@3wkp+1ttxjGQo
"IBM is no longer a force to be reckoned with..." is IMHO a bit uncharitable. IBM is still the dominant player in certain market segments, and it is unlikely that they will be pushed out any time soon. "International BUSINESS Machines" is the name of the company, and they are living up to that title. As much as observers would like to imagine otherwise, IBM is not the AI company, the quantum computing company, the printer company, the networking and communications company, nor any other kind of company. IBM sells big-a-s servers and associated bits of enterprise software to business customers, and that's that. They have dabbled in other technology segments from time to time, but they keep on retreating to their roots.
Let this be a warning to everyone. IBM is historically conservative in its corporate culture and management style, and not prone to flights of fancy when it comes to trendy technologies. They are good at mainframe hardware and software, and legacy software products. They are still current and relevant to that market segment, but given their history it's unrealistic to expect them to be anything else. They may call out for everyone to be "master inventors", but I'm willing to bet that most of that IP doesn't go anywhere outside the legal department. It won't get developed and it won't be sold.