Even though so lots of of us Microsoft watchers were preoccupied together with the hasty departure of former Microsfot CIO Stuart Scott,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2010 Product Key, the resignation of the enterprise;s OEM chief slipped ideal by most of us.Scott Di Valerio quietly left Microsoft in the extremely end of October and has resurfaced at Lenovo. Redmond Channel Companion noted on Di Valerio;s career moves in early November, but I missed their tale.Di Valerio is slated to begin his new work on December three as Lenovo senior vice president and president of the Americas Group.Considering that November 2005, Di Valerio was corporate vice president of Microsoft;s Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) Division. The head of the OEM division typically may be an essential post at Microsoft — and one with rather the revolving door since the mid-1990s.The most (in)famous of Microsoft;s OEM chiefs was Joachim Kempin, who left his post in 2000. Richard Roy, head of Microsoft Germany, stepped in to fill Kempin;s shoes. Next, Richard Fade,
Office Professional 2010 Activation cl��, the VP in charge of Microsoft;s desktop applications division, headed the OEM unit for a couple of years,
Microsoft Office 2010 32bits cl��, during the tough DOJ sanction-negotiation period. Then, in July of 2002, Rodrigo Costa took the OEM reins. In 2005,
Office Pro 2010 Serial, Di Valerio moved over from his profession as Microsoft;s Corporate Vice President of Finance and Administration and chief accounting officer (CAO).It can;t have been much fun to be OEM chief at Microsoft for the past few years. Vista;s constantly changing due date and feature set was followed by finger-pointing between Microsoft and its PC partners regarding hardware/driver incompatibilities. Microsoft ended up giving in to OEMs; requests to allow them to preload Windows XP for an additional few months in order to appease customers not ready to move to Vista.Redmond Channel Companion said that James Pickney (whose previous title I had no luck finding) will serve as the interim leader with the Microsoft OEM Division,
Office 2010 Activation, working with Bill Veghte, corporate vice president of the Windows Business enterprise Group, and COO Kevin Turner, to find a full-time replacement for Di Valerio.Update: A couple of readers pointed out that another previous Softie, Microsoft;s previous Human Resources Chief Ken DiPietro (who left the enterprise in a hurry in 2005 for publicly undisclosed reasons), is now the HR chief at Lenovo.