Thread regarding Xerox Corp. layoffs

HP Executives Seen Talking to Xerox Executives At Devos

The annual gathering at Davos, Switzerland, has always been a stage where the world’s most influential figures—be they political, social, or business leaders—come together to shape the future of the global economy. The World Economic Forum (WEF), founded by Klaus Schwab in 1971, has become synonymous with elite discussions on critical issues. From climate change to geopolitical tensions, and from technological innovation to the fate of global industries, Davos has long been where ideas are exchanged, deals are struck, and power dynamics are navigated.

But this year, the whispers on the snow-capped mountains surrounding Davos carry a particularly intriguing question: What brought together executives from HP and Xerox? These two giants of the tech world, once locked in fierce competition in the printer and copier space, have seen vastly different fortunes in recent years.

HP, with its stable of patents and substantial market presence, has steadily expanded into new sectors, adapting to an ever-evolving landscape. Xerox, on the other hand, has been battling financial troubles, its glory days of groundbreaking innovation now a distant memory. Yet, despite its challenges, Xerox still holds a trove of intellectual property—patents and innovations that may hold value for the right buyer.

Could HP, in its pursuit of market dominance, be eyeing the remnants of Xerox's intellectual capital? A corporate raider move, masked as a chance encounter? Or perhaps this is just an innocent meeting of two tech titans, brought together by the vast network of connections that Davos provides? Is there a potential for collaboration, or is this the beginning of a new chapter in corporate warfare?

In a world where perception and timing can be as important as innovation itself, every handshake at Davos carries the weight of potential consequences. As HP’s executives make their way to the Congress Centre for what appears to be a casual conversation with Xerox’s leadership, the question remains: Is this a fleeting moment of convergence or a calculated strategic move in the making? Only time will tell, but in the rarefied air of Davos, where deals are done behind closed doors and the stakes are always high, nothing is ever as simple as it seems.

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| 2201 views | | 14 replies (last February 13, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jkk9r6gp

14 replies (most recent on top)

Remember one boat…the Xerox titanic

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Post ID: @xj+1jkk9r6gp

Xerox’s balance sheet is not even
Good for the bottom of a bird cage. 🦜

Give the bird a bit more respect than that…. 🕊️

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Post ID: @q5+1jkk9r6gp

This is delusional. Xerox has nothing of benefit to offer HP.

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Post ID: @ks+1jkk9r6gp

"I am not sure if you guys are looking at our financials but we are so far in the negative, most companies would have already folded with our balance sheet."

Finally, someone who can read financials. I don't think the SLT members can...

Agree with the 24 months, 5 years will not happen. LEX combo will create havoc that may accelerate decline.

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Post ID: @kk+1jkk9r6gp

Guys, we have to find someone to merge with or we will not be here in 24 months. I am not sure if you guys are looking at our financials but we are so far in the negative, most companies would have already folded with our balance sheet. I cant even understand how our stock price isn't listed as worthless. I wanted to hang on for at least 5 more years and retire but I don't think the company will be here in 24 months.

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Post ID: @jm+1jkk9r6gp

Maybe stevie b put this through xeroxs many ai solutions and posted it

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Post ID: @ez+1jkk9r6gp

Why are you even messing around with these guys? They will lead you once again into dark despair and ruin.

At what point do you all start to think for yourselves and not rely on Xerox, HP, or Devos for speculative answers that can’t be trusted?

Start the car, and get outta town. Period.

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Post ID: @ex+1jkk9r6gp

My 15 year old daughter is a writer and she wrote this last week as I was complaining about my future at Xerox. This is not AI generated. A few of my long time Xerox buddies just sat around the table saying thing and she put this all together.

I stand as an analyst, watching Xerox decay,
A company once proud, now fading away.
Its wealth flows to the few at the very top,
While the roots of the empire wither and drop.

We wished upon a white knight, a savior so grand,
We called out to HP, to lend a strong hand.
But the knight, upon arrival, saw naught to save,
Just echoes and ruins in a corporate grave.

We beckon, we call, but the silence is deep,
Only answers from failing knights who cannot leap.
Like Lexmark, adrift on a sinking sea,
Chasing shadows, as lost as we.

What remains is an ember, a flicker of light,
A fire long gone, consumed by the night.
In truth, there's nothing but ashes and dust,
As the dream slips away, as all things must.

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Post ID: @er+1jkk9r6gp

I spoke to the guy behind the register at the McDonalds I recently went to. Should everyone speculate that I am now purchasing McDonalds?

What a stupid article.

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Post ID: @ba+1jkk9r6gp

What pointless Narrative is this? Xerox is beyond ripe road ki-l. The only reason HP would address Xerox is to wipe it off the sole of its shoes.

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Post ID: @aj+1jkk9r6gp

Ah yes, Davos, the elite playground where the world’s true power brokers shape global finance, geopolitics, and the fate of humanity. And amidst all this? Supposedly, HP and Xerox executives, deep in world-altering conversations. Right. Because if there’s one thing keeping Klaus Schwab awake at night, it’s the future of mid-range office printers.

Let’s cut the cr-p. Even in three reincarnations, Xerox executives wouldn’t get invited to Davos unless they were delivering printed agendas at the front desk. The idea that the global elite would pause discussions on AI, climate change, and multi-trillion-dollar hedge funds to watch two former copier warriors awkwardly shake hands is beyond delusional: it’s AI-generated drivel of the highest order.

This article reeks of ChatGPT-on-autopilot journalism: a soup of buzzwords, rhetorical questions, and dramatic nonsense without a single fact, source, or shred of reality. The whole thing is a suspense novel where nothing happens, written by an algorithm that desperately wants to sound like a political thriller but has the depth of an office memo.

HP “eyeing Xerox’s intellectual capital”? What, like a scavenger bird circling a carcass? Xerox’s last groundbreaking innovation is going bankrupt in high resolution. If HP wanted their patents, they’d buy them at a liquidation sale, not whisper about it between climate panels and champagne receptions.

Whoever—or whatever—wrote this needs to be unplugged, rebooted, and sent back to remedial fact-checking school. If this is what passes for “verified information” now, I eagerly await next week’s “Dell executives caught plotting with Epson at the UN General Assembly.”

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Post ID: @ae+1jkk9r6gp

The HP guys we’re just goofing on Stevie.

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Post ID: @a7+1jkk9r6gp

Thank you for that laugh. It could easily be true.

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Post ID: @a3+1jkk9r6gp

The HP Executives mistook the Xerox attendees as parking attendants… after 30 seconds it was cleared up and the HP team went about their day.

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Post ID: @a2+1jkk9r6gp

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