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- This is a short article I've dug out from an old polish paper magazine
- called "Komputer". It was published in July 1987. Here is an english
- translation...
-
- Sorry for my not so good english. (better than my Polish :) - Spiny)
-
- - --- ---- ----- -----------------------------------------------------
- <link=g45.scr>"People of the microworld - Jack Tramiel"</l> translation: sAuL0t 2k + 1
- ---------------------------------------------------- ----- ---- --- --
-
- "Jack Tramiel (58 years old) was born in Poland. His grandfather Jakub
- was a merchant selling barrels in the city of Lodz, who could, in
- times of low demand, switch to selling soured cucumber and cabbage,
- packaged in the same barrels, and business would go on.
-
- In search for a better life in 1947, Jack left Poland and through the
- next couple of years he had no exeptional successes. He had a
- small company repairing typewriters in the Bronx. The company wasn't
- a great success, but the its name was slighty better :
- - "Commodore"( :-))))) ).
-
- The number of typewriters needing repair was dwindling, Jack switched
- to producing computers and the company started evolving and eventually
- reached acapital turnover of over a billion dollars. In 1984 he was
- forced to leave the company (simultanously withdrawing all invested
- capital), the result of a conflict of interests, which no agreement
- could be reached, with the main shareholder, Irving Gould. After that
- he bought the living legend (at this time in major financial trouble)
- Atari, the first company on the electronic games market, which in 1983
- had losses of 500 million dollars. Tramiel invested 30 million of his
- own cash and added 45 million from loans granted by several banks and
- quickly started work. First off he sacked approximatly 900 employees,
- then he employed his three sons and around thirty other people who had
- followed him from Commodore.
-
- In a year Atari had designed brand new and cheap microcomputers called
- the ST series, which went on to become a great success on the market.
-
- In the case of his sons, Tramiel frequently repeats, that "business is
- like war" and that "Harvard cannot teach business, you must bring it
- from home" And in reality, for 27 year old Gary, his first impressions
- of childhood are stock-lists from papers... 37 year old Leonard who in
- 1984 left his doctorate of astrophysics to come back to business, to
- help push Atari into deeper waters. Samuel was the president of the
- company, and in reality, ruled his father.
-
- Jack Tramiel was considered as a very hard-hearted businessman. It's
- impossible for him to throw out his share in Atari -in overall Tramiel
- family has over 50% of share and Jack himself has 45%.He can kick out
- subordinates, even from higher management levels, without any serious
- reason; on a whim he can pull out from contracts worth millions of
- dollars. He is not talkative in contact with press - he says what he
- wants, but not what the journalist and press are expecting. He fully
- uses his right to refuse giving any information (lot of bravery is
- needed to do such a thing in the USA). He simply remains cautious.
-
- Tramiel, as his friend says, has great ambitions to write himself into
- history as a man who gave to the masses a very good and simultanously
- very cheap computer. Without doubt he did this at Commodore, and now
- at Atari, he is definatly on his way to repeating himself."
-
- There is nothing left to write. Cry, laugh or scream. Do what you like
- -there is nothing more you can do...
-
- -- -- --- ---- -- ----------------------------------------------------
- CHOSNECK team contact us:
- people faithful 2 da roots! atarimsb@wp.pl
- ---------------------------------------------- -- ----- ---- ----- ---
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