错误/郑愁予 我打江南走过,那等在季节里的容颜如莲花的开落。东风不来,三月的柳絮不飞,你底心如小小的寂寞的城,恰若青石的街道向晚。跫音不响,三月春帏不揭,你底心是小小的窗扉紧掩。我达达的马蹄是美丽的错误,我不是归人,是个过客……
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Microsoft Fires Its CIO After Investigation
http://informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202803094&cid=nl_tw_security
Microsoft Fires Its CIO After Investigation
Microsoft General Manager Shahla Aly and Alain Crozier, a Microsoft VP in charge of the company's CFO, sales, marketing and services group will take over Stuart Scott's duties.
By J. Nicholas Hoover
InformationWeek
November 6, 2007 05:40 PM
Microsoft (NSDQ: MSFT) has fired its chief information officer, Stuart Scott, the company said in a short statement Tuesday.
"We can confirm that Stuart Scott was terminated after an investigation for violation of company policies," the company said. "We have no further information to share."
Microsoft is already looking for a replacement. Microsoft General Manager Shahla Aly and Alain Crozier, a Microsoft VP in charge of the company's CFO, sales, marketing and services group will take over Scott's duties while Microsoft looks around.
Scott was hired as Microsoft's CIO in the summer of 2005. Prior to his work at Microsoft, Scott had been a divisional CIO for several divisions during his 17 years with General Electric, most recently as executive VP and CIO of GE Healthcare. Though he began as a co-CIO at Microsoft with Ron Markezich, Scott eventually replaced Markezich. Markezich is now a Microsoft VP in charge of the company's new enterprise managed services line, known as Microsoft Online.
Just last month, Scott sat onstage at the InformationWeek 500 Conference alongside Microsoft COO Kevin Turner. While there, Scott touted data center consolidation, trimming the number of apps running inside Microsoft, a virtualization effort, the use of new collaborative software, and a shift toward spending more of Microsoft's IT budget on new product development.
In an interview posted on Microsoft's Web site that took place soon after Scott's hiring, Scott said he was drawn to Microsoft partially by employees' devotion to the company.
"I was really attracted by the people and the passion and loyalty they have for Microsoft," he said. "I get to work with some of the best, brightest and most driven people in the IT industry. They are here to achieve a higher purpose, not just to earn a paycheck."
His mission was to bring "operational excellence" to Microsoft's CIO job, he said at the InformationWeek 500 Conference.
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