the days before Rte.
495 was built (Boston's "outer beltway," for non-residents).
Massachusetts Rte. 110 was then a major route between New York City and
Maine, crammed with vacationers' cars. For a few years, they were also
"filled with the nightly rumble of trucks carrying mill machinery from
Lowell to North Carolina."
Similarly, while Microsoft may not be putting all its eggs in the
Windows NT basket, it is most assuredly nestling them in the embrace of
the MS Windows GUI. Public information from MS mentions nothing about
unadorned MS-DOS beyond version 6, while it does promise a "Windows 32
on DOS" in 1994. MS-DOS v6 is a valedictory.
Wes
|
2429.125 | | SFC01::SFC01::SMITHP | Written but not read | Mon Apr 05 1993 20:36 | 7 |
| re: .118
>> My premise to John is that there was a reason why KO moved into the
>> mill. It was cheap because it was empty.
Seems KO could have a chance to do it again in a couple of years with
a new company :-)
|
2429.126 | so who's closer? are they less objective, perhaps? | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Mon Apr 05 1993 20:59 | 12 |
| re Note 2429.116 by QUARK::LIONEL:
> As employees, we are often "too close" to the situation to be able to be
> objective about corporate decisions. We should be careful not to let
> sentimentality prevent us from becoming stronger as a company. I think
> moving on is the right choice.
Of course, the executives making decisions such as these are
even closer to the situation -- yet the common assumption is
that that makes for more objectivity, not less.
Bob
|
2429.127 | Remember, you read it here first ... | MU::PORTER | | Mon Apr 05 1993 21:16 | 8 |
| >>> My premise to John is that there was a reason why KO moved into the
>>> mill. It was cheap because it was empty.
>
> Seems KO could have a chance to do it again in a couple of years with
> a new company :-)
Aha! The reason why DEC is leaving the Mill is *really* because
the Mill was promised to Ken as part of his "retirement" package...
|
2429.128 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Apr 06 1993 08:23 | 45 |
|
>Heather,
> Don't be silly - of course the mill represents the soul of the company,
>to many many employees,
I did say that I can understand the attachment of some people, but the
majority of people in Digital have never heard of the mill, let alone it
being a soul.
> but much more importantly, to the rest of the world.
I believe this to ba a delusion.
>The mill is all that some cutomers know.
And most customers have never heard of.
> You know, the clock tower that
>everybody in here is talking about?
Until I read this notes topic, I never knew there was a tower or clock,
I have never seen it on any documentation, or official anything in the
10 years I have worked here.
I have never even heard it mentioned - not by employees or customers.
> How does it look to the rest of the worlkd - customers and competitors -
>when we throw away our roots and abandon our heritage?
It is not my roots and heritage from working in Digital, and as the
majority of customers haven't even heard of it, I would suggest
it doesn't look like anything.
> Closing the mill is a very bad thing - for Digital's
>employees, for Digital's customers, for Digital's image, for the local
>economy, and even for the state economy.
I can't really comment on the local or state impact, however I can't see
any detrimental effect for employees or customers - except the employees
who have a sentimental attachment to the building.
I really don't understand why you think it is such a big thing for
Digital, when most of the employees and customers have never even
heard of the mill, clock, or tower.
Heather
|
2429.129 | The DEC values are still best | 42702::WELSH | Think it through | Tue Apr 06 1993 10:19 | 12 |
| re .110:
> To a large part of the company the mill doesn't mean anything, I hadn't
> even heard that our head-office was in a mill, called the mill, until
> I'd been here over 5 years.
But then Heather, you work for Digital.
A lot of us still work for DEC, even if we're forced to
translate that into "Digital" every time we speak or write.
/Tom
|
2429.130 | Just because of this controversy over the Mill, | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Apr 06 1993 11:28 | 3 |
| I'm going to add one more to my 19 undeniable truths about Digital
"Digital cares more about its past than its future."
|
2429.131 | | HAMIS3::VEEH | Schlaf ist das halbe Leben | Tue Apr 06 1993 11:34 | 18 |
2429.132 | The mill wasn't completely empty. | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Tue Apr 06 1993 11:56 | 12 |
| re: The mill was empty
Actually, we shared the mill with quite a number of other companies in
the years after DEC moved in - in fact, one of Ken's stories of early
DEC had to do with how we kept dripping acid into the furniture
warehouse underneath the first board manufacturing line. Supposedly
most of the companies early furniture was acquired from our insurance
company after it bought it off the warehouse. There were still at
least three other companies occupying sections of the mill when I
started in the mid-70's.
/Butch
|
2429.133 | De-kenning Digital | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:18 | 6 |
| A friend of mine is a diehard Millrat. He thinks it will take at
least two years to get the people and equipment out of the Mill. In
fact, other things have to be figured out as well, since the Mill
houses the radio equipment used by the helicopters and security. One
comment he made which I found amusing was that he hopes that this move
really does make financial sense and isn't just more "de-kenning."
|
2429.134 | Repeat after me... | GLDOA::PENFROY | Just Do It or Just Say No? | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:19 | 11 |
|
It's only a building. You know, brick, wood, etc. Made by people.
It is not alive. It does not have a soul. It's just a building where
people work.
Is it possible that the mill is giving off toxic fumes, clouding
people's thinking? Or do you guys out east just need a shrink?
-=- Paul
|
2429.135 | I have a few souveniers. | ELWOOD::BERNARD | | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:26 | 17 |
| I was looking through a closet at home yesterday and came across a
box of wrapping paper that brought back memories. When I started in DEC
there were indeed other companies that shared the mill complex, one of
them was Dennison. It was a company (maybe still in business) that
printed wrapping paper in building 1. Some of us techs back in those
days had to use the elevators to move equipment from floor to floor and
frequently ran into the Dennison workers who were discarding excess
run-offs of wrapping paper. They had a large variety and told us to
help ourselves to the stuff in the trash bins, paper that was protected
in plastic and in perfect condition. Sometimes they got rid of rather
large rolls, ours for the asking. Since I doubt that there are many
original woolen blankets still around from the mill, maybe the wrapping
paper I still have is one of the oldest products that came from the
mill aside from some original DEC equipment. That dates back 25 years.
Paul
|
2429.136 | I think they're a customer even | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:40 | 5 |
| > them was Dennison. It was a company (maybe still in business) that
Still in business. In fact it's a rather large company.
Alfred
|
2429.137 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:43 | 5 |
| RE: .120
You captured my feelings too.
Marc H.
|
2429.138 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Apr 06 1993 12:45 | 5 |
| RE: .121
Can you give some details of the book? Author? Where to buy it?
Marc H.
|
2429.139 | Its painful, but for the best | XLIB::BRUNELL | Outlanders MRO D Division Champs, Again | Tue Apr 06 1993 13:14 | 13 |
| As far as savings go, right off the top it was going to cost $6 million
to bring the electrical service up to code and end the summer brownout
problems. Add in costs to fix all the other problems in the mill, plus
the general operating costs of a complex that size and you get a
sizable savings each year.
We're down to buildings we own now and we still have excess space.
Perhaps the mill will be the last site we have to close.
I love the mill, but I'd rather see us keep several hundred jobs than
keep it open.
Dave
|
2429.140 | Who? The what? | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Apr 06 1993 13:24 | 11 |
| I must admit, I've read this topic with a bit of amusement. For a lot of us
outside of GMA, the mill doesn't mean much. It's somewhat important from a
historical perspective, but as far as our day-to-day business and that of our
customers, it ranks about a 0 on a scale of 1 to 10. It's only in GMA that
one can say they work for Digital and have people know it means Digital
Equipment Corp. Here in Dallas for example, people are will probably think
you work for Digital Switch Corporation (DSC), if you tell them you work for
Digital. If you say DEC, they won't have the slightest idea what you are
talking about. So, moving out of the mill won't mean anything.
Bob
|
2429.141 | So Long | BSS::HOLLAND | Galvanized Yankee | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:13 | 13 |
| I will miss the Mill but I miss Bedford and CXN-1 and.........
Well, I really don't miss Bedford or Route 3 or Route 62 :^) It was
funny to drive to PKO everyday for training instead of Bedford, but
the drive was more enjoyable.
Seems like a LOT of buildings are going away, I guess that's progress?
I do have my clock tower tie tack to remind me of the Mill. BTW, is
anyone going to buy the Mill? For the amount of cabling (fiber, copper,
etc...) it should be worth something!
/Mike
|
2429.142 | Brownouts are voluntary actions | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:32 | 11 |
| re: .139
>>As far as savings go, right off the top it was going to cost $6 million
>>to bring the electrical service up to code and end the summer brownout
>>problems.
As far as I know, there are brownouts because Mass Electric (or Boston
Edison, or whoever it is who supplies the power) asks Digital, and
other major users of electricity, to cut back on power use at times of
peak demand. It happens at PKO and presumably all other Digital sites.
It has nothing to do with the electrical service at the mill.
|
2429.143 | | SOLVIT::GRTVAX::THERRIEN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 15:13 | 17 |
| I believe it's possible, as .120 says, that the closing of the mill "has
everything to do with symbolism". Changing of the logo, the brand campaign,
et. al. are also symbolic.
However, it's not the symbolism that got us to be unprofitable, unfocused, etc.
It's decisions by the people in charge. Until we get the right mix of qualified
managers (business as well as technical) who can create a new Digital which is
fun, profitable, challenging, etc. all these symbolic changes will be
meaningless. That process has begun (witness KO, Jack Smith, Enrico Pesatori,
et. al.)
I'm indebted, and I believe that most of us are, to KO, JS, et. al. for creating
the digital that gave us careers, fun, comaraderie, etc for so long. However,
it's not working any more and so we've got to change. It's unfortunate we
can't find a new role within the company for the leaders of yesterday.
Gerry
|
2429.144 | a side-effect of novel thinking | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Tue Apr 06 1993 15:19 | 28 |
| re Note 2429.140 by ROWLET::AINSLEY:
> I must admit, I've read this topic with a bit of amusement. For a lot of us
> outside of GMA, the mill doesn't mean much. It's somewhat important from a
> historical perspective, but as far as our day-to-day business and that of our
> customers, it ranks about a 0 on a scale of 1 to 10.
I've often felt that one of the mistakes Digital made while
becoming big was failing to continue with the approaches
that worked so well in the early days.
In particular, I always wondered why the Mill was the ONLY
(as far as I know) old mill that Digital recycled.
Instead, Digital recycled a number of relatively new
buildings (including a shopping mall and the RCA Computer
headquarters), and of course it built a number of
characterless facilities (ZKO is the epitome), but it never
continued, with the same passion, the original thinking that
got it growing.
We made the same mistakes in the computer industry, too.
The Mill was merely a side-effect of the original
perspectives of the people at Digital. It was a
one-of-a-kind.
Bob
|
2429.145 | digression | REGENT::LASKO | DEClite: New logo, No Mill. | Tue Apr 06 1993 15:42 | 8 |
| Re: .136
>> them was Dennison. It was a company (maybe still in business) that
>
> Still in business. In fact it's a rather large company.
Random nit: Dennison either merged with or was bought by Avery about
six years ago.
|
2429.146 | Save the Mill? | LEZAH::FACHON | | Tue Apr 06 1993 15:54 | 37 |
| The Mill is a symbol, the Mill is a Myth,
the Mill is a building, the Mill is a pit.
The Mill is tradition, the Mill is folk-lore,
the Mill is adventure, the Mill is a bore.
The Mill is beginnings, the Mill is a light,
the Mill is inspired, the Mill is a right.
And so-on and so-forth. Don't know what came over me...
I *loved* working there -- even had a window overlooking the
pond for almost a year. Had to stand on a chair to see out,
but what the heck.
