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TECH SPACE
Cisco to cut 6,000 jobs in streamlining
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Aug 13, 2014


Florida Polytechnic University hosts IBM super-computing center
Armonk, N.Y. (UPI) Aug 13, 2013 -IBM is expanding its partnership with universities and business schools, and has established a super-computing center at Florida Polytechnic University.

The center is a joint effort with the university and business partner Flagship Solutions Group for advancing cyber-security, Big Data and analytics, Cloud virtualization and other engineering and computer science areas.

It will also support research projects led by university faculty and graduate students and the school's focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, education.

"Florida Polytechnic University's STEM-based mission is directly aligned with the business models of IBM and Flagship, and it has been very satisfying to work with the leadership at those two firms to make the Supercomputer happen on an expeditious timeline," said Tom Hull, Vice President of Florida Polytechnic University.

"After considering the mission of the university, I realized that an IBM Supercomputer Complex could satisfy our need for a high performance computing center and a student data center for both our curriculum and applied research at a high level.

Florida Polytechnic is a new school in the state's university system and joins 28 other institutions of higher education in partnering with the company.

The super-computing center is 2,500 square feet in size. The super-computer itself consists of five racks of systems that include nearly 1,000 core processors. Its storage technology manages more than 150 terabytes of data.

US computer networking giant Cisco Systems said Wednesday it plans to slash some 6,000 jobs, or eight percent of its global workforce in the coming year.

Chairman and chief executive John Chambers called the move a "limited restructuring" that will allow Cisco to "reinvest cost savings in key growth areas."

Chief financial officer Frank Calderoni said the move to streamline comes with Cisco moving "to continue to invest in growth, innovation and talents while managing costs."

The announcement came as Cisco announced a modest dip in quarterly profits at $2.2 billion in the quarter to the end of July.

Revenues were down 0.5 percent at $12.4 billion in the period.

"We are executing well in a tough environment," said Chambers in the earnings statement.

The cuts come a year after Cisco announced 4,000 reductions by the California tech giant in response to a weaker-than-expected global economic environment.

The latest move brings the total number of jobs cuts since 2011 at Cisco to 17,800.

Cisco has been expanding in the areas of cybersecurity and cloud computing, but its main activities of computer networks are sensitive to economic conditions.

Cisco is expected to take charges up to $700 million for the restructuring, starting in its new fiscal year that began this month.

soe-rl/rcw

CISCO SYSTEMS

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