开云体育

ctrl + shift + ? for shortcuts
© 2025 开云体育

Ginni Rometty: Forget digital—cognitive business is the future

ret99_99
 





A new era of cognitive business is here.

IBM Chairman and CEO Ginni Rometty said that a new technological era is upon us, one that marries digital business with digital intelligence. It’s what’s known as cognitive business.


“Digital is the wires, but digital intelligence, or artificial intelligence as some people call it, is about much more than that,” Rometty told Fortune Editor-in-Chief Alan Murray at the in Washington, D.C. “This next decade is about how you combine those and become a cognitive business.”

“It’s the dawn of a new era,” said Rometty.


There’s a vast amount of information out there, from the Internet to your computer hard drive, but nearly 80% of that information has been invisible to systems and computers until now, explained Rometty. For instance, while there may be millions of songs and movies digitally stored, a computer hasn’t known what’s inside those files before today’s technological innovations.


Artificial intelligence has been around for decades but it hasn’t been until recently that its power’s been unleashed. IBM’s -0.97% Watson is symbolic of this era and is able to demonstrate , said Rometty. Systems can now understand, reason, and learn. See: Watson’s breath-taking performance on Jeopardy! in 2011 when it took down the gameshow’s top two contestants ever.


There’s still a long way to go before digital intelligence becomes the standard, but Rometty recommended five areas where a business can benefit now if it starts building a cognitive business:

  1. Drive Deeper Engagement: Help clients behind the scene for better customer experience.
  2. Scale Expertise: Companies spend lots of money training employees, this could be scaled more effectively.
  3. Put Learning in Every Product: Build products that adapt to each consumer’s needs.
  4. Change Operations: Streamline your supply chain to help margins.
  5. Transform How You Do Discovery: From pharmaceuticals to financial industries, research will be the foundation of many many segments will work in the future.

“Instead of being disrupted, be the disrupter. I do it inside my own business,” said Rometty. “You will be the disrupter if you choose to do it.”



Today is the 3 year anniversary for this group

ret99_99
 

This group was founded Sep 22, 2012.



Top 10 IBM groups sorted by Founded date

stj2
 

Group name ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Founded date ? ? # of members
ibmpension???????????????????????? 18-May-99 ? ?? 5903
IBM_RETIREE???????????????????? 22-Jul-99 ? ? ? 8252
ibmretiree???????????????????????????? 23-Aug-99???? 2243
IBM_THINK????????????????????????? 20-Aug-01???? 11734
IBM_EMPLOYEEISSUES ? 27-Apr-02 ? ?? 8677
IBM_PENSION??????????????????? 4-Aug-03??????? 10156
IBM??????????????????????????????????????? 17-Nov-07????? 13370
ibmpensionissues???????????? 22-Sep-12???? 5074
ibmemployeeissues ? ? ? ?? 22-Sep-12???? 3754
ibmretireeissues ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? 22-Sep-12???? 3425




Re: On IBM's Pension Liabilities

corporate_apologist
 

Looks like another thread rejected by moderators over at IBMPENSION.? Weird.


---In ibmpensionissues@..., <no_reply@...> wrote :



On IBM's Pension Liabilities

ssn_tech
 

Summary

  • Taking a closer look at IBM debt.
  • The hidden debt represented by pension liabilities.
  • The enormity of pension liabilities at IBM.

A popular part of the narrative surrounding IBM (NYSE:) on Seeking Alpha (and elsewhere) is IBM's high headline debt number (about $39 billion according to the ). This is often combined with a statement along the lines of: IBM has taken on enormous debt to fund its financial engineering shenanigans, aka share repurchases.


It has been pointed out (mainly in commentary on Seeking Alpha) that most of IBM's debt is in its Global Financing (GF) segment (roughly $26 billion). Financing (i.e., a bank like entity) utilizes debt like a mammal utilizes oxygen. Roughly, the point is that GF utilizes IBM's stellar debt rating to borrow in capital markets at low rates and then turns around and lends at higher rates to customers, making a profit off the spread (this is only a rough, but essentially right, approximation to GF operations). The risk in such an activity primarily stems from the degree of leverage, duration mismatch (the classic problem of borrowing short term to lend long term) and credit risk (will the borrowers repay). In IBM's case there's also residual value risk associated to equipment leases (think of the risk to a dealer in leasing a car), but we don't need to get into the nitty gritty here.