Anyway, how many DECCIE's would be willing to take
a .5 to 1% paycut to help defray Mill operating costs until
this corporation is back on it's feet and can afford to
sustain an important tradition? Now wait. Even you
skeptics who don't really care, imagine the PR!
"DEC Employees Band to Save Heritage, Keep Mill Headquarters"
or
"In This Time of Trendy Downsizing, DEC Employees Say "Enough!"
If it isn't already, the Mill *would* become a world-wide symbol of
a company -- of a corporation made of individuals -- with
principles. Not that we're sticking to tradition for it's own
sake, but because the Mill symbolizes what DEC did right before,
and what, with hard work and entrepreneurial flair, we can do right
again.
Handled correctly, something like this could have a huge PR windfall
for DEC. One *big* reason to consider it. Start a movement, anyone?
Cheers,
Dean F.
|
2429.147 | | SOLVIT::GRTVAX::THERRIEN | | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:10 | 15 |
| RE: .146
If I'm still around after the next TFSO, and if I'd agree to return .5% to 1%
of my salary to the company, I'd rather have it go to keep people employed.
My ordered priorities:
1. people
2. logos
3. telecom services
4. buildings
5. miscellaneous stuff (5/10/15 year awards, post-its, WSJ, etc.)
Gerry
P.S. The priority of everything after #1 is insignificant and changeable.
|
2429.148 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Apr 06 1993 16:12 | 5 |
| re: .146
No thanks. I'd rather have office supplies.
Bob
|
2429.149 | FORMER MLO5-FIVER | AKOCOA::ANDERSON | | Tue Apr 06 1993 19:32 | 5 |
| My best memories, and perhaps only exposure to what once was known as
the "Dec culture," were the three years I spent at the Mill. I'll miss
it.
Rich
|
2429.150 | | AIMHI::BOWLES | | Tue Apr 06 1993 19:49 | 13 |
| I've never worked in the Mill. Actually, I was well past my five year
anniversary before I even visited even though I work not too far away
in MKO. I've probably visited the Mill 3-4 times -- total.
I sort of like the mystique of the place, but for me, personally, it's
no big deal to see it vacated. I also have to agree with
Heather that, for 99.9% of our customers (maybe Dennison is an
exception) the fact that we moved corporate headquarters is *no big
deal*. All they will notice is that instead of listing our address as
146 Main, we will list our address as 111 Powdermill Road --
*it's even the same town*.
Chet
|
2429.151 | Don't it make my brown eyes blue | BWICHD::SILLIKER | Crocodile sandwich-make it snappy | Tue Apr 06 1993 19:57 | 31 |
| .147
Every party needs a pooper, that's why we "invited" you...gee WHIZ!
You say "people" are a priority, yup, don't think a one of us disagrees
with you, but, the "people" of this (once) great people are demoralized
to a point of no return, and closing the symbol of this wonderful
culture, in addition to all the other insults to our morale we have
endured over the last few years, is simply, to my way of thinking, a
thoughtless action that you can't prove by me is "financially"
necessary, and is a slap in the face of the "people" who worked long
and hard to bring this company to its place of eminence. I'm the author
of .120, and let me tell you, I am plenty pained by this latest
development, it sure doesn't give me the warm fuzzies that our senior
management gives one hoot about the feelings of the "people". Yes, it
was a symbol, and a very special one at that, of a very special place
to work, with all of its quirks and idiosyncracies, not one of those
blend-into-the-background characterless high tech companies...quoth the
Raven, "Nevermore"... (cribbed from Poe)
Too much heartrending change, too fast...
A former MLO1-Fiver...with a window on the pond, and REAL windows I
could open for F R E S H air! and a sun that beat in mercilessly in
the afternoon, and shades you could draw that helped a little, a holes
in the wooden floors that could do a real number on high heels, so I
always had a pair of flats at the ready, and my backside never looked
firmer as when I lived at the Mill, and had to climb all those stairs,
and you could catch KO in the cafe, and you could walk downtown and do
all kinds of domestic errands at lunch...
Sigh...
|
2429.152 | Time to move on... | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Apr 06 1993 20:08 | 6 |
| re: .151
It's a symbol only to SOME people and a lot of those people are gone, some of
their own choosing, some not.
Bob
|
2429.153 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Being a Daddy=The best job | Wed Apr 07 1993 14:09 | 2 |
|
Kinda like the new coke.
|
2429.154 | | SOLVIT::GRTVAX::THERRIEN | | Wed Apr 07 1993 14:19 | 11 |
| re: .151
Congratulations. You've got me cornered. I don't know if I should zig or
zag. I don't know if your proposal was presented in earnest or in jest.
> Every party needs a pooper, that's why we "invited" you...gee WHIZ!
Well, excuse me if I don't say thanks for having been "INVITED" to the party.
P.S. From the reaction to note 2452, seems like there's several "poopers"
at the party. I hope you brought a "pooper scooper"!!!!
|
2429.155 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Apr 07 1993 15:19 | 16 |
| RE: .144
Come on, ZK(O)'s lack of character *IS* its character!
I will say this. I'd love to get an open window in this
place. The air in here sucks. OSHA should take a look at
this place too!
My vote is to dump the Mill. It's not going to be worth
having in the long run.. (This coming from someone who
loved and roamed the Mill for the first 2-3 years of my
DEClife)
In ZK(O) with a sinus infection for the past 6 months!,
mike
|
2429.156 | LONG LIVE THE CLOCK TOWER. | SPECXN::BLEY | | Wed Apr 07 1993 16:31 | 25 |
|
Well how about the building where they used to store the lanalion (sp).
Yeh, the one where if your desk had wheels, and wasn't nailed down,
would roll towards the center of the building. The one where they used
to give one of those big barrels a slight push and it would roll all
the way from one end to the other....it even had slight rises in the
floor to slow it down.
And then there were the manila folders hung from the ceiling to catch
the lanalion drippings so it wouldn't get all over your terminal.
And what about the old generator...that still works, and Digital sells
elec. back to the power company. The big wide belt that runs through
the floor from the water wheel to the generator...Remember that room
with the single light bulb shining bright?
Well enough I guess. I will miss the mill. It was, IS a great place,
and Digital did great things in and with the mill. It would not have
been here this long had Ken not put so much time and money into it.
Whatever happens to the mill, I vote we keep the clock tower as the
corporate symbol....long live the clock tower.
|
2429.157 | | MEMIT::CANSLER | | Wed Apr 07 1993 17:59 | 4 |
|
ref 140.
hi, I use to live and work in Dallas,Georgia too.
|
2429.158 | re: .157 - Don't you mean Columbus, Indiana? :-) | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Apr 07 1993 18:14 | 0 |
2429.159 | millrats | CAPVAX::ANDRUS | We're 106 miles from Chicago... | Wed Apr 07 1993 20:18 | 88 |
|
I worked in the mill for 10 of my 13 years at DEC. I'm going to miss
it but I can understand closing it because it really must be a terrific
expense to maintain. I don't think that looking back is necessarily
bad because I don't think that what made Digital great is exactly what
brought it down to its current level. So to the extent that the mill
represents the work ethic -- working hard, having fun, innovating --
that made us great, I offer these mill rat descriptons that appeared in
my mail a few years ago.
REAL MILLRATS AREN'T CONFUSED
BY TUNNELS UP IN THE AIR
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Real Millrats don't wear shoes with soft crepe soles.
Real Millrats have been up in the clock tower.
Real Millrats don't wince when the pallet trucks rumble past.
Real Millrats don't ask why the pond is yellow.
Real Millrats know where Tory's moved to.
Real Millrats don't wear ties.
Real Millrats can find Building 2.
Real Millrats don't eat breakfast at Paul's - instead, they buy it there,
and take it back to the office.
Real Millrats don't get winded climbing stairs.
Real Millrats have seen the generator.
Real Millrats enter the cafeteria via the exit.
Real Millrats don't get confused by having to go outdoors to get to the
stairwells in Building 1.
Real Millrats don't turn their terminals off at night.
Real Millrats don't append "O" to location codes, and especially not to "ML".
Real Millrats don't wear socks that match their shirts. Sometimes they
don't wear socks that match. Sometimes they don't wear socks.
Real Millrats don't get to 9:00 meetings on time.
Real Millrats don't navigate by pole numbers.
Real Millrats are incapable of giving clear directions to non-millrats.
Real Millrats understand why the pond is uphill from most of the Mill.
Real Millrats know what's in the basement of Building 21.
Real Millrats put their feet up on the desk while they are typing
at their terminals.
Real Millrats know how to get free food from the vending machines.
Real Millrats don't scream "EARTHQUAKE!" when the building leans in the
wind or shudders because a truck has backed into it.
Real Millrats know how to get from 1-1 to the vending machines on
3-1 and aren't afraid of going there alone.
Real Millrats rarely wash their coffee mugs.
Real Millrats have badge numbers less than 6 digits long.
Real Millrats don't use the entrances with guards at them.
Real Millrats wouldn't be caught dead with a VT52.
Real Millrats can correctly identify the components of a PDP-8.
Real Millrats send mail electronically.
Real Millrats have "personal" (non-work) files on their system.
Real Millrats have at least one surplus computer component that they
keep "for nostalgic reasons".
Real Millrats can go places where NOBODY will find them.
Real Millrats would NEVER transfer to Merrimack.
Real Millrats have badge numbers less than 65536.
Real Millrats return from Merrimack (but don't move back to Mass.)
Real Millrats have DECtapes in their possession.
Real Millrats don't get confused when walls have been removed, or moved
since the last time they were in the dungeon; 4-4, 3-4, etc.
Real Millrats offices don't have carpets on the floor.
Real Millrats chairs have flat casters (oak is harder than plastic)
on their chairs and terminal stands.
Real Millrats have stacks of line printer paper soaked with
lanolin on their grey steel desk (no lock).
Real Millrats are not concerned by the toxic waste disposal units
parked by the river.
Real Millrats know where the soda fountain at Mannings went.
Real Millrats tell time by listening to the bell tower.
(If the bells aren't ringing, who really cares what time it is!)
Real Millrats have wooden bookcases, with books in them.
Real Millrats know how to operate Real Elevators.
Real Millrats know how to get a line printer from 11-3 to 4-1.
Real Millrats know where 4-1, 7-1, 3-1, 6A-1, 6B-1 end and begin.
Real Millrats have been transferred to a "modern" office building
at another site, and came back anyway.
Real Millrats miss the board shop.
Real Millrats read graffiti in the bathrooms
Real Millrats know the sound of sand blasted wood, jack-hammered brick,
monkey-wrenched pipe, above, below, and to the side.
Real Millrats like rickety wooden stairways with foot marks worn into them.
Real Millrats string their own terminal lines the length of Building 1.
Real Millrats know how to remove splinters.
|
2429.160 | | NYAAPS::CORBISHLEY | David Corbishley 321-5128 | Wed Apr 07 1993 21:06 | 15 |
| The replies to this note are good examples of our varied experiences while
working for the same company. Sure it means alot to some of us and nothing to
probably an even larger number.
Probably some people only know of the Mill or the Clock Tower by the anniversary
gifts we used to get (for example, my 15 year watch has a little clock tower on
the band).
I'm sure anyone that has worked for a long time in any building has memories
and may disagree with its closing.
RE: recycling mills mentioned in an earlier reply, wasn't the Springfield plant
a former armoury? I was never there but remember hearing this.
BTW, keep sharing your Mill memories, its part of our oral history here at DEC.
|
2429.161 | | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO2-2/T63) | Wed Apr 07 1993 21:20 | 9 |
| re Note 2429.155 by AXEL::FOLEY:
> RE: .144
>
> Come on, ZK(O)'s lack of character *IS* its character!
