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- From: sl31+@andrew.cmu.edu (Stephen M. Lacy)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.misc,comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Subject: IBM Software Execs Still Bullish on OS/2 01/22/93
- Message-ID: <4fMgyuG00iUzE1gXRH@andrew.cmu.edu>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 07:19:54 GMT
- Article-I.D.: andrew.4fMgyuG00iUzE1gXRH
- Organization: Junior, Math/Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh, PA
- Lines: 61
-
- SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A., 1993 JAN 22 (NB) -- Despite its parent
- company's record losses, the president of IBM's Personal Software
- Products (PSP) division is optimistic -- even bullish -- about
- the future.
-
- In a briefing at the Winter Windows & OS/2 Conference in San Jose,
- California, division president, Lee Reiswig, reflected on the
- successes of the division's most visible product, OS/2, and
- outlined plans for the coming year as OS/2 version 2.1 continues
- in beta testing. "We've come a long way in the last year,"
- Reiswig said.
-
- OS/2 2.0 began shipping in March of 1992. By the end of the year,
- IBM had shipped more than two million copies. Also by the end of
- 1992, more than 1,200 OS/2 32-bit applications from more than 500
- vendors were shipping, and major software developers such as Lotus
- Development Corporation had committed to moving entire product
- lines to the OS/2 platform.
-
- Reiswig declined to give an exact date for the shipment of OS/2
- version 2.1, saying only "we'll ship it when it's ready," but
- adding that he expected that to be "in the near future."
-
- John Patrick, vice president of marketing and sales for the
- Personal Software Products division, discussed an aggressive
- advertising plan for OS/2 that includes an increased budget,
- product-specific -- rather than image-oriented -- advertising,
- and an emphasis on trade publications rather than business
- publications.
-
- PSP's sales and marketing efforts will also be bolstered by brand
- management teams for each major product line. These teams work
- closely with engineering to ensure customer concerns are met and
- make decisions about distribution channels and marketing. Patrick
- also described PSP's enhanced developer services program, which
- provides easier access for corporate developers. He was
- enthusiastic about the addition this week of John Osborne, previously
- with Zenith Data Systems, as director of sales for PSP's US
- business, a new position.
-
- A discussion of IBM's position in the personal software market
- wouldn't be complete without mentioning Microsoft, which many
- believe is poised to de-throne IBM. Patrick described the Personal
- Software Products division's positioning against Microsoft. IBM
- has the experience (with such issues as security) to help
- big users successfully manage large, networked systems, while
- Microsoft approaches networking from the perspective of the desktop.
-
- "We are the future of IBM," Reiswig said in response to a question
- about the impact of its parent company's troubles on his division.
- Many people may be asking how IBM can afford to increase spending
- on so many aspects of OS/2 and other PSP products. Reiswig's reply:
- "How can we not?"
-
- OS/2 is an advanced operating system for 32-bit personal computers
- that enables users to run DOS, Windows and OS/2 applications.
-
- (Audrey Kalman/19930122)
-
-
- "We're too young to reason, and too old to dream." -Roxy Music
-