Compaq scores two mammoth contracts

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Compaq, Ericsson, Deal

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Compaq Computer has snared two mammoth three-year contracts, one with defence contractor Raytheon for $200m to $250m and one with Swedish cell phone maker Ericsson for $150m. Compaq beat out its fiercest rival, Dell Computer, as well as its would-be acquirer Hewlett-Packard to become Raytheon's primary supplier of Intel-based servers, desktop PCs, workstations and laptops, said Peter Blackmore, Compaq's executive vice president of sales and service. The Ericsson contract, an expansion of an existing relationship, is primarily an outsourcing arrangement under which Compaq will manage the company's installed hardware, Blackmore added. The deals are good news for Compaq, which has struggled with the economic downturn and a brutally competitive PC market. The company has been on a roll, though, with recent deals at American Express and the US Post Office. Compaq also recently announced a multiyear deal to supply General Motors with PCs, a $495 million deal to supply computing services for General Electric Aircraft Engines and a $20 million-per-year deal with drug wholesaler Cardinal Health. Blackmore hopes two more major contracts will be announced by the end of the year. Blackmore believes the deals not only provide revenue, but also show faith that Compaq's merger with HP makes sense. "The customers get the logic of the merger," Blackmore said. "We will have a transition for them. They trust us." But product lines are in limbo, particularly with the vocal opposition to the merger that some fear could leave Compaq and HP separate after all. Competitors are crowing about the uncertainty. Dell said that a major bank's chief information officer approached Dell, panicking about the prospects of the merger. And Sun chief executive Scott McNealy quips that part of plan to cope with the recession is "just answer the phone calls from HP and Compaq customers." More enterprise IT news in ZDNet UK's Tech Update Channel For a weekly round-up of the enterprise IT news, sign up for the Tech Update newsletter. Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the ZDNet news forum. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read other letters.

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