It's real subtle!
Bob
|
2429.162 | A sad day for DEC | RCOCER::MICKOL | D-FENS | Thu Apr 08 1993 04:20 | 19 |
| I spent a few years working in Maynard Plant MFG (the manufacturing plant
where it all started) and in the Board Shop when it was operating. I was
speechless as a state of disbelief came over me. The Mill is a special place
for DEC. It is a special place for all DEC employees... whether they know it or
not.
The closing of the Mill is a serious milestone in the evolution of our company.
I have been out of the 3M area for 3 years now, but the pain is still real.
There have been many events over the past three years that have brought
feelings of dismay, disgust, puzzlement and confusion. For me, the decision to
close the mill sits right at the top of the most emotional pieces of news I
heard in recent years.
I can only hope its worth it.
Regards,
Jim
|
2429.163 | Not a cheep move to make!! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Thu Apr 08 1993 10:21 | 15 |
| Well, my concern with the closing of the mill is the fact it is going
to cost an aweful lot of money to move equipment and employees from
that place...
Just the cost of moving ALL that PBX/telephone switching equipment is
going to be near 17 million dollars (my calulation). that is just to
move the equipment... It would have to be installed "mirror image" to
the existing, brought on line, then the old powered down and removed.
Not a bad figure for a company bent on saving money...!
Just my opinion
Bob G.
|
2429.164 | move headaches | STAR::ABBASI | i want to play chess | Thu Apr 08 1993 17:54 | 6 |
|
i also sure hope someone make sure the mail is forwarded from
the mill to MSO after they move. i always lose mail myself when
i move from place to place.
\nasser
|
2429.165 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Slave of the Democratic Party | Fri Apr 09 1993 13:55 | 8 |
| re .163
Well, you have to spend money to make (or save) money....
I'd be rich, but I can't afford it...
Tom_K
|
2429.166 | .163, Missing a :) ? | ESGWST::HALEY | become a wasp and hornet | Fri Apr 09 1993 21:22 | 18 |
| re .163
> Just the cost of moving ALL that PBX/telephone switching equipment is
> going to be near 17 million dollars (my calulation). that is just to
> move the equipment... It would have to be installed "mirror image" to
> the existing, brought on line, then the old powered down and removed.
This number is a joke right? I thought there are only 2K people in the
building, there is no way it takes $17M US to move it. For a couple
hundred $K we could buy new NT equipment for a complex for only 2K folks.
That is assuming that in 18 months we still have 2000 people to move. I
would think that we have spare office space in the 3M area for that many
people.
Leave the stuff there, or sell it. There is no way you need to pay to move
any of it.
Matt
|
2429.167 | it's HEADQUARTERS, not just 2100 people | CARAFE::GOLDSTEIN | Global Village Idiot | Sun Apr 11 1993 03:22 | 19 |
| re:.166
No, the 17 Million is no joke. I didn't post it myself because I
didn't know if we had wanted it publicized, but it's the number that
Corporate Telecommunications gave Real Estate when they first raised
the notion of closing the Mill last winter.
The Mill's own telephone extensions are a negligible expense. The Mill
is the hub of the Easynet, the Integrated Digital Network, the Digital
Telephone Network, and the Digital Lightwave Network. We have I think
five European T1 or E1 circuits going there. We have hundreds of T1
domestic circuits there, plus the fiber optic gear. The Mill PBX is
the main control for all of the Maynard/Stow sites (SL-100).
To move out, we have to essentially rebuild the networks elsewhere,
then put them in service. That means LOTS of expensive carrier
circuits have to be duplicated for a considerable period, plus
redundant equipment, etc.
Hence my opinion: No money saved. Ken's ghost.
|
2429.168 | No, It's a Building with Nostalgic Memories | ALAMOS::ADAMS | Visualize Whirled Peas! | Mon Apr 12 1993 00:11 | 25 |
| re: .167 <Hub for Easynet, etc.)
You're joking, right? In other words, if the Mill loses power, or
diaster strikes, the entire Easynet and other telcom networks go down?
For the entire US geography? Sure it's headquarters, but who would
make any location a single point of failure for a DISTRIBUTED,
PEER-TO-PEER communication system???
re: The Mill
While I was a customer and went to Digital classes, all of my ed-svcs.
documentation displayed this picture of a clock tower. Up until a year
after I started with Digital, I had no idea what it was, or cared.
As a customer, I looked to DEC to supply me with a solution to my IS
problems. The mill would have meant nothing to me because it didn't
help me solve my problems. As a DECie, the mill isn't important since
I've never been there, and my customer isn't in the GMA.
I do feel for those that will miss the mill for nostalgic reasons. But
face the facts, I would guess 80% of DECies and %95 of our clients care
less about the 'symbolism' of the mill. As an earlier noter stated,
"If it saves us money, the decision is a no-brainer."
--- Gavin
|
2429.169 | mill not single point of failure! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Mon Apr 12 1993 07:50 | 16 |
| RE: Milling as a "single point of failure" could not be furthest from
the truth.. The many networks are set up in such a way that if the mill
suffered from an unfortunate accident, the network would remain
functioning for the rest of the company...
The mill is the hub during normal business operations.
The cost, as stated, would include a "mirror image" of the present
network, into the new facility(s)... testing then turning up service
between that new facility and the Digital world... then the tear down of
the mill's telecommunications equipment...
By no means a simple task... BUT as a 22 year Telecomm rat I wish I
were part of the team blessed with such an undertaking... What a
challenge.. not to mention at least two years of job security.
|
2429.170 | There's a message here... | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Mon Apr 12 1993 18:10 | 16 |
| I think that the reasoning for closing the mill is blindingly obvious,
if not what some of us would like to hear:
What is the mill a symbol of?
Lets see:
It's the building where DEC was founded.
It's where much of DEC's history happened.
The Mill is a SYMBOL OF DIGITAL's HISTORY.
Digital has chosen to do away with that building/symbol.
Now that's a message that's hard to mistake.
"Things won't be like that again. Ever. Forget about it, its past."
My $.02
Kevin
|
2429.171 | Service Award Catalogue c. 1989 | SNOC01::NICHOLLS | Problem? ring 1-800-382-5968 | Mon Apr 12 1993 22:53 | 19 |
| "For nearly a hundred years the Old Clock has stood at the Mill in
Maynard, Massachusetts as a sturdy symbol of faithful service.
"The Clock has ticked its way through good times and bad. It has worked
its way through the turn of the century, two world wars, the Great
Depression, and three different owners.
"Neither the timer nor the ball mechanism have ever been electrified;
Digital employees climb 120 steps to wind the clock every week - 90
turns for the timer, 330 turns for the striker
"And still the Old Mill Clock goes on. Day after day. Year after year.
"So when the time came for Digital to select a symbol for your service
award, it was easy. We had one in our own front yard.
"The Old Mill Clock. An emblem of excellence. A model of consistency. A
tower of enduring strength. A timeless reminder of your own diligent
work.
|
2429.172 | Cost cutting, you know ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Digitus Impudicus | Tue Apr 13 1993 21:55 | 9 |
| re: .169
> By no means a simple task... BUT as a 22 year Telecomm rat I wish I
> were part of the team blessed with such an undertaking... What a
> challenge.. not to mention at least two years of job security.
I wonder if they'll outsource the job ...
Geoff
|
2429.173 | | TLE::LESSARD | | Wed Apr 14 1993 19:10 | 36 |
|
From what I understand (from many sources) the numbers for
closing the Mill were run again and again, until the right
combination of numbers/excuses were hit upon. (for example
OSHA does not make companies retrofit old buildings. That's
a bunch of horse hockey that we have to come up to some ridiculous
standard!) Quite frankly, the ghosts are too much for current management.
Besides, I think the newer facilities make for a much better backdrop
for designer suits to be seen in. That is what counts, right?
As for those of you who have no knowledge, or have never seen
the Mill, It's a shame. As many people have said, it's probably
are only facility in Digital with a modicum of character. The
reason people are so sentimental over it, is that so much
good work happened there. The Mill did indeed represent a place
of spirit, joy and was full of youthful, eager people.
I think some of the sarcastic comments in this string are uncalled for.
I think people's feelings should be respected as their personal
viewpoints and opinions, and should be valued as such. ( I think
personnel calls is "valuing difference").
Some of the regional viewpoints, such as the West Coast and European
views, interest me greatly (get a life, you said, as I recall). Many
people have stated that they had no clue as to what the Mill was about
or stood for. Perhaps if we came to your area, and said the Tower of
London or the Mission San Juan Capistrano had no value, you might feel
differently about cutting down an area's heritage. The Mill means more
than just Digital, it is a very historic building.
As a general FYI, Bob himself met with town officials yesterday to
consult about possible companies that would be suited to moving
the Mill. Gotta get those property taxes covered!
FWIW.
|
2429.174 | Lots of shed skin; where's the new one? | GLDOA::MORRISON | Dave | Thu Apr 15 1993 04:14 | 9 |
| I've only been here (at DEC) 8 years and so only have a 5 year pin and
hwas looking forward to a 10 year memoribilia item with the Mill on it.
I've driven by once and was truly inspired; next time I go past, if
training allows, i'll stop in and climb up the tower. It is truly sad
to see the Mill close, particularly since many older buildings get
exempted. Those who abandon their successful histories (& their
symbols) often show the first signs of forgetting the inspiration of what
made them great. Let's hope the implications of abandonment are'nt as
weighty as they might be.
|
2429.175 | | VANGA::KERRELL | but that's not my real job | Thu Apr 15 1993 07:28 | 8 |
| I thought DEC was moving out of the Mill building not demolishing it! Those
who feel strongly should perhaps form their own business and rent the Mill
because _this_ business can not afford it.
I for one, am glad I work for a company that is finally recognising that
there are healthier ways to cut expenses than shed employees.
Dave.
|
2429.176 | Don;t you love double negatives! | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Apr 15 1993 08:36 | 22 |
|
> Some of the regional viewpoints, such as the West Coast and European
> views, interest me greatly (get a life, you said, as I recall). Many
> people have stated that they had no clue as to what the Mill was about
> or stood for. Perhaps if we came to your area, and said the Tower of
> London or the Mission San Juan Capistrano had no value, you might feel
> differently about cutting down an area's heritage. The Mill means more
> than just Digital, it is a very historic building.
I think you misunderstand.
I have said the mill is unknown to most of the employees or customers
of Digital, and also I do understand after finding out about it here,
it has a sentimental attachment to a few.
A similar response would be that Americans did not know that the Tower
of London existed, but after reading something about it, understand
that it may have a sentimental value to some.
Valuing differences does not mean not telling the truth.
Heather
|
2429.177 | | GVAADG::PERINO | A bit of serendipity | Thu Apr 15 1993 10:26 | 20 |
2429.178 | Talk about your needless debates... | NOVA::SWONGER | Rdb Software Quality Engineering | Thu Apr 15 1993 12:12 | 20 |
| > I have said the mill is unknown to most of the employees or customers
> of Digital, and also I do understand after finding out about it here,
> it has a sentimental attachment to a few.
That's fine. However, from previous notes it is apparent that there
are those who do not share your understanding.
I personally am sad to see the Mill go. I like the place, and it
holds great symbolism for the company. It's historic. But, I also
understand the need to move on, in both a financial and symbolic
sense.
Some people have gone off the deep end in either direction. The
idea of saving the Mill by donating our pay is just plain silly, and
the people who harangue those who feel any kind of emotion are
annoyingly obtuse. My bet is that the vast majority fall somewhere
in the middle, either feeling some emotion at the passing of the
Mill, or at least understanding those who do.
Roy
|
2429.179 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Apr 15 1993 12:15 | 5 |
| RE: .173
Nice...couldn't have said it better myself!
