这算什么。 看这个新BOARD MEMBER的EXPLOIT。 KARMA好就行了。 CASTE 也很重要。 Vice President and General Manager of Cisco's Service Provider Network Management Business Unit is leaving his position and a headhunter has been hired to seek a replacement for Nye according to a Cisco source. Earlier this year, Network World reported that Nye outsourced the U.S. jobs of 3 Cisco groups he managed to Tech Mahindra in India. Nye managed Cisco's service provider network management applications serving wireline, mobile wireless and cable providers. http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/42639 Cisco quietly outsourcing to India, cutting jobs: http://www.computerworlduk.com/in-depth/outsourcing/2133/cisco- Cisco Systems Chairman & CEO John Chambers said two Indians - Padmasree Warrior, 51, its CTO & chief strategy officer, and Pankaj Patel, 58, its executive vice-president & chief development officer - are in contention to succeed him as CEO when he steps down sometime in the next two-to-four years. About 30% of the company's workforce will be in India in the not-so-distant future, up from about one-sixth at present. Even six years ago, Cisco had only 1,400 people in India. That number has since grown to 11,300. "I am looking at India beyond labour arbitrage or outsourcing. No other high -tech company has put majority of its R&D and services utilisation in India, " Chambers said. The Cisco board has shortlisted about 10 candidates who could succeed Chambers. It reviews the list every quarter. http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-04-18/news/38 profound proponent of "Seamless Mobility" hahaha from wiki: Warrior joined Motorola in 1984,[3] as one of only a few women in its Arizona facility. Over the course of her 23 years at the company, she served in a broad range of roles, including Corporate Vice President and General Manager of Motorola’s Energy Systems Group, and Corporate Vice President and Chief Technology Officer in its Semiconductor Products Sector,[3] which later became Freescale Semiconductor. Immediately prior to becoming Motorola ’s CTO, she served as general manager of Thoughtbeam, a wholly owned Motorola subsidiary chartered to commercialize Motorola’s GaAs on silicon technology that was developed at the Physical Sciences Research Laboratory in Tempe, Arizona. This position was short-lived, however, because the Thoughtbeam technology was found to be based on erroneous measurements.[4] Her promotion to CTO after this failed venture has been called a "Dilbert moment" by observers in the technology industry.[5] When named Motorola's CTO in January 2003, Warrior became a senior vice president [6] and in 2005 she was promoted to executive vice president.[7] During Warrior’s tenure as CTO, Motorola was awarded the 2004 National Medal of Technology by the President of the United States, the first time the company had received this honor. During this period she was a profound proponent of "Seamless Mobility" - the concept of having seamless communication across all facets of a person's life. The dream was not fully realized and the concept was eventually dropped from Motorola marketing presentations. She also is known for criticizing, in her blog "Bits on my Edge",[8] the Apple iPhone, which later became a huge success in the cell phone industry[9] On December 4, 2007, she left Motorola to become CTO at Cisco Systems.