The purpose of this article is not to assess the risk in Global Financing (for the moment, suffice it to say that I think that it is minimal). Instead, I wish to address a follow-up argument that is often made along the lines of "in the end all debt is debt, whether is financing or core or whatever."

I'm going to do this in a twisted way by pointing out that IBM detractors who worry about the $39 billion debt number should be focusing on a much more dangerous liability which sports a much higher headline number. Namely, IBM's total pension benefit obligation at year end 2014 exceeded $100 billion (see the ).


Let me be clear, I am NOT saying that IBM is in a GM style sinkhole. IBM's pension liabilities seem to be quite conservatively funded.


My intention is to simply point out that anyone worrying about IBM's debt load endangering the financial future of the company and ignoring the fact that GF debt is offset by receivables (i.e., the loans due from borrowers) should instead be focusing on the much bigger elephant of pension liabilities.

After all, if one is going to ignore offsetting assets in GF, then the same should be done for pensions (yes, I do think this is asinine, but this is the logical end of the argument made by debt detractors).

In fact, as I will explain in a moment, a dollar of pension liabilities can be much more problematic than a dollar of good old fashioned debt. Let me also make the following (deliberately provocative and sarcastic) statement: any ex-IBMer concerned by his/her beloved company's debt load and who bleeds true blue and wishes to help the company in these difficult times in any possible way should consider forfeiting his/her company pension as this is the biggest and most dangerous financial liability facing the company in the future.

The financial tape worm represented by pension obligations

Good old fashioned debt (like loans, bonds issued, etc.) is relatively simple to understand - the company borrows X dollars, pays an R% interest rate on them for Y years and then pays back X dollars at the end of the Y years. I'm ignoring fancier versions of this involving callability covenants, collateral, etc., since in a nutshell the above is what standard debt looks like.


My point is that in this sort of debt the financial obligations of the company and the schedule along which they must be met are quite precise.


However, we should remember that debt is really just another word for future financial obligation or a promise to make a cash payout in the future.


This is exactly what defined pension benefits are. Let me illustrate by simply quoting the master of explaining these things in a simple fashion ():

Assume that you, personally, make irrevocable promises to pay pensions of $300 per month for life after they reach 65 to, say, four household employees. To make it easy, let's say that they each are 55 years of age at present. If you make that promise today, you have reduced your net worth today by about $70,000...

Why are you immediately $70,000 poorer? Well, if you set aside a $70,000 fund not and invest it at 7% interest - and let all such interest remain in the fund to be compounded - the principal value of the fund will grow to about $140, 000 in ten years when your employees reach 65. And to buy them a lifetime annuity of $3,600 per year will then cost about $35,000 each, utilizing the entire accumulated capital of the fund. So if you make the promise and it is binding - legally or morally - figure you have spent today $70,000, even though you don't have to pay out a dime of cash for 10 years.


The point is that defined benefit pensions are for all practical purposes exactly like debt (a future financial obligation). However, unlike old fashioned debt, the amount of the obligation is not very precise. To explain, let me continue quoting Buffett:


Now take it one step further and assume that your employees are earning $600 per month but, instead of promising them $300 per month upon retirement, you promise them 50% of their salary at the time they retire. If their increases run 7.2% per year - and they probably will in the world I foresee - they will be earning $1,200 per month by the time they reach 65. And it will now cost you $70,000 each to purchase annuities for them to fulfill your promise...


In a corporation the bill will have to be paid out of current and future revenues - with interest - and frequently with what is, in effect, a cost-of-living escalator.


The point is that defined pension benefits often have a number of adjustments and estimates built into them. Moreover, when one tries to put a present value to this pension debt, one in effect has to make a number of estimates (discount rate, return on capital put aside in a pension fund, life expectancy, health cost trends, cost of living adjustment).


That is, in effect, pension liabilities behave like long-term debt with final payment and interest rates subject to change.


In other words, one should be a lot more wary of future liabilities represented by pensions than the comparatively precise nature of old fashioned debt.

The enormity of IBM's pension liabilities

Now of course this is a well recognized problem, and corporations have to regularly make sure that their pension plans are adequately funded with capital invested to meet these future obligations. So is the case with IBM.


However, remember that the debt that IBM uses in Global Financing is also offset by financing receivables, and debt detractors choose to ignore this, arguing that "debt is debt." Hence, using this line of argument, we should ignore IBM's pension assets, and simply look at the headline pension liability number which is in excess of $100 billion.


I mean this is $100 billion in debt (and let's call it that because that is what it essentially is) which even though is a legacy debt (defined benefit pension plans at IBM, and most other public corporations, have been wisely discontinued) can balloon in the future and has a coupon in flux!


To put it in a snarky way, this is a gift for IBM bears: if you are an IBM bear using the company's debt as part of your argument, please do your homework and use the big pension number as opposed to the comparatively much smaller usual debt number.


Added later: Looking at the comments section, it would appear that several readers either seem to have missed the point, had a knee jerk reaction to the title (in other words didn't even bother to read the article), or I failed to make my sarcasm/snark completely clear.


To avoid any further misinterpretation, let me make this crystal clear: the point that I am making is that complaining about GF debt without accounting for the fact that it is offset by receivables/loans is as ridiculous as looking at pension liabilities in isolation without considering the funded status of the plan.

A secondary purpose of the article is to point out the ticking time bomb that pension liabilities can represent (even if a plan has been closed to new participants, is at first glance well funded, discount rates, expected returns, inflation adjustments, life expectancy, etc. are in constant flux, and the present value of pension obligations can change drastically).


It is NOT being claimed that IBM's funding of its pension plan is anything but rock solid. However, it is being pointed out that the numbers are quite large.


The overall point is that in the case of IBM, the bears who cite the company's debt have simply not done their homework (if they had, then the pension liabilities would be the more significant item to pick up on, than the relatively paltry amount of debt). Of course, this would require said bears to actually crack open a 10-K (and think) as opposed to regurgitating numbers from some third hand source like Yahoo Finance or Morningstar.



IBM medical coverage: FHA moving to medicare(Disability) and non-medicare spouse

 

I have been in the FHA medical plan (med-deductible) for 2015 and I just received notice that I'll start medicare in December 2015 (due to a SS Disability).

I'll be 62 this Fall and my wife (non-employee/non-medicare) will be 62 next spring.

I still have about 30,000 left in the FHA fund and wanted to use it over the next 1.5 years (approx time left at 100% FHA)

What options do I have?

1. Do I qualify for Extend Health and can move the FHA funds there and use them? (i.e. some sort of Medicare supplement plan)
2. Will my wife be able to use the FHA funds for non-medicare health insurance (i.e. from netbenefits / IBM)?
i.e. non-employee wife only without me on the insurance.
3. If I can't use the FHA except for eyes and dental (can I?)
are there any other options to use the FHA for coverage such as stay on the FHA non-medicare
IBM plan for another year and delay medicare or something else?
or use the 100% FHA for the IBM plan for 2 as a secondary coverage for me (very weird with the cost and deductibles) and medicare as primary
and as primary for my wife.


Thanks for the help!


Re: IBM Comatose, Near Death?

 

I have been retired for 9 years and at age 76 I don't imagine IBM would ever call me back. ?
When I read the Alliance site I see griping on and on. Doesn't matter how long I stay away, it looks the same when I go back. I would go so far as to say "Happiness is NOT visiting Alliance!"


Re: IBM Comatose, Near Death?

 

开云体育

Supporting the Union is like buying a lottery ticket when the prize is $500Million.???

Its not the jackpot that you are after.

You are buying a dream that you can enjoy for that week that perhaps you will become very wealthy for no effort at the end of the week. You can imagine your new security in life without
being dependent on the whims of your employer for income. ?

When the drawing comes and you lose again, you are not surprised.? But you buy
that ticket the next time the jackpot is big, just in case.



On 08/10/2015 05:48 AM, ssn_tech wrote:

?


The Alliance has been and continues to be a money pit for people to dump a couple hundred dollars a year to support a website that gives people false hope that their donation will ever do anything more than keeping the flow of CWA parent company funds into the pockets of the Alliance leaders.