Marc H.
|
2429.180 | | NEST::TGRILLO | I Don't Brake For Cats...SPLAT!! | Thu Apr 15 1993 12:32 | 9 |
| Many replies here have assumed that becuase we are moving out of the
Mill, we will no longer be using the clock tower as our company symbol.
Has anyone heard any official word that this is true ? I for one don't
think so. We probably have enough anniversary gifts and Certificates
with the clock tower on them in stock to last for the next 10 years.
Its my belief that we are getting out of the Mill because it costs too
much to maintain, not because the new management wants to through away
our heritage or whatever. I think we'll see the clock tower on gifts
& literature for years to come. I guess only time will tell.
|
2429.181 | RE .176 | NYAAPS::CORBISHLEY | David Corbishley 321-5128 | Thu Apr 15 1993 13:09 | 4 |
| Imagine how Londoners must have felt when London Bridge was sold and moved to
Phoenix, Arizona.
David
|
2429.182 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Apr 15 1993 13:59 | 17 |
|
>Imagine how Londoners must have felt when London Bridge was sold and moved to
>Phoenix, Arizona.
Pleased at the money we got.
London Bridge was never a symbol................except for falling down
and costing loads of money to keep repaired (que song....london bridge
is falling down, falling down, falling down)
I always thought that the Americans confused Tower Bridge with
London Bridge, and paid loads of money for something noone else wanted.
And having seen London Bridge in Arizona, I can say I am very pleased
we actually got any money for it at all, we did a very good deal.
Heather
|
2429.183 | A Picture is worth a 1000 words. | SPECXN::BLEY | | Thu Apr 15 1993 14:03 | 15 |
|
There are so many people who have fond memories of the mill, and many
of us will never forget it (or Ken for that matter). So...
How about an 8x10 picture of the "whole" mill, maybe even with Ken
standing in front of it.
That would be one picture I would put in an expensive frame and hang
on my wall.
I would even pay for a *really good* color picture.
What think.....
|
2429.184 | | FSDEV::MGILBERT | Education Reform starts at home.... | Thu Apr 15 1993 14:58 | 8 |
| RE: clock tower as a corporate symbol.
I think we might find it quite difficult to maintain the Mill Tower
as our symbol if we don't own it. Especially if we sell the building to
another company. BTW - My ten year service certificate (given 6 years ago)
has the tower embossed upon it. My 15 year certificate has the Digital
logo but no sign of the Tower.
|
2429.185 | Give me that 3-D plan | IOSG::SHOVE | Dave Shove -- REO2-G/M6 | Thu Apr 15 1993 15:28 | 8 |
| RE: .183
Better than a photo (and there is a superb aerial view around
somewhere) would be that 3-D plan, showing all the bridges and where
they come out in each building.
IMHO,
Dave.
|
2429.186 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Thu Apr 15 1993 15:43 | 5 |
| We could also just lease out the clock tower when we need to use it.
That way, it would continue to symbolize Digital. (Boy, I gotta
remember to get my bran muffins tomorrow morning ...) ;^)
Steve
|
2429.187 | | HARBOR::ZAHARCHUK | | Thu Apr 15 1993 16:54 | 9 |
| I have a picture from 1982 of the Mill pond with the 25th Anniversary logo
floating in the middle of the pond, with bldg 1 in the backround.
re .183
I'll see what copies and postage will cost, maybe I found a new market in
addition to mill bricks ;<)
Bill Z.
|
2429.188 | I can't imagine any employee not knowing about the Mill | ZPOVC::HWCHOY | Mostly on FIRE! | Thu Apr 15 1993 16:57 | 8 |
| For those who think that anyone outside GMA haven't got a clue what the
Mill is all about:
In Singapore, all major proposals (for customers) are delivered in
white binders with the Mill Clock Tower and Digital logo embossed in
gold. Well, that's almost the furtest you can get away from Maynard
short of going to space, it's practically on the other side of the
globe!
|
2429.189 | Woops... | CAPL::LANDRY_D | | Thu Apr 15 1993 18:28 | 16 |
| re: .182
>>I always thought that the Americans confused Tower Bridge with
>>London Bridge, and paid loads of money for something noone else wanted
I remember hearing when it was purchased that the millionaire who
bought it had never actually seen the bridge. He was shown a
postcard showing the "Tower Bridge" and on the card was some
statement about "the Tower Bridge as seen from the London Bridge"
or something to that effect. So when told the "London Bridge"
was being removed and a new one put in it's place he bought it
for the development in Arizona. And in fact he did think that
he was buying the beautiful "Tower Bridge" as opposed to what
he got ;-)
dick
|
2429.190 | y | TLE::LESSARD | | Thu Apr 15 1993 21:00 | 19 |
| Re:176
Yes, I love the double negatives. My "personal" viewpoint
of your notes is that you don't care about the Mill, which
is *your* personal opinion and you are entitled to that.
Perhaps your lack of knowledge of the Mill leaves some
of us feeling you are uninformed. No offense, intended,
but of course.
As as uninformed individual, then, I can certainly understand
your lack of emotion.
Kindest regards,
Meg
|
2429.191 | Please see my suggestion in note 2452.46... | CRAIGA::SCHOMP | Save the clock tower! - Back to the future... | Thu Apr 15 1993 21:50 | 0 |
2429.192 | | ARCANA::CONNELLY | it's Cards-on-the-Table Time! | Fri Apr 16 1993 03:13 | 27 |
|
Maybe as a kind of history project someone should create a "virtual reality"
representation of the Mill that future employees can roam through...? ;-)
One comment i see people making that strikes me as misguided is that by
closing the Mill we'll save employee jobs that would otherwise be lost. I
have to believe that if the Mill wasn't closed they would've ended up closing
some other buildings to meet their cost savings targets. I bet property,
plant and equipment savings are an entirely different "bucket" in the whole
budgeting process from salary and benefit savings and are managed as such.
The use of target headcount numbers like "under 90K employees by Q1 FY94"
indicates that the actual number of employees is what's important, maybe for
symbolic reasons on Wall Street. Else why TFSO so many $25-$35K employees
while leaving the $80K+ ranks in place? I know of one manager who was asked
for a plan on how to reduce his employee budget by 20%. He tried to argue
for putting his whole group on 32 hour/week part-time status rather than
TFSO anyone. Was told: "WRONG!" So getting rid of numbers of people seems
to be more the issue in its own right.
Closing the Mill might've been done for psychological reasons (show that
nothing is sacred, exorcise the ghost of Ken Olsen, etc.), or because we
have some contingency plan that involves merging with or being bought out
by some other company that has an existing headquarters of some magnitude
elsewhere. (Gee, speaking of Texas, is that where Intel is based?? ;^))
paul
|
2429.193 | I'm not reading ANYMORE of this string! | TRUCKS::QUANTRILL_C | | Fri Apr 16 1993 07:54 | 44 |
| Re: .182
Heather, you always get in with just the response I am thinking
of posting but way ahead of me!
As to all this talk of "The Mill" and the statements about
being insensitvie and uniformed etc....
To some people Digital moving out of the Mill will be a blow.
To others it won't mean a thing except maybe an acceptance that
we have to think along new lines if we are to survive. (I am one
of the latter).
It is NOT a question of being uniformed or insensitive to have
the latter viewpoint. The Mill is NOT being demolished as far
as I am aware. I wouldn't care if someone said that British
Parliament was being moved out of Westminster. I might be a
little perturbed at the thought of the bulildings being pulled
down (conversely I'm sure you could find a lot of people in the
UK who would cheer if they were and a lot who would go berserk
at the thought of "The Mother of Parliaments" moving).
I always thought it was called The Mill in a slightly derogatory
way - you know like a treadmill or "I've really been put through
the mill". I've never seen even a picture of it, nor did I
know it actually HAD been a Mill until this string started.
I guess Europeans will have a hard time understanding any
attachment to a relatively modern building like that. Many of
us are living in places which are older without a second
thought.
I was going to ask that we stop debating this subject and that
those who DON'T want Digital to move out of the Mill, do
something more positive, like tell Bob Palmer so and those who
don't care just keep quiet, but that would probably turn on
another flood of "you don't understand, you are uninformed and
you are insensitive" notes and after all. all this noting "got"
to me to the point that I had to let off steam about it.
Cathy
P.S. Digital is moving out of the Mill... People are starving,
being tortured and killed every day - just a point on perspective
here.
|
2429.194 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Apr 16 1993 08:39 | 17 |
| > Perhaps your lack of knowledge of the Mill leaves some
> of us feeling you are uninformed. No offense, intended,
> but of course.
Meg, because I don't have the same viewpoint as you does not mean that
I am ill informed.
The mill has no, or very little, impact on the majority of Digital
Employees or their customers, so I don't see it as a big thing for
Digital, however I can see that some people could be emotionally
attached to it.
However I do admit that I wonder about emotional attachments to a
building, especially when it is planned to be re-used, not pulled down.
Heather
|
2429.195 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Fri Apr 16 1993 10:55 | 11 |
| Instead of getting emotional about this, back and forth across the
pond. Skip over notes from those who you know will upset you. There
are a number of names that "trigger" either the next unseen key or
I type n. Easy enough, their notes are read by those who agree with
that particular viewpoint or aren't as emotional to the topic. I'm
sure there are those or do likewise to mine. No hair off my back.
Make a choice, either continue the excercise in getting the last
word in or move on.
Jim C.
|
2429.196 | | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:19 | 13 |
| I understand that folks who work for Digital in New England, and
have had dealings with/in the Mill would be very upset at the idea of it
passing out of Digital culture.
What those in GMA need to understand is that this does not represent all,
or even most, of Digital Equipment Corporation.
For those of us outside of NE, while we may understand intellectually
what significance the Mill has to DEC, the emotional ties just aren't there.
It doesn't mean that we're uninformed or ignorant, just that its meaning
varies in different parts of the globe. And we ARE a global corporation.
Kevin
|
2429.197 | marketing and sales hit next unseen | WRKSYS::CARLSON | Dave Carlson | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:20 | 44 |
|
Now I know the sales and marketing folks who have been merrily bashing away
at the mill have no clue of what is involved with product development and
qualification. For them my following words will be wasted..
I also realize that many have lumped people's fondness for the mill into some
type of ken-culture mystique and that the mill must be closed to shed the
"old DEC" image.
As people bash away at how in-efficient or otherwise outdated the mill is
I am most struck by the comments in .21 who talks about how herendous it is
moving labs. The mill has several lab facilities that will need to be either
moved or new ones constructed. MANY MANY MANY Environmental chambers, acoustic
lab, the shock and vibration lab, Thermal engineering lab, Mechanical engineer-
ing lab, product safety lab, and the TME prototype manufacturing operation.
If the author of .21 thinks that moving one lab into the mill would be bad, you
have no idea how herendous (& expensive) it will be to move or replace all the
lab operations that I've mentioned.
The quick access afforded to hardware engineering groups located in the
mill will be sorely missed. An engineer could take equipment to the one of the
previously mentioned labs for required testing and return to his area to do
other work in minutes and return to the testing lab if there were problems.
(again within minutes) When I worked in a different facility, transporting
equipment for testing done in the mill was done either in the back of your car
if small enough or sending via interplant truck. Either way is a pain and
usually ended up consuming a half day of somebody's time.
Yup figuring the route to get from one particular building to a different
floor in another building could cause momentary head scratching,especially
if an elevator is down but it's still quicker than property passes and a car
ride or using interplant trucks.
Regarding the simplistic statement about giving everyone new equipment,
you forget there are also engineering support groups in the mill and some
amount of the older equipment needs to be retained to verify problems and
to test possible fixes.
