Tag Archives: New Era

IBM and Genentech Introduce a New Era

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

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On this day in economic and business history …

IBM knew it had something big on its hands when it introduced the System/360 series of mainframe computers on April 7, 1964. Legendary IBM executive (and son of that other legendary IBM executive) Thomas J. Watson Jr. called the launch “the most important product announcement in the company’s history.” IBM hosted a launch event that would put today’s to shame — a coordinated nationwide reveal attended by more than 100,000 businessmen in 165 cities across the United States.

Watson told the world:

System/360 represents a sharp departure from concepts of the past in designing and building computers. It is the product of an international effort in IBM‘s laboratories and plants and is the first time IBM has redesigned the basic internal architecture of its computers in a decade. The result will be more computer productivity at lower cost than ever before. This is the beginning of a new generation — not only of computers — but of their application in business, science, and government.

Watson was right. System/360 was not a single mainframe, but an entire series of them, with capabilities and costs running the gamut from workhorse to wonder. It was the first time that computers had been designed with upgrades in mind, as the entire range of System/360s shared the same base instruction set and could thus be upgraded without forcing users to learn to use something unfamiliar. System/360s were available at monthly rental costs that ranged from $2,700 to $115,000 — compared with purchase prices of between $133,000 to $5.5 million — and users could feel confident that no matter which machine they ordered, they could always upgrade later as their data processing demands grew.

The System/360 family became extremely successful in the market, producing some of the strongest business (and stock price) gains in IBM’s history. IBM also created a number of industry standards with the System/360 family. Some have since been superseded by newer designs, but the 8-bit byte was possibly the most durable — it remains the standard to this day.

IBM continued to deliver and support System/360s almost up to the release of its PC in 1981, as the last mainframes were delivered to customers in 1978. It’s still possible to run applications for System/360 machines in the present day, as IBM‘s modern System z mainframes are fully backwards compatible with their groundbreaking ancestors.

Birth of biotech
Genentech was founded on April 7, 1976, becoming the world’s first true biotechnology company. Genentech itself tells the story of its founding through the “GenenLab Notebook,” part of a welcome kit the company gives to new employees that found its way online in 2012:

It all began with an experiment conducted by a team led by Dr. Herbert W. Boyer of the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) and Dr. Stanley N. Cohen of Stanford University. They proved that DNA could …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Model Takeover: Louis Vuitton's Alma Campaign May Be the Beginning of a New Era

By Justin Fenner

Louis Vuitton calls its brand new ad campaign for the iconic Alma bag “Chic on the Bridge” – which is fitting, as the images were shot on bridges in New York, Paris, and Shanghai.

Steven Klein shot the images, which feature models Karlie Kloss, Iris Struebegger, Jac Jagaciak, and Daria Strokous. In each city they pose with a differently colored Alma bag: taxicab yellow in New York, French blue in Paris, and lacquer red in Shanghai.

But the beautiful images might be the beginning of a new tide of ads for Vuitton: market sources told WWD that the brand has plans to phase out its Core Values campaigns, which have featured notable figures like Angelina Jolie, Catherine Deneuve, Mikhail Gorbechev, and Keith Richards.

A look at the new ads here in the gallery.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at fashionologie

New Era's Sales Surge in First Year of NFL Contract

By Alicia Jessop, Contributor For 88 years, America’s own cap company, New Era, has been providing headwear to sports fans across the globe.  With its history firmly rooted in Major League Baseball, New Era entered the new frontier of professional football earlier this year when it signed a five-year contract to be the official headwear provider of the National Football LeagueNew Era‘s partnership with the NFL began just prior to the NFL Draft.  This week in New Orleans, the company put the capstone on its first year of NFL business during Super Bowl week.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest