The Rig is an insane read. Tallen is fascinating, especially his death compulsion. It's always there but he doesn't quite want to die. But there's still that raw desire. It's so humanistic, so stark for so many.

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The Rig is an insane read. Tallen is fascinating, especially his death compulsion. It's always there but he doesn't quite want to die. But there's still that raw desire. It's so humanistic, so stark for so many.
HP’s cloud chief exits, sparking more confusion
#SuryaRay #Surya Hewlett-Packard’s attempt to get its cloud computing strategy heard above the noise around the company’s bigger woes took another hit this week. Zorawar “Biri” Singh, who headed up HP’s Converged Cloud and Cloud Servicess effort, is gone, according to AllThingsD. He will be replaced on an interim basis by Roger Levy, group VP for technology and customer relations. The news muddies HP’s already unclear cloud situation, although Singh’s departure is not all that surprising. He was recruited out of IBM two years ago by HP’s then-CEO Leo Apotheker. Apotheker himself was axed by HP less than a year into his tenure, replaced by current CEO Meg Whitman. Last September, citing an internal memo, _CRN_ reported that HP had formed a Converged Cloud business unit under the leadership of SVP Saar Gillai, who reported to Singh. Last week, AllThingsD re-reported the formation of that group, but said Gillai reported to HP COO Paul Veghte. There was no mention of Singh. HP, which could not be reached for comment, has been hindered by bigger issues around its costly Autonomy acquisition and plateauing PC-and-server business, and has struggled to make its vision of enterprise-class cloud heard above the competition. In an interview last year, Singh told me the company could differentiate itself from other public and private cloud providers by offering the types of high-level and specific service level agreements (SLAs) that Amazon Web Services and other cloud providers do not. It’s easy to write HP off after all its high-level management struggles and poorly handled acquisitions. In its proxy statement last month, the company reopened the possibility of selling off business units. Since then, speculation has amped up that it might even sell off Autonomy – which it bought in 2011 for more than $11 billion — and Enterprise Services unit, which grew out of its 2008 $13.9 billion buyout of EDS. http://dlvr.it/2plctQ @suryaray