Please do not forget the amount of computing power that is in the mill
to do simulations. There are several mixed interconnect clusters used to
support simulation.
And in closing, yes Heather you are ill informed because you indeed do
not know all the activities that go on here. It is also obvious that you
and other's not in product development or support do not care to know.
|
2429.198 | How do you do this? | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT; Unix a mere page from history | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:23 | 17 |
|
Re:
> Instead of getting emotional about this, back and forth across the
> pond. Skip over notes from those who you know will upset you.
Please tell me how to do this. This is my most wished for missing
feature in notes. I would love to be able to type in the command:
SET PROFILE/IGNORE(xxx::yyy,aaa::bbb,...)
so that I never get to see notes from certain people. I would be
applying the command to people that just write trash notes rather than
those I disagree with. Unfortunately you can't just hit NEXT UNSEEN
because you miss the rest of the notes in a string.
Dave
|
2429.199 | Easy enough | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:37 | 9 |
| Before I read an entry I look to see who wrote it. If I don't care
for that persons tact I look to see if their note is now the last
in that particular string, if so I hit next unseen, if not I hit
N CR which gets me to the next entry. Nothing fancy about it really
and perhaps there is an easier way.
Jim C.
|
2429.200 | y | TLE::LESSARD | | Fri Apr 16 1993 17:44 | 10 |
| .198
Should have taken your very excellent advice and enacted
my personal SET/PROFILE and ignore button. Had done so
well up in until a couple of days ago, then just lost it.
Have now reactivated and expect to have no more delirious thoughts
about offering opinions. Very bad idea. Topic is far too
emotional, I think.
Back to sanity, out of this string.
|
2429.201 | | NEST::TGRILLO | I Don't Brake For Cats...SPLAT!! | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:15 | 4 |
| Re: A few back
Just hit the #3 key on your small keypad and you will automaticly go
to the next note in the string. If you hit the #1 key it brings you
back to the previous note in the string.
|
2429.203 | ref .159 | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Fri Apr 16 1993 19:55 | 8 |
| .-1
that is a nice one.
i assume you work in the Mill too?
\bye
\nasser
|
2429.204 | What happened??? | ENSURE::SCHRAM | | Fri Apr 16 1993 20:16 | 5 |
| What happened to .202???
I thought it was great!!!
M.A.
|
2429.205 | | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Fri Apr 16 1993 20:42 | 4 |
| it is moved to note .159
\nasser
|
2429.206 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Sat Apr 17 1993 02:47 | 5 |
| re: .204
It is great. Unfortunately, it's a duplicate of .159, so I removed it.
Bob - Co-moderator DIGITAL
|
2429.207 | Are we watching History repeat itself? | CSC32::K_HYDE | Yes, we do windows -- CX03-2/J4 592-4181 | Sat Apr 17 1993 18:55 | 39 |
| When I was a new hire in 1980, I recall seeing a videotape presentation
by Ken Olsen. He talked about "The Mill". It was empty when Digital
needed space. Why was it empty in the 1950's when it had obviously
been necessary at some earlier date? To KO, this was caused by people's
working hard, but not working smart. His opinion was that those jobs
might still exist today if those people, most-importantly their
management had "worked smarter".
Isn't that what has happened to the current tenant?
1) While we were busy capturing "market share" and showing improvements
every year by carefully defining the "market" to ensure the future
would show an increase in our share of it, Microsoft was going after
new markets.
2) While we spent much time and effort capturing and reporting on
"Leveraged Revenue", which is a way for every product on an order to
take credit for the other dollars on the order, our software
competitors were making their profits on their software. We
actually helped these competitors get their feet in the door and now
they hold the software platforms that are the key to add-on software
and services revenue. Many of them are working toward hardware
platform independence, which will allow them to write us out of the
account any time they want. They are now between us and the end
customer.
3) What about career advancement? Are there technical paths? In those
parts of the company where technical career paths exist on paper, do
they exist in fact? I was in ISWS (no longer exists) and we
supposedly had a technical career path. My job's salary range was
reduced under JEC and my boss explained that it was because I didn't
manage anyone. The bottom line in our group was two-fold -- The size
of your budget and your headcount. This is how the govenment became
wasteful. How many other groups in Digital work this way?
Those who fail to learn from History are doomed to repeat it.
Maybe Ken Olsen's new startup company will need to rent some space in an
abandoned mill in Maynard, Mass.
Kurt
|
2429.208 | When the heart dies, so shall the body!! | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Mon Apr 19 1993 05:50 | 25 |
| Round and round we go.... will it stop, nobody knows..!!!!!
Boy, I remember those videotapes... It was at my orientation, 12 years
ago... I seem to remember it being at the mill... It seems they held
them there to link us with "the heart of the Company"....! Has the
heart died? If the heart dies, we know what happens to the body. Will
it happen to Digital..!!! I think it already has..
BUT, I'm sure with this new "brand name" campaign going on, they will
find a heart transplant, the patient will live, but the character will
certainly have changed..!
Time to move on, I suppose..! Here's to "life after Dec." I hope to
soon see if it is true, that there is in fact, life after DEC.
**** I have learned this ****
Loyalty is everything for the person giving that loyalty.. BUT means
nothing to the receiver of that loyalty when "it is only business"
seems so easy to say..!
Later..!
Bob G.
|
2429.209 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Apr 19 1993 09:08 | 11 |
| > And in closing, yes Heather you are ill informed because you indeed do
>not know all the activities that go on here. It is also obvious that you
>and other's not in product development or support do not care to know.
So, how will this affect Digital equipment and its customers - most of
whom don't know or care whether these activities are performed in
a building that used to be a mill, or a more modern building.
Heather
|
2429.210 | The Symbolism of the Mill | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Mon Apr 19 1993 11:54 | 16 |
| I know a lot of you think it's tedious to read more about the mill. As
I wrote earlier, it gives the impression that Digital cares more about
its past than its future.
The real issue here is that the mill was symbolic as Ken Olsen was, of
what Digital (a) really was, (b) aspired to be, and (c) was perceived
by customers to be.
To a very large extent in 1993, Digital has become unanchored in a
profound sense (ie in a world of open systems, what can a $14B company
do that others can't), and in a lot of trivial matters.
If a remote observer like me can see a big vacuum which ought to be
filled with a new sense of mission and a spirit of competitiveness, I
wonder why this has escaped the attention of our present senior
management.
|
2429.211 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Apr 19 1993 13:21 | 9 |
|
> The real issue here is that the mill was symbolic as Ken Olsen was, of
> what Digital (a) really was, (b) aspired to be, and (c) was perceived
> by customers to be.
I beg to differ, the mill was symbolic - TOO A FEW.
Heather
|
2429.212 | cynic on a Monday | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Apr 19 1993 14:44 | 16 |
| > If a remote observer like me can see a big vacuum which ought to be
> filled with a new sense of mission and a spirit of competitiveness, I
> wonder why this has escaped the attention of our present senior
> management.
Inc magazine had a short survey report recently. They asked both
management and line/sales people if the company had a clear written
mission statement. 99% of management said yes but only 77% of line/sales
people did. I suspect that senior management believes that they have
stated a clear mission statement. The course, to them, is clear. For
them to know that others feel otherwise would require 2-way
communication. And right now it appears that a pre-requisite for getting
to talk to senior management is buying off on what they want to
believe is reality.
Alfred
|
2429.213 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | There are no mistakes in Love... | Mon Apr 19 1993 15:33 | 11 |
| Symbolism is important -- not just to employees, but to our customers.
Now, the specific symbolism of the Mill may not be important, but many
customers are getting the message, based on the company's actions,
that the company does not place the loyalty of its workforce in very
high regard.
As a result, many of those same customers are re-examining their
loyalty to Digital Equipment Corporation, and wondering if they can
(or should) establish a better working relationship with another
vendor (or vendors).
andrew
|
2429.214 | a deal is a deal! | FROCKY::MANNERINGS | | Mon Apr 19 1993 15:52 | 14 |
| re: .182 and London Bridge
As I understand it some smart young official from the Greater London
Council took the guy from Arizona to Tower Bridge and then got him to
sign a contract for London Bridge. the ugly London Bridge was then
packed up and sent to Arizona, where the recipients first realised
something was wrong when they unpacked it. I just hope the guy from the
council took the rest of the day off after he closed the contract.
Perhaps as some kind of compensation Digital could sell that clocktower
to the city of London. It might look quite nice down at the tower or
maybe in Hyde Park.
Kevin
|
2429.215 | Failure at the Mill today? | CX3PT2::CODE3::BANKS | | Mon Apr 19 1993 16:13 | 25 |
| Re: <<< Note 2429.169 by BSS::GROVER "The CIRCUIT_MAN" >>>
> RE: Milling as a "single point of failure" could not be furthest from
> the truth.. The many networks are set up in such a way that if the mill
> suffered from an unfortunate accident, the network would remain
> functioning for the rest of the company...
I just received the following mail which tends to indicate otherwise...
#1 19-APR-1993 10:07:44.65 NEWMAIL
From: BSS::BSS::K_BISBEE "Kelly Bisbee CNMC-West DTN 592-5469 19-Apr-1993 0958"
To: @CSCDIST:CXO3,@CNMCCXO12,COMET::MAJORC
CC: K_BISBEE
Subj: DTN service is down
April 19, 1993
09:50
All DTN service is down at this time due to a problem at
the Mill.
Do not have an estimated time of restoration.
Will send out another message when service is operational.
Thank you
CNMC West Telecommunications
|
2429.216 | | AIMHI::BOWLES | | Mon Apr 19 1993 18:37 | 10 |
| >April 19, 1993
> 09:50
>
> All DTN service is down at this time due to a problem at
> the Mill.
.......And probably no one to fix it - the offices in MA are closed due
to that unique holiday, Patriot's Day.
Chet
|
2429.217 | | 11SRUS::POITRAS | | Mon Apr 19 1993 18:38 | 54 |
| re: .211
Right on, Heather! "The Mill is symbolic to a few". At least one note from
Europe seemed to indicate that someone over there was thinking that all U.S.
employees or all New England employees were crying their eyes out over the loss
of the Mill. Well, it just isn't so. I started in the Mill almost 20 years
ago. Like many other firsts: first love, first car, first house, whatever,
it is memorable. I have fond memories, fun memories, and unpleasant memories.
But they're all memories, just as they should be. It's a nice old building
and it would be a shame if it burned down or was demolished, but I don't
*need* it. Back in the old days the rain came though the roof and the snow
came through the windows and we walked to work bare-footed, in the snow, seven
miles each way, up hill (in both directions) etc. It was interesting. The
building I'm in now is warm and dry and level and modern and quiet. I can
do my work comfortably. I do my job, I like what I do, others like what I do,
and I get a paycheck with the name Digital on it. I'm happy with that.
Except for this conference, I'm not hearing *anyone* in the group or otherwise
moaning about the loss of the Mill. From the way that some people are carrying
on about it, I wonder if they are still living at home with their folks because
they can't bear to be away from the house they grew up in and the people who
raised them. Time marches on. Let go of the past and be thankful you still
have a job. It's just a building. It's not as if a family member has died.
If it were a death in the family or the loss of your home I'd be very
sympathetic, sensitive, and understanding. I know I must sound mean to some
people but I just don't understand all this furor over the Mill.
re: .213
> Symbolism is important -- not just to employees, but to our customers.
> Now, the specific symbolism of the Mill may not be important, but many
> customers are getting the message, based on the company's actions,
> that the company does not place the loyalty of its workforce in very
> high regard.
> As a result, many of those same customers are re-examining their
> loyalty to Digital Equipment Corporation, and wondering if they can
> (or should) establish a better working relationship with another
> vendor (or vendors).