---In ibmpensionissues@..., wrote :

Maybe it's time for a union vote :-) Oh, wait. The alliance has been dead for years.
?


Re: IBM Comatose, Near Death?

ssn_tech
 


The Alliance has been and continues to be a money pit for people to dump a couple hundred dollars a year to support a website that gives people false hope that their donation will ever do anything more than keeping the flow of CWA parent company funds into the pockets of the Alliance leaders.


---In ibmpensionissues@..., <no_reply@...> wrote :

Maybe it's time for a union vote :-) Oh, wait. The alliance has been dead for years.
?


Re: IBM Comatose, Near Death?

blue_guy_revived
 

Maybe it's time for a union vote :-) Oh, wait. The alliance has been dead for years.


IBM Comatose, Near Death?

ret99_99
 

?

Watson: The PR Blitz Continues

July 28, 2015

I know that IBM is trying to reverse 13 quarters of revenue decline. I know that most of the firm’s business units are struggling to hit their numbers. I know that IBM’s loyal employees are doing their best to belt out the IBM song “Ever Onward” in perfect harmony.

If you are not familiar with the lyrics, you can read the words at on the IBM Web site, which unlike the dev ops pages are still online:

EVER ONWARD — EVER ONWARD!
That’s the spirit that has brought us fame!
We’re big, but bigger we will be
We can’t fail for all can see
That to serve humanity has been our aim!
Our products now are known, in every zone,
Our reputation sparkles like a gem!
We’ve fought our way through — and new
Fields we’re sure to conquer too
For the EVER ONWARD I.B.M.

Goodness, I am tapping my foot just reading the phrase “Our reputation sparkles like a gem!”

And I don’t count the grinches who complain at like this:

Comment 07/27/15:
Job Title: IT Specialist
Location: Rochester MN
CustAcct: Various
BusUnit: Cloud
Message: I was forced out/bullied out through bad PBC rating/threats of PIP. I left voluntarily a few months back, rather than waiting for the inevitable layoff (since my 2014 rating was a 3, I would have probably been let go with no package). Once I got my appraisal in January, I started looking around and found another job that pays about the same as my band 10 IBM salary – and I am evaluating several other offers as we speak. I truly feel for the victims of yet another round of layoffs. But I don’t quite understand why some find it “shocking” and “unexpected” that IBM gets rid of them. Your CEO has publicly declared that many of you – especially those in the services organizations – are nothing more than “empty calories.” She went on record with those words. What do you expect? Either you organize or you better start looking for something else.

I pay attention to the “.” The write up explains:

Cognitive computing is transforming the way we work.

The brain it turns out is not particularly objective. My goodness, how could and his colleagues have hit upon this idea before Watson was the toast of the PR hyperbole ball?

Watson and its learnings have made it clear that the brain has an “ambiguity effect.” I know that IBM revenue data are not ambiguous to some stakeholders. The brain is like a heat seeking missile which homes toward “confirmation bias.” And the brain suffers from “not invented here syndrome.”

My goodness. Imagine how effective IBM would be if its executives relied on Watson to figure out how to integrate the disparate content processing systems the company owns. Imagine the profitability if IBM’s executive decisions were based on Watson outputs? Conceptualize how IBM would become congruent with this stirring sentiment from the “Ever Onward” anthem:

EVER ONWARD — EVER ONWARD!
We’re bound for the top to never fall!

My personal view is that IBM is better at public relations than it is at generating revenue. I am tired of reading about Watson and its future. How about some case studies about revenue successes directly attributable to Watson? How about some top line performance for IBM? If a company owns a Watson, isn’t it logical that the Watson owner would outperform companies without Watson?

Oh, what if Watson does not work very well?

?


Retired IBMrs Arguing

clk_griswold
 

You two ladies (mouser and iggy) retired in probably NY and NJ have it rough for? places to retire.
Wish the two of you could meet up over a pizza and beer, say in Nyack and report back to us about your findings.? TIA!



Happy Fathers Day

susan85032
 

Happy Fathers Day to all the fathers out there.
This is one of the days that I miss my father the most.

