Author: JT Smith
a proposal for what to do with most themes: get rid of ’em.” The column is at osOpinion.
Category:
- Linux
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Brick seemed matter-of-fact about losing his job. “I’m just going to look for a new job,” he said. “Hopefully it will be Open Source, but I’m not holding my breath.” Brick says he is receiving three weeks severance pay.
Greg Wood, press contact for Eazel, confirmed the layoffs. “Basically, Eazel is laying off 40 people out of 75,” he said. “Brian Croll, v.p. of Marketing, is the one marketing person staying.” Wood said that Eazel wiped out its marketing and sales departments and is hanging on to the remaining 34 (not counting Croll), who are on the programming and developing side.
Brick, who wasn’t in marketing or sales but still lost his job, had a slightly different take on the layoff percentages. “Basically, the only people left are the ones who were working directly on Nautilus. They wiped out the quality engineering department, labs, and the services engineering team.”
Why did Eazel do this? Wood’s answer was fairly predictable, given the current downturn in the market. “Eazel grew very quickly because when they were coming together as a company, the environment was a lot different than it is today. The layoffs reflected the new sober environment that Linux is facing. While there’s still growth, it just has to be scaled back.
“This is something they did not want to have to do.”
NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Category:
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Panelists and attendees will examine and debate the Open Source movement
and how it is challenging current notions of competition, collaboration and
intellectual property in businesses across the globe. (NewsForge is part of OSDN.)
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith
Author: JT Smith