IBM Rochester
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Rochester Technology Campus | |
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Big Blue.[2]
HistoryEarly yearsIBM's CEO Arlington, Virginia .
The building was first dedicated in 1958, but has been expanded considerably since then. Current developmentsEmployment at the site has gone through several cycles of growth and collapse, but is over twice what it was in the 1950s. On May 4, 2016, it was announced that IBM would consolidate its remaining employees into the eight buildings on the east side of the complex and sell the remaining facilitates to a separate entity.[4] This occurred after years of IBM renting out its various facilities to companies it had spun or sold off such as HGST. The site's employee count (excluding contractors) was reported to be 2,740 in 2013 and 2,791 in 2017, a steep decline from the high of over 8,000.[5][6] In February 2018 the property was sold to Industrial Realty Group of Los Angeles.[7] On April 24, 2018, in a presentation to the local community, it was announced that the site was renamed Rochester Technology Campus.[8] ProductsThe mile-long facility is best known as the plant that produced the AS/400 computer system. The AS/400 system was itself an advancement of the System/38 that was introduced several years earlier with an inbuilt Relational Data Base Management System (RDBMS) making it leading edge for its time. The AS/400 was later rebranded as the iSeries. Development of the OS/400 operating system, now known as IBM i, continues at Rochester. IBM Power Systems development is here.[9] PureSystems were originally assembled at this site,[10] but are now mainly assembled in New York and Mexico.[11] The IBM 3740 Data Entry System was developed at the facility in 1973 and the follow-on IBM 5280 Distributed Data System had its beginnings there, but was transferred in 1981 to the Austin, TX facility, where it was released for production. The advent of personal computing swallowed up this type of data entry by 1990. The IBM 5110 personal computer was developed and manufactured in the facility. IBM Rochester was important to the Summit and Sierra supercomputers.[12][13] hard disk development occurred here.
DistinctionsThe teraflops . The manufacturing output of the site is so great that if it was a separate company, it would be the world's third-largest computer producer.
The plant, which is near Atlanta, Georgia .
TenantsHitachi Global Storage Technologies, although having been spun off from IBM Storage Technology, remains on-site, leasing otherwise unused space from IBM. Along with the Mayo Clinic , the IBM plant is one of the biggest employers in the Rochester area, reportedly numbering around 5,000 in 2002.
In 2019, Crenlo LLC rented part of the IBM facility to move part of its EMCORE manufacturing division, where it is currently separate from the Crenlo Cab Manufacturing line of products, as EMCORE was sold in 2021. References
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