Susan



Re: Moderation on ibmpension

c25years
 

This Edit membership, LEAVE GROUP process works for groups I have recently joined. I joined ibmpension this week (second time) and used this process to unsubscribe today. That still leaves my membership of June 20, 1999 which would require a moderator help to remove, and I have had no success getting them to do this for me.


---In ibmpensionissues@..., <swcritsb@...> wrote :

When you click Membership, then Edit membership and get that screen
that lets you select youe subscription settings and email settings - go
all the way to the bottom of that page and click? LEAVE GROUP..

Leave Group

Are you sure, you want to leave this group?


Re: Moderation on ibmpension

 

开云体育

When you click Membership, then Edit membership and get that screen
that lets you select youe subscription settings and email settings - go
all the way to the bottom of that page and click? LEAVE GROUP..

Leave Group

Are you sure, you want to leave this group?




On 06/11/2015 02:21 PM, c25years wrote:

?

> Its a Yahoo issue.?

Yes. I agree it is a Yahoo issue. I doubt that Yahoo is going to do anything to fix the root cause. Removing my membership from Jun 20 1999 could be done by a moderator of the group. It looks like the moderators are not interested in doing that for me.

> Do you not see the ' unsubscribe ' link at the bottom of the message?

No. I do not see an unsubscribe link at the bottom of the message when I view messages of my groups on the web.

I do see a method to Unsubscribe using email: ibmpension-unsubscribe@... . The response I get when sending an email to this address is:

We are unable to process the message from <c25years@...>
to <ibmpension-unsubscribe@...>.

The email address used to send your message is not subscribed to this
group. If you are a member of this group, please be aware that you may
only send messages and manage your subscription to this group using
the email address(es) yo u have registered with Yahoo Groups.


> Log into your Yahoo ID and go into groups and then open the group and then you will find a manage group button.


Yes. Manage My Groups does bring up a list of the groups I am subscribed to. I choose No email for all my groups. That function does not provide any method to unsubscribe that I can find.

---In ibmpensionissues@..., wrote :

Its a Yahoo issue.? Do you not see the ' unsubscribe ' link at the bottom
of the message?

Log into your Yahoo ID and go into groups and then open the group and then
you will find a manage group button.

On 06/06/2015 06:06 AM, c25years wrote:
?

I wish I could just leave. I have tried everything I can think of to leave. I tried a posting this morning to ask the moderators to help me:

How do I unsubscribe?


I would like to unsubscribe from the ibmpension group. I first joined in June 1999. I just joined again to try to delete my id from the membership list. Now I show up twice:


c25years Joined: 20 Jun, 1999

c25years Joined: 10:53 AM

?

How do I unsubscribe? Can a moderator help me? Remove both my original and the new one? Please.



---In ibmpensionissues@..., wrote :

I guess if you are dissatisfied with the powers that be just leave. Even start your own group.?
For me I am staying. ?I have found some useful information here. ?
Al

?



Re: Moderation on ibmpension

c25years
 

> Its a Yahoo issue.?

Yes. I agree it is a Yahoo issue. I doubt that Yahoo is going to do anything to fix the root cause. Removing my membership from Jun 20 1999 could be done by a moderator of the group. It looks like the moderators are not interested in doing that for me.

> Do you not see the ' unsubscribe ' link at the bottom of the message?

No. I do not see an unsubscribe link at the bottom of the message when I view messages of my groups on the web.

I do see a method to Unsubscribe using email: ibmpension-unsubscribe@... . The response I get when sending an email to this address is:

We are unable to process the message from <c25years@...>
to <ibmpension-unsubscribe@...>.

The email address used to send your message is not subscribed to this
group. If you are a member of this group, please be aware that you may
only send messages and manage your subscription to this group using
the email address(es) you have registered with Yahoo Groups.


> Log into your Yahoo ID and go into groups and then open the group and then you will find a manage group button.

Yes. Manage My Groups does bring up a list of the groups I am subscribed to. I choose No email for all my groups. That function does not provide any method to unsubscribe that I can find.

---In ibmpensionissues@..., <swcritsb@...> wrote :

Its a Yahoo issue.? Do you not see the ' unsubscribe ' link at the bottom
of the message?