Says who? You? Manufactured facts are not facts! The facts are that
we lost on the order of $300 million in Q3 last year and lost
only $30 million in Q3 this year and we're expected to finally turn a profit
in Q4. Analysts are saying (refer to an article in The Economist mentioned
elsewhere) that Digital is turning around. Maybe it's because we have become
so efficient recently that we can lose customer confidence and sales and
still improve, but I doubt it very much.
Seperately, do you think Digital's customers look at Digital's regard
for employee loyalty as being any less than that of IBM, Wang, Prime or
any of the other myriad of large computer and non-computer companies that
have been laying off employees and selling off properties? I don't. I suspect
that many of our customers are doing the same thing. Everybody's doing
exactly what they think they have to do to stay in business: turn a profit.
Mac
|
2429.218 | | CX3PT2::CODE3::BANKS | | Mon Apr 19 1993 21:41 | 9 |
| Re: <<< Note 2429.216 by AIMHI::BOWLES >>>
> .......And probably no one to fix it - the offices in MA are closed due
> to that unique holiday, Patriot's Day.
Ah! I'd forgotten about that. Explains the low activity level in most notes
conferences...
- David
|
2429.219 | TPU to your rescue | FUNYET::ANDERSON | OpenVMS Forever! | Tue Apr 20 1993 20:33 | 16 |
2429.220 | The business press says... | KALI::PLOUFF | Lifestyles of the unrich and anonymous | Wed Apr 21 1993 16:31 | 18 |
| re: .211 and many others
Heather Thomas protests repeatedly that the Mill is symbolic to only a
few, and certainly not to most Digital employees and customers
worldwide.
Hmm, _The Economist_, April 17, 1993, thinks the Mill is of interest to
enough Britons that it's pictured in the article, and mentioned as the
latest step in Digital's cuts under Bob Palmer. Best quote:
"The idiosyncratic structure around Ken Olsen is being vaporised,"
notes William Bluestein of Forrester Research, a consultancy based
in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The rest of the article is full of the typical _Economist_
perceptiveness.
Wes
|
2429.221 | what its age? | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Wed Apr 21 1993 18:00 | 7 |
|
did someone say how old is the Mill?
i bet it was build in the 1700's A.D. or something like that?
thank you,
\nasser
|
2429.222 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | blah blah blah GINGER | Wed Apr 21 1993 18:39 | 4 |
| The Mill was built in the 19th century; it's a fairly typical example
of mid-century industrial architecture.
andrew
|
2429.223 | Live and let live | LARVAE::GRAY | Chris | Wed Apr 21 1993 20:42 | 27 |
| Hi,
I just can't see anyone being as attached to DECpark (REO) as they
obviously have to the "mill". :-)
Having worked for a company which had part of its offices in a nice
country house (many acres of land, lake, peacocks, cattle, stables,
etc, etc - especially close to a v. good village pub), I can really
understand the attachment people have to being in an "old" building -
especially one were the company (almost) started from.
However, when change is inevitable - we must be prepared to grieve,
allow ourselves time to recover, and then get on with our lives. By
not allowing people "space" to grieve, we are only stoking up
resentment, anger, etc, etc.
In a small way, we do this in our sale team when we loose a bid.
Having worked b****y hard on a bid, put your whole life into it, only
to loose - the team is devastated and needs space in which to grieve
and recover. Not quite the same as having to move out from your second
home (eg: the "Mill") - but there are similarities.
Live and let live.
regards
Chris
|
2429.224 | | MSD26::WOJDAK | | Thu Apr 22 1993 11:49 | 60 |
| > did someone say how old is the Mill?
> i bet it was build in the 1700's A.D. or something like that?
> thank you,
> \nasser
Some quotes from the "A Walk Through The Mill" brochure,that was
given out last year for the 100th celebration of the clock (1892-1992).
" A proper tour of the Mill begins at
the beginning,at the river that
gave the mill its name and its power.
In 1847 Armory Maynard acquired
water rights to a stretch of the Assabet
River and deeds to choicest land,
in partnership with William Knight.
The two designed and built a wooden
mill and began the buisness on manu-
facturing carpets and carpet yarn."
" The Mill buildings date from 1846 to 1918,
and although the architectural styles vary,
the complex is unified by the red brick that
extends as far as the eye can see.The oldest
buildings are quite plain,with shallow pitched
roofs.Fancy brickwork over slightly arched windows
is a sign of later construction."
" The 19 buildings of the Mill complex are joined
by a network of bridges: A challenge,since floor
levels don't typically correspond from one building
to the next.Bridges slant up and down, run at odd
angles to the buildings they connect, and form a
maze that is a test of skill to all but the 'Mill
Rats', the engineers who are fiercely attached to
their 19th century workplace."
" In its heyday the Mill provided jobs for over
4000 workers.Even 10 years after the Depression,
the American Woolen Company employed nearly 1,500
workers. Today, Digital's workforce around the
globe far exceeds the number of workers found at
the old mill during its most vigorous times."
" What kept Maynard from the fate of other New
England mill towns? Perserverance, ingenuity, and
clear-eyed pragmatism.Once again Maynard is working
full tilt.Digital Equipment Corporation has breathed
new life into the MIll that has been its home since
1957."
|
2429.225 | | FRSBEE::ROBERTS | back to anthracite | Thu Apr 22 1993 12:40 | 6 |
|
I hope when time comes to leave this facility, we will be allowed to
bring in cameras and take a few pictures. I doubt I'll ever work in
a wooden structure like this again.
Gary
|
2429.226 | is it legal to do? | STAR::ABBASI | checkmate! | Thu Apr 22 1993 13:48 | 11 |
| .-1
Gary, can you take pictures from the Mill now but from the outside of
it? is there you think security problems with this? i also wanted
to take a picture of our ZKO building facility from the outside offcourse
to mail to my mother and father and every one so they can see where i work
and be so proud of me and all but i did not do it because i was afraid
to take the picture of a digital facility even from the outside, i
thought it was illegal or something?
\nasser
|
2429.227 | Wood is wonderful! | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Thu Apr 22 1993 15:38 | 11 |
| re .225
Wooden structures! I remember the old plywood office partitions in the
Mill. Once when the group I was in changed buildings within the Mill,
I came in on the weekend of the move with a hammer and crowbar. It
took the managers in the offices on either side of me 6 months to
realize that my office was 3 feet wider than theirs (these were not the
most observant guys in the world...). And they accepted my explanation
that it must be because I had a programmers cubicle!
/Butch
|
2429.228 | cameras | RGB::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Apr 23 1993 18:15 | 7 |
| I know of no restriction against taking pictures of the outside of any of
our buildings. There *are* restrictions against bringing cameras *into*
many of the buildings. It amazes me that security is so paranoid about
cameras, but you can walk right out with a magtape. Talk about looking
backwards...
Larry
|
2429.229 | | STAR::ABBASI | iam in my mid-life crises | Fri Apr 23 1993 19:20 | 16 |
| >cameras, but you can walk right out with a magtape. Talk about looking
>backwards...
hi Larry,
i dont think according to the procedures and regulations in place
you are supposed to take out tapes or such mass storage media with you
prior to previous acquisition of a clearances from the appropriate
channels of authority. as it a matter of fact, if the security
officers in place at the time are in full awareness of this
circumenstances in progress they will request you to surrender such media
until and of such a time you display to them the ammended and related
documents for discharge purposes of said items.
\nasser
|
2429.230 | | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Mon Apr 26 1993 14:31 | 6 |
| Excellent! This didn't used to be the case, although it's a long time
since I've heard of its being tested. Over the last few years, we've
carried our data on removable disk drives. Those require property passes.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
2429.231 | missed the point again | WRKSYS::CARLSON | Dave Carlson | Tue Apr 27 1993 14:53 | 22 |
| re.209
>> So, how will this affect Digital equipment and its customers - most of
>> whom don't know or care whether these activities are performed in
>> a building that used to be a mill, or a more modern building.
It is not whether the activities are performed in an old mill or a new
building, it's the fact that the activities will likely no longer be
closely linked (tunnel access) to engineering.
How will it affect Digital and it's customers?
Try time to market and extending the overall development cycle.
The people in the mill are not being moved to a different facility of
the same size. The plan is to place groups in existing facilities.
The likelyhood of our engineering group being in the same location as
all the test labs, environmental, safety, shock and vibration is very
small. The inefficiency and additional time in moving equipment between
buildings now several miles apart becomes reality.
Dave
|
2429.232 | Missed the point again | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Apr 27 1993 16:03 | 16 |
|
> The people in the mill are not being moved to a different facility of
> the same size. The plan is to place groups in existing facilities.
> The likelyhood of our engineering group being in the same location as
> all the test labs, environmental, safety, shock and vibration is very
> small. The inefficiency and additional time in moving equipment between
> buildings now several miles apart becomes reality.
If there are groups that need to work together, they should be together.
I don't see what difference it makes to most of Digitals employees
or customers whether they are together in a building that used to be a
mill, or a more modern building.
Heather
|
2429.234 | Tunnels are now electronic | MR4DEC::HARRIS | | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:57 | 16 |
| Re .231:
As for lack of tunnel access slowing time-to-market and extending
product development cycles...
Digital is spending plenty of money developing networking and data
management software products to enable concurrent engineering by widely
dispersed development and manufacturing teams. The ASD/SEE offering is
intended to enable management of large (>2M lines) software development
projects spanning many geographies and companies. Seems we don't
believe in the necessity of tunnel access any more -- or at least that
we recognize that the design and manufacturing of most products have
become decentralized. That's what we're telling our customers,
anyway...
Mac
|
2429.235 | Further down the side path... | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Thu Apr 29 1993 19:02 | 12 |
| When you NEED to be decentralized, it's a good idea to be able to do it
well. Many of our customers need to carry out their work at multiple
sites. Often we need to in Digital. That doesn't make decentralization
what you should choose if you have a choice.
I was on a project once that spanned at least 5 groups in at least 3 widely
separated sites. Sure we had email and notes and teleconferencing. It
was still a lot harder (and slower) than being in the same site. All this
nifty technology we've got simply made it POSSIBLE.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
2429.236 | Mill memories and re uses conference | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Jun 24 1993 14:44 | 50 |
| A notes conference has been opened at LSTARK::MILL_MEMORIES to collect
re-use ideas for the Mill complex as well as to provide a place for
memories of the Mill and working there.
Alfred
<<< CVG::LSTARK$DKA200:[PUBLIC.NOTES]MILL_MEMORIES.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Uses for and memories of the Mill >-
================================================================================
Note 1.0 Welcome to the Mill Uses and Memories Conference No replies
CVG::THOMPSON "Radical Centralist" 38 lines 8-JUN-1993 09:38
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Over the next two years, Digital will be relocating out of the
Maynard Mill complex. The company is looking for reuses of the
facility which will be good for the community and good for the
local economy. At the same time we want to preserve and
celebrate the memories and traditions that have been associated
with these unique buildings.
Established by the Mill Relocation Task Force, this notes file is
intended as an open forum for discussion of suggested reuses of
the Mill and suggested activities to preserve and celebrate Mill
memories. It is also a place to gather the Mill-related
recollections of all Digital employees.
This is not the place to discuss details of the relocation as it
unfolds. Since that will happen business by business over many
months and since those plans will be subject to constant revision
to meet changing business needs, your managers should be your
main source of information about space allocation and schedule.
Please post your ideas and recollections as replies to the topics
established here. This structure will make the file easier for
all to read and will help avoid duplication. It also will help
jog your memories and stimulate creative thinking that could
actually be put into action.
If you have friends who are retirees or who recently left the
company, please ask them for their input as well and enter their
contributions for them.
