Broadcom lays off many VMware employees after closing its $69 billion acquisition of the companysilverbax@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 440 points – 12 months agobusinessinsider.com72Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsIf your company is being acquired, you need to assume you, the employee, are disposable and not the reason for the acquisition.Particularly Broadcom, which is where old technologies go to die.Isn't that IBM?There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards! Oracle has entered the chat * Yup. Warm up that resume and work on an exit strategy.
If your company is being acquired, you need to assume you, the employee, are disposable and not the reason for the acquisition.Particularly Broadcom, which is where old technologies go to die.Isn't that IBM?There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards! Oracle has entered the chat * Yup. Warm up that resume and work on an exit strategy.
Particularly Broadcom, which is where old technologies go to die.Isn't that IBM?There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards! Oracle has entered the chat *
Isn't that IBM?There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards! Oracle has entered the chat *
There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards!
If your company is being acquired, you need to assume you, the employee, are disposable and not the reason for the acquisition.
Particularly Broadcom, which is where old technologies go to die.
Isn't that IBM?
There are several places - Computer Associates was the olther classic place - until it was bought by Broadcom.
Oh, did they? Well that's some shit that floats upwards!
Yup. Warm up that resume and work on an exit strategy.