Log into your Yahoo ID and go into groups and then open the group and then
you will find a manage group button.

On 06/06/2015 06:06 AM, c25years wrote:
?

I wish I could just leave. I have tried everything I can think of to leave. I tried a posting this morning to ask the moderators to help me:

How do I unsubscribe?


I would like to unsubscribe from the ibmpension group. I first joined in June 1999. I just joined again to try to delete my id from the membership list. Now I show up twice:


c25years Joined: 20 Jun, 1999

c25years Joined: 10:53 AM

?

How do I unsubscribe? Can a moderator help me? Remove both my original and the new one? Please.



---In ibmpensionissues@..., <k5fk@...> wrote :

I guess if you are dissatisfied with the powers that be just leave. Even start your own group.?
For me I am staying. ?I have found some useful information here. ?
Al

?


Re: Moderation on ibmpension

 

开云体育

Its a Yahoo issue.? Do you not see the ' unsubscribe ' link at the bottom
of the message?

Log into your Yahoo ID and go into groups and then open the group and then
you will find a manage group button.

On 06/06/2015 06:06 AM, c25years wrote:

?

I wish I could just leave. I have tried everything I can think of to leave. I tried a posting this morning to ask the moderators to help me:

How do I unsubscribe?


I would like to unsubscribe from the ibmpension group. I first joined in June 1999. I just joined again to try to delete my id from the membership list. Now I show up twice:


c25years Joined: 20 Jun, 1999

c25years Joined: 10:53 AM

?

How do I unsubscribe? Can a moderator help me? Remove both my original and the new one? Please.



---In ibmpensionissues@..., wrote :

I guess if you are dissatisfied with the powers that be just leave. Even start your own group.?
For me I am staying. ?I have found some useful information here. ?
Al

?


Re: Moderation on ibmpension

c25years
 

I wish I could just leave. I have tried everything I can think of to leave. I tried a posting this morning to ask the moderators to help me:

How do I unsubscribe?


I would like to unsubscribe from the ibmpension group. I first joined in June 1999. I just joined again to try to delete my id from the membership list. Now I show up twice:


c25years Joined: 20 Jun, 1999

c25years Joined: 10:53 AM

?

How do I unsubscribe? Can a moderator help me? Remove both my original and the new one? Please.



---In ibmpensionissues@..., <k5fk@...> wrote :

I guess if you are dissatisfied with the powers that be just leave. Even start your own group.?
For me I am staying. ?I have found some useful information here. ?
Al

?


Re: Moderation on ibmpension

 

开云体育

I guess if you are dissatisfied with the powers that be just leave. Even start your own group.?
For me I am staying. ?I have found some useful information here. ?
Al

Sent from my iPhone

On May 31, 2015, at 18:02, locorebob <no_reply@...> wrote:

?


c25years,

I think it is a safe bet that the ibmpension moderators are already aware that some members are not happy with the moderation. Note the rules of the board - specifically rule #4:

" Posts will be deleted if:? 4) They debate editorial policies of this board."

In other words, discussion about dissatisfaction with the moderation is not allowed.

---In ibmpensionissues@..., <no_reply@...> wrote :

It appears that I am not the only one who is not happy with the moderation on the ibmpension group. It is inconsistent and frustrating and makes the group much less useful than it could be. But what can be done about? Is there any means to make the moderators aware of the dissatisfaction? Protest? Vote? Exit? Other ideas? Does anybody really care?


?


Re: Moderation on ibmpension

locorebob
 


c25years,

I think it is a safe bet that the ibmpension moderators are already aware that some members are not happy with the moderation. Note the rules of the board - specifically rule #4:

" Posts will be deleted if:? 4) They debate editorial policies of this board."

In other words, discussion about dissatisfaction with the moderation is not allowed.

---In ibmpensionissues@..., <no_reply@...> wrote :

It appears that I am not the only one who is not happy with the moderation on the ibmpension group. It is inconsistent and frustrating and makes the group much less useful than it could be. But what can be done about? Is there any means to make the moderators aware of the dissatisfaction? Protest? Vote? Exit? Other ideas? Does anybody really care?


?