Members of the committee will read this file, but will not have
time to respond individually to your suggestions. The most
promising ideas will be discussed at regular meetings, and
decisions regarding future action will be posted here.
Thank you for your cooperation and creativity.
|
2429.237 | DNS address for Mill memories conference | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed Sep 08 1993 11:58 | 17 |
| <<< CVG::LSTARK$DKA200:[PUBLIC.NOTES]MILL_MEMORIES.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Uses for and memories of the Mill >-
================================================================================
Note 2.1 Conference Announcements 1 of 1
CVG::THOMPSON "Radical Centralist" 10 lines 7-SEP-1993 15:09
-< DNS object name now available >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A DNS object name has been created for this conference. In the event
that this conference ever moves, if you use the DNS object, you should
never have to update your notebook entry to find this conference.
That's the theory anyway. :-) It seems to work fairly well in practice.
The DNS name for this conference is:
.easynote.confs.other.mill_memories
Alfred
|
2429.238 | marketability of the Mill vs. the Wang towers | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Feb 17 1994 12:27 | 14 |
| The Wang towers in Lowell, one and a half million square feet of modern
high rise office buildings, located at the intersection of two major highways,
went at auction the other day for just over $500,000 dollars, or "the price
of two ordinary single family homes [in this part of the country]."
What might this say about the marketability of a similarly sized,
substantially older (but well-maintained and improved) complex
within 20 miles of the towers, with no access to major highways?
- tom]
(The Wang towers are reported to need $2 million to $3 million per year
for utilities, taxes, maintenance, security, and the like, so the half-million
purchase price will soon fade into the noise from the buyer's point of view.)
|
2429.239 | | CVG::THOMPSON | An other snowy day in paradise | Thu Feb 17 1994 12:33 | 3 |
| Yeah, but the Mill has character. :-)
Alfred
|
2429.240 | from $80 mil to $500K | SUBSYS::WOJDAK | | Thu Feb 17 1994 12:41 | 9 |
| More on the Wang towers: they were built at a cost of $80 Million
and are appraised for $20 Million for tax purposes.When the auctioneer
was asked about the price he said it was fair, it is what the market
will bear. The person who bid on the complex, was escorted out the back
door away from reporters. So, it is not sure who actually bought it.
Hey, wouldn't they make nice luxury apartments/condos?
Rich
|
2429.241 | | NACAD2::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:30 | 10 |
| I figure it's a good news/bad news deal. The good news is, you just
bought the property for only $500K! The bad news is, your payments
work out to be about $3M per year for the foreseeable future ...
Makes it sound basically like an easy to get, infinite-year loan with
600% interest and no prepayment option, if we're talking single-family
homes. The other good news is, the rate is pretty much fixed ...
;^)
Steve
|
2429.242 | Wang Towers remembered | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Dogbert's Clues for the Clueless | Thu Feb 17 1994 13:52 | 32 |
| Wang towers, the stuff of legends, is gone? I worked on Wang hardware
and closely with Wang itself in the early eighties, when they were
hot-hot-hot since they actually had computerized multi-user
word-processing (that by today's standards, looks a lot like entering
hieroglyphics with a vt100, but anyway...).
I think Fred Ong was at the wheel back then, steering it down a
co-axial connection course into a rigid OS, where it got hulled and
began sinking. There was an adventure game called "Wang Towers",
wherein the computers had taken over earth and you had to get the final
junk mail list of humans from the ruins of the tower to save the world.
FWIW, Wang and Digital have similarities to me. They were heavily
concentrated in the high-cost northeast (obviously not so high cost
now, 'eh?), had distinctive headquarters (Mill/Towers), expanded
rapidly, had excellent employees, began a downward spiral, and began
going through reorganizations. Often-times, in the latter days, a
sales rep announcing a reorg to a large user's group would find that,
upon returning to his office, another one had taken place in his
absence, completely invalidating his announcement.
A product/service was "spotlighted", much money put towards its
development/sale, then dropped, leaving the few customers who bought it
feeling very alienated. I did several Wang to Dec conversions back in
those days after I thought I had left the Wang arena.
I feel some heartstrings pulled, knowing the fate of the Towers and
those whose working life was led in their shadow. I've run into
several ex-Wang people here at Digital.
Maybe someone should study what happened. To misquote: "Those who
don't study history are doomed to repeat it.".
|
2429.243 | Wang-gone | AMCUCS::YOUNG | I'd like to be...under the sea... | Thu Feb 17 1994 16:08 | 6 |
|
So with Wang gone shouldn't we be using the term Wung?
;^)
|
2429.244 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 17 1994 16:29 | 11 |
| Wang the company is not gone. It in fact is showing a profit. It's the
Wang towers that were sold, but the company had abandoned them already.
I was amused by a comment in the Globe article about the Wang towers sale;
the article mentioned that Digital was moving out of the Mill and that IBM was
considering leaving Armonk, and then the writer made some comment about
companies realizing that posh top-floor executive offices were no longer an
appropriate image. I said to myself that the writer has obviously never
been to the Mill...
Steve
|
2429.245 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 17 1994 17:42 | 6 |
| >Wang the company is not gone. It in fact is showing a profit. It's the
>Wang towers that were sold, but the company had abandoned them already.
I believe Wang is still in the towers -- part of the deal is that the new
owner has to lease part of them to Wang for 6-12 months. The Globe says
Wang "is abandoning" the towers, not that they have abandoned them.
|
2429.246 | hopefully, it will be occupied | RICKS::NORCROSS | Designer of Systems and Logic | Thu Feb 17 1994 18:58 | 23 |
| Re: yearly costs
> (The Wang towers are reported to need $2 million to $3 million per year
> for utilities, taxes, maintenance, security, and the like, so the half-million
> purchase price will soon fade into the noise from the buyer's point of view.)
> I figure it's a good news/bad news deal. The good news is, you just
> bought the property for only $500K! The bad news is, your payments
> work out to be about $3M per year for the foreseeable future ...
> Makes it sound basically like an easy to get, infinite-year loan with
> 600% interest and no prepayment option, if we're talking single-family
> homes. The other good news is, the rate is pretty much fixed ...
I would assume that the $2M to $3M per year to maintain the building
refers to the occupied building (utilities, maintenance, security, etc.).
That occupation will bring income to offset the costs, so I wouldn't quite
put it the way Steve did. Of course, taxes must be paid regardless of
occupation.
It sounds like a steal to me.
/Mitch
|
2429.247 | Moving out? Not from this veiw... | PCBOPS::OUELLETTE | | Thu Feb 17 1994 19:01 | 7 |
|
<the article mentioned that Digital was moving out of the Mill
Moving out??? Every day I see more and more new groups moving IN.
Whats the true story on this? Are we closing the Mill down or
not? I've heard talk of keeping just a couple building open.
|
2429.248 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Thu Feb 17 1994 21:37 | 9 |
|
Heard at dinner one night:
"What's the difference between Wang and Digital?"
"Oh, about 5 years"
mike
|
2429.249 | money for moving | MEMIT::SILVERBERG_M | Mark Silverberg MLO1-3/H20 | Fri Feb 18 1994 09:57 | 8 |
| re .247
Hundreds of folks have moved into the mill recntly, and many more are
just moving around the mill. Seems like we're getting ready for a
long summer next to the pond 8^)
Mark
|
2429.250 | so i've heard | CAPNET::GUMPA::Corbett | | Fri Feb 18 1994 17:38 | 4 |
| The new rumor is that someone has made an offer on the Mill and they are
trying to scrable around and figure a way of getting everyone out by June.
mc
|
2429.251 | ? | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Dogbert's Clues for the Clueless | Fri Feb 18 1994 18:46 | 3 |
| So they're, in effect, "Milling around?"
:^] Brent
|
2429.252 | Office of the President moves to MSO2 facility this fall | CVG::THOMPSON | Another snowy day in paradise | Wed Mar 23 1994 13:53 | 28 |
|
Worldwide News LIVE WIRE
Office of the President moves to MSO2 ... Date: 23-Mar-1994
Office of the President moves to MSO2 facility this fall
Digital will move the Office of the President to the MSO2
facility in Maynard this fall as part of its announced intention to
close the Mill.
Last April, Digital announced its intention to close the 1.1
million square foot, 19th-century structure and relocate the businesses
to other eastern Massachusetts Digital sites.
The Office of the President will occupy part of the second floor
of the three-story MSO2 building, which opened in 1991. The facility
is located off Powdermill Road at the eastern end of Maynard. Digital
offices in the MSO2 space are being moved in April to allow for the
modifications, according to Nancy Salustro, Mill Re-use manager.
The Mill closing is part of the overall New England real estate
consolidation program. Since FY90, more than 7 million square feet of
building space has been closed for a savings to Digital of more than
$140 million annually.
|
2429.253 | for days that he doesn't limo in | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Wed Mar 23 1994 15:38 | 1 |
| Has Lucente picked out a parking space yet? ;-)
|
2429.254 | And the guard says | IJSAPL::OLTHOF | Oranje goes America | Thu Mar 24 1994 05:46 | 6 |
| Guards are useually well informed. When I was at the Mill a couple of
weeks ago, he claimed that certain groups move INTO the Mill. He also
said that Digital would not be able to sell it because nobody would
want it.
Henny Olthof, The Netherlands
|
2429.255 | Save the Belltower ! | CHEFS::HEELAN | Dale limosna, mujer...... | Thu Mar 24 1994 06:11 | 15 |
| In my presence, a main Board Director of the UK's largest company told
his Chairman:
"If you really want to understand DEC,you HAVE to visit the Mill"
This was when when we were making $100M from this account. The demise
of the Mill, I guess, is part of the rites of passage from the old DEC
to the new maroon Digital.
A bit sad though.
:-((
John
|
2429.256 | I'm Being Moved | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 223-8576, MSO2-2/A2, IM&T) | Thu Mar 24 1994 09:23 | 11 |
| re Note 2429.255 by CHEFS::HEELAN:
> "If you really want to understand DEC,you HAVE to visit the Mill"
Will it be possible to understand DEC (excuse me, Digital)
once the Mill is closed?
Bob
P.S. For a limited time only -- if you want to visit the
future site of the Presidential suite, come visit me in MSO2!
|
2429.257 | You ARE taking all your CPUs when you move... aren't you? :-) | DRDAN::KALIKOW | The sun never sets on the Web | Thu Mar 24 1994 10:18 | 5 |
| Yeah Bob, rumor hath it that he's only taking over your cubie because
he wants as little hassle as possible when he goes out Web-surfing.
Boy, will HE be surprised! :-)
|
2429.258 | Surf ? where's the ocean | IAMOK::VAUGHAN_D | Tale as old as time.. | Thu Mar 24 1994 15:27 | 5 |
| He just wants that great view of the parking lot :-)
Does BP know how to Web-surf ?????????????????
Dave V
|
2429.259 | | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | | Thu Mar 24 1994 16:16 | 4 |
| Maybe we can come full-circle. You know,rent bits and pieces of the
mill to "start-ups" like we were doing way back when.
Ken
|
2429.260 | I heard Ken O. bought a building... | RUMOR::FALEK | ex-TU58 King | Thu Mar 24 1994 17:27 | 1 |
|
|
2429.261 | Re 2429.258 see sofbas::Internet_Tools 450.0 ! | DRDAN::KALIKOW | The sun never sets on the Web | Thu Mar 24 1994 23:40 | 2 |
| Press KP7 to add to your NOTES$NOTEBOOK...
|
2429.262 | it's been bought... | MKOTS3::LANGLOIS | Which bridge to burn,which to cross | Thu Sep 22 1994 15:25 | 55 |
| Franklin Lifecare Corp. to purchase Digital's Mill complex
Franklin Lifecare Corp. and Digital today announced that they
have signed a purchase and sale agreement for the Mill complex located
at 146 Main Street in Maynard, Mass.
