ExcelStor Technology
ExcelStor Technology (Chinese: 易拓科技) was established in 2000 as a small hard disk drive manufacturer and has evolved into a contract manufacturer and a system integrator. ExcelStor bought the bankrupt Conner Technology PLC, its products and factory. It has a manufacturing plant in Shenzhen, China, and an R&D center in Longmont, Colorado, USA. The company is partly owned by Shenzhen Kaifa Technology, of which the major share holder is China Great Wall Computer Group Co.
In 2002, ExcelStor signed a deal with IBM to manufacture and sell the 40 GB version of IBM's Deskstar 120GXP series under the ExcelStor brand name. IBM was also to market these drives under its own brand name.[1] In 2003, after Hitachi took over IBM's storage division, the deal was extended to include 40 GB and 80 GB drives from Hitachi's Deskstar 7K250 series.[2]
Since 2004 ExcelStor has manufactured some of Iomega's products, including REV.[3] In 2007 Iomega announced it would acquire ExcelStor in a stock swap valued at approximately $315 million.[4] The deal fell apart, however, with Iomega paying a termination fee of $7.5 million in 2008 as Iomega was being acquired by EMC Corporation.[5]
In 2007, Excelstor laid off 20 of its 28 employees at its Longmont CO R&D Center.[6]
References
- ↑ 2002 IBM deal
- ↑ 2003 Hitachi deal
- ↑ Iomega describes relationship with ExcelStor in third paragraph of press release
- ↑ Valuation of Iomega acquisition based on Iomega stock in December 2007
- ↑ April 2008 termination of Iomega acquisition
- ↑ http://www.bcbr.com/article.asp?id=86346 Jobs cut at ExcelStor in Longmont
External links
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