*** Welcome to piglix ***

Unisys

Unisys Corporation
Public
Traded as UIS
Industry IT services, IT consulting
Predecessor Burroughs Corporation
Sperry Corporation
Founded 1986
Headquarters Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Peter Altabef (CEO)
Services IT, business consulting and outsourcing services
Revenue $3.015 billion (2015)
Profit $154.9 million (2014)
Total assets
  • Decrease US$ 2.35 billion (2014)
  • Decrease US$ 2.51 billion (2013)
Number of employees
< 20,000 (2016)
Website www.unisys.com
Unisys Facilities
Unisys Salt Lake Office.jpg
Unisys Building Sydney.JPG
Unisys Bangalore Office 2.JPG
Unisys UK Milne.JPG
Fox Milne, Milton Keynes, UK
Unisys Brazil RJ.jpg
Unisys Irvine CA.JPG
UnisysToronto2.JPG
Toronto, Canada

Unisys Corporation is an American global information technology company based in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, that provides a portfolio of IT services, software, and technology. It is the legacy proprietor of the Burroughs and Univac line of computers, formed when the former bought the latter.

Unisys traces its roots back to the founding of American Arithmometer Company (later Burroughs Corporation) in 1886 and the Sperry Gyroscope Company in 1910. Unisys predecessor companies also include the Eckert–Mauchly Computer Corporation, which developed the world's first commercial digital computers, the BINAC and the UNIVAC.

In September 1986 Unisys was formed through the merger of the mainframe corporations Sperry and Burroughs, with Burroughs buying Sperry for $4.8 billion. The name was chosen from over 31,000 submissions in an internal competition when Chuck Ayoub submitted the word "Unisys" which was composed of parts of the words united, information and systems. The merger was the largest in the computer industry at the time and made Unisys the second largest computer company with annual revenue of $10.5 billion. At the time of the merger, Unisys had approximately 120,000 employees. Michael Blumenthal became CEO and Chairman after the merger and resigned in 1990 after several years of losses. James Unruh, (formerly Memorex and Honeywell) became the new CEO and Chairman after Blumenthal's departure and continued in that role until 1997, when Larry Weinbach of Arthur Anderson became the new CEO. By 1997, layoffs had reduced world-wide employee count to approximately 30,000.

In addition to hardware, both Burroughs and Sperry had a history of working on U.S. government contracts. Unisys continues to provide hardware, software, and services to various government agencies.


...
Wikipedia

...