Franklin Lifecare Corp. is a for-profit, Massachusetts-based
company that was formed specifically to create an integrated elder care
campus at the Mill site.
The campus, which will be renamed Mill Pond Village, is expected
to be developed in accordance with a master plan that would ultimately
provide housing, health care, education and medical research services
for the elderly. The development of Mill Pond Village is projected to
take five years and cost between $20 million and $50 million.
Digital and Franklin Lifecare expect to close on the purchase of
the site by early November. Current Mill employees will continue to be
relocated to other Digital-owned facilities with the expectation that
two-thirds of the Mill will be vacated by the end of December. The
company has arranged to lease back space from Franklin Lifecare during
the interim.
"The Mill has played an important role in the history of both the
town of Maynard and Digital," said Nancy Salustro, Digital's Mill Reuse
Program manager. "It has had two full and useful business lives: first,
as a source of production for the Assabet Mills and American Woolen
Co. and second, as headquarters for Digital Equipment Corp. We are
pleased that this ambitious project will introduce yet another use for
these buildings."
Anthony J. Bongiorno, president and CEO of Franklin Lifecare
Corp. commented, "We are very excited to have acquired the Mill
property for this development. The principals of Franklin Lifecare
bring years of experience and expertise in the areas of real estate
development and construction, project financing and health care
services to this project. But just as important, we are an organization
composed of individuals with roots in this area. As a result, we are
sensitive to the traditional values and needs of the town of Maynard
and we are proud to embark upon this project that will bring a new use
to the Mill site by creating a residential village that will also serve
as a center for a continuum of specialized elder services."
FOR DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY
|
2429.263 | How much? | AWECIM::MCMAHON | Living in the owe-zone | Thu Sep 22 1994 17:15 | 1 |
| I wonder what we got for it?
|
2429.264 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pit heat is dry heat. | Thu Sep 22 1994 18:09 | 8 |
|
So, basically the mill will be full of old people: disoriented,
not really sure what they're doing; people that time has passed
by - people who know things that no one wants to know anymore; people
who are no longer productive, just serving out 'their time'.
It will be sort of hard to tell when the actual transition
takes place.
|
2429.265 | Dear .264 -- THHHPPPPTTTT! | WRKSYS::DUTTON | Inspiration, move me brightly... | Thu Sep 22 1994 18:24 | 7 |
| Yeah, us folks in the Mill are all old fogeys, disoriented, not really
sure what we're doing, yeah that's it...
Now which group of folks was it that developed the DEC 3000 line,
and the kick-ass 2100 server? Oh yeah... we're just serving out our
time, yeah, that's it....
|
2429.266 | must be CRABBY old people | MUZICK::WARNER | It's only work if they make you do it | Thu Sep 22 1994 19:06 | 3 |
| re: .265
What? No sense of humor, either?
|
2429.267 | Need radio transmitters on the disoriented elderly | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | | Thu Sep 22 1994 20:04 | 6 |
| Not being a milrat I always had a hard time finding my way in the mill complex.
Imagine the poor elderly that move into it .. or the nurse on-duty that tries
to follow the color-coding on the walls to find the patient that rang the
bell .. or relatives that come to visit and wander off into never-never land...
>Per
|
2429.268 | | LANDO::CANSLER | | Thu Sep 22 1994 20:19 | 7 |
|
ref -1
Apparently you have never been in a Metro - Hospital...
bc
|
2429.269 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pit heat is dry heat. | Fri Sep 23 1994 00:41 | 18 |
2429.270 | Methinks the brush is too broad.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | You have left basic services | Fri Sep 23 1994 10:21 | 9 |
| it would seem that LEEL::LINDQUIST thinks only very senior managers sit
(or have ever sat) in the mill; I only wish I was paid enough to agree.
While a resident of the mill, I led the teams that produced the
VAX4000-400/500/600, and the DECpc AXP/150. I hope those products were
of at least some value to the company.
...tom
|
2429.271 | play DOOM, then ya won't get lost here | WRKSYS::BCLARK | wack-a-mole with no hands | Fri Sep 23 1994 12:04 | 5 |
| I'll miss working here in the Mill. I still get a kick out of
people getting lost here. I never could understand why some needed
maps.
The Mill is like the maze in DOOM, right? 8>)
|
2429.272 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Sep 23 1994 13:02 | 3 |
| No, like in ADVENTURE.
Steve
|
2429.273 | first the heart, then the soul | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Fri Sep 23 1994 14:20 | 16 |
| re Note 2429.269 by LEEL::LINDQUIST and Note 2429.265 by WRKSYS::DUTTON:
I think the Mill was and still is an excellent environment
for engineers. By far my most productive time as an engineer
in Digital was the time I worked in the Mill. It is both
inspiring and recreational to that kind of person.
I would love to work there again; it would be a good place
for a third industrial revolution -- but only if populated by
revolutionaries!
I am not so sure that the environment of the Mill sits well
with executives, lawyers, accountants, and non-technical
overhead folks.
Bob
|
2429.274 | | CALDEC::RAH | Don't fear the reaper. | Fri Sep 23 1994 16:41 | 10 |
|
I spend a month there, and my impression is that its
too antiquated and the physical plant isn't up to
the standards of dependability needed to compete.
SGI and Sun campuses are modern and aren't plagued
with power and HVAC problems.
It's good that Digital will be out of the Mill in
my view.
|
2429.275 | | BSS::RONEY | Charles Roney | Fri Sep 23 1994 17:17 | 8 |
| The mill was Digital and vice versa. I can not think about Digital
without fond memories of it. My first training classes were in
building 11, and it was quite a trek to eat lunch. The long production
lines were impressive to see. It was exciting to just "get lost" and
explore all the many different things going on. The mill was also
something no other computer manufacture had. I will be sad to see it
go, but I guess that is just one of the new changes that must be gone
through.
|
2429.276 | | SUBSYS::NEUMYER | Cut-a-rug , chug-a-lug | Fri Sep 23 1994 18:28 | 7 |
|
The Mill was (and I believe still is) more condusive to enginering work
than the sterile atmospheres of the new plants.
Long live the memories of the Mill....
ed
|
2429.277 | | TOOK::MORRISON | Bob M. LKG1-3/A11 226-7570 | Fri Sep 23 1994 19:51 | 8 |
| I have mixed feelings about the work environment of the Mill. I think that
for the Digital (product line and people) of the 1960's and 1970's, the
Mill was a much better place to work than the sterile, boxy facilities that
most other high-tech companies were and are in. However, with the stuff we
are doing now, the power glitches, unlevel floors, dust, inefficient layout
of space, etc. are a problem.
Is someone going to walk thru the Mill with a camcorder and record it for
posterity? There isn't much time left.
|
2429.278 | | DPDMAI::SODERSTROM | Bring on the Competition! | Fri Sep 23 1994 21:19 | 5 |
| .277
Great idea!
I hope someone does this!
|
2429.279 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Sep 26 1994 11:55 | 24 |
| > <<< Note 2429.274 by CALDEC::RAH "Don't fear the reaper." >>>
>
> I spend a month there, and my impression is that its
> too antiquated and the physical plant isn't up to
> the standards of dependability needed to compete.
>
> SGI and Sun campuses are modern and aren't plagued
> with power and HVAC problems.
I don't know when you spent your month there, or in what part of the Mill.
I spent nearly 11 years there, from late 1977 to late 1988.
I'd go back in a minute. After the major renovations in the early '80s,
there were no systematic problems with power and HVAC.
The new windows and the membrane roof kept the inside in and the outside out.
The centralized HVAC kept a more uniform, comfortable temperature
than either the small (DSG) or large (MRO) facilities I've been in since.
Some people are prejudiced for the Mill, some against.
There's little doubt that it's unique among high-tech work space.
Whether it's more comfortable for techies than others is arguable.
But it's gone, and I take that as a loss.
- tom]
|
2429.280 | DEC back at the mill? | UPSAR::WALLACE | Vince Wallace | Fri Mar 03 1995 16:20 | 4 |
| Last night I was speaking with an aquaintance who's son works
for Digital. She said he had just been moved into the mill.
It seems DEC is now renting space from the new owners. Anybody
else hear anything about this?
|
2429.281 | Not back, never left (completely) | NEMAIL::KGREENE | | Fri Mar 03 1995 16:26 | 10 |
| RE: .280
Yup, I believe Digital is now in 1 building, not sure of the building
number.
I believe that was part of the plan that Digital would rent/lease space
from the new owners until we could vacate completely.
kjg
|
2429.282 | | NODEX::ADEY | they look down at the ground, missing... | Fri Mar 03 1995 16:56 | 8 |
| re: last couple
Yes, Digital is leasing MLO5 for a period of 18 months. My group and I
were just moved from MRO1 into the Mill last week. This is supposed to
be a temporary stop on our way to Littleton.
Ken....
|
2429.283 | AG's office holds up Mill project | GLRMAI::HICKOX | N1KTX | Mon Mar 06 1995 11:02 | 14 |
|
The State Attorney General's office tossed out the Town of Maynard's
changes with respect to the Mill re-zone (Health/Industrial District)
on procedural and substantive grounds.
I think the procedural error was corrected, but there is concern
about discrimination due to the age 55 or over wording?? The Town is
also concerned with the viability of Covenents.
I think Franklin LifeCare (FLC) had about 24 hours to re-submit a
re-worded proposal for Town Meeting in May or else they'll have to
wait till the Fall (in the meantime more businesses leave Maynard).
Mark
|
2429.284 | | WRKSYS::BCLARK | Bob E. Clark PK3-1/T18 DTN 223-5733 | Mon Mar 06 1995 11:11 | 4 |
| Did the Acoustics engineering group also move out? What was the
final outcome of the anechoic chamber? Anyone know?
bc
|
2429.285 | Still here...still going | CONSLT::JOKEL | | Mon Mar 06 1995 11:56 | 20 |
| re: .284 (acoustics engineering)
We're still here, testing away (almost) as usual. Actually, with the
population in the complex down to what it is, we have less background
noise to interfere with our measurements so we do an even better job
than ever!
Seriously, the plans are to move the acoustics services to PK2 later
this month. We will not have the exact same test facilities as in the
mill...our reverberation room will be sorely missed, for example. But
we plan on providing the same level of services as always, just using
slightly different technology. We look forward to being sited so
closely with our brethren mechanical technologies, to facilitate
communications with them, and to help make it easier for our customers
to do business with TCS.
Bring us those machines to quiet!
PS Bob, the check is in the mail for bringing this to everyone's
attention!
|
2429.286 | the saga continues | ASABET::SILVERBERG | My Other O/S is UNIX | Fri Dec 06 1996 17:25 | 8 |
2429.287 | | RANGER::WASSER | John A. Wasser | Fri Dec 06 1996 17:57 | 4 |
2429.288 | foreclosure auction | CADSYS::SHEPARD | Overwhelmed by trivialities | Mon Dec 09 1996 02:47 | 16 |
2429.289 | | POMPY::LESLIE | | Mon Dec 09 1996 06:09 | 1 |
2429.290 | | MBALDY::BRUCE | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Tue Jan 14 1997 14:02 | 5 |
2429.291 | apparently got financing after all | WRKSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jan 14 1997 15:08 | 8 |
2429.292 | Mill 'Space Available' | DANGER::HADUCH | | Fri Feb 28 1997 11:29 | 7 |
| I just checked this thread because I drove past the Mill this morning, and
there is a "Space Available" sign on the fence in front, with a phone
number. (Sorry, but I didn't write down the phone number.) Since no one
added any mention of it to this note, I thought that it was an interesting
addition to the story.
-ken
|