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December 3, 2008 2:23 PM PST

Adobe added its name Wednesday to the list of companies warning of weaker sales and cutting jobs.

In a press release, the company said it would slash 600 jobs amid less-than-anticipated demand for its recently launched Creative Suite 4 series of products.

"The global economic crisis significantly impacted our revenue during the fourth quarter," Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen said in a statement. "We have taken action to reduce our operating costs and fine-tune the focus of our resources on key strategic priorities."

The company said it now expects per-share earnings of 45 cents to 46 cents, on revenue of $912 million to $915 million for the three months ended November 28. The company had expected sales to come in as high as $955 million. The company said it expects revenue to drop further in the current quarter, with expectations now for revenue in the range of $800 million to $850 million.

The company said it will take pre-tax charges of $44 million to $50 million to account for the restructuring.

Among the things the company is apparently cutting: its booth at Macworld Expo.

Originally posted at Beyond Binary
December 3, 2008 12:35 PM PST

With the overall economy slumping, the tech industry is taking its fair share of hits. We'll keep updating the chart below as news of company changes comes in. See our complete coverage of how the tech sector is faring here: Tracking the tech downturn.

Know of a layoff not listed here? Let us know on this form or e-mail us.

See also: The spreadsheet of sunshine: Who's hiring.

... Read more
December 3, 2008 10:20 AM PST

Analysts are readjusting their expectations for the PC industry next year, and it's not looking good.

On Wednesday, IDC released an updated forecast for the number of PCs expected to be shipped next year. In 2009, PC shipments will rise just 3.8 percent worldwide, according to the report.

That's a drastic cut from the 13.7 percent growth IDC had predicted for 2009 earlier this year. The hardest hit areas will be the emerging PC markets of Latin America, Central Europe, the Middle East, and Africa due to falling commodity prices and the worldwide credit crunch.

But the U.S. PC market is expected to fare even worse. Next year will bring a decline in shipments of PCs by 3 percent compared to this year. However, IDC says that there will be "low single-digit" increases in the years following.

The key factors affecting PC shipments are the rate of portable PC adoption, falling prices, and the PC upgrade cycle.

"Low-cost mini notebooks will help volume, but pressure margins and revenues," said Lore Loverde, director of IDC's Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. "Consumer and commercial segments will be much more conservative in their purchases over the coming year or two, and while low prices will remain essential, they will not drive volumes as they did in the past few years."

December 3, 2008 9:35 AM PST

Visitors to e-commerce sites spent $846 million on Monday, an increase of 15 percent over the same day a year ago, according to ComScore.

Monday, referred to as Cyber Monday by online retailers, capped off a successful Thanksgiving holiday weekend for the industry, which overall saw spending jump 13 percent.

It's a welcome relief for an industry that was mostly bracing for the worst.

"Consumers are clearly responding positively to retailers' aggressive online discounts," ComScore Chairman Gian Fulgoni said in a statement. "With Cyber Monday promotions beginning in earnest over the Thanksgiving weekend, consumers have finally begun to open their wallets, setting off a streak of four consecutive days of extremely strong growth..."

ComScore ranks the $846 million spent Monday as the second-biggest day of online shopping ever. That should be encouraging to retailers, since typically Cyber Monday isn't the biggest spike in online sales for the holiday season, just the first, according to retail analysts.

It also comes on the heels of a better-than-expected Black Friday shopping day, so the retail picture this holiday may not be quite as dreary as expected. What remains to be seen, however, is whether retailers were able to draw any sort of profit after the aggressive promotions that clearly attracted shoppers.

December 3, 2008 4:00 AM PST

Editors note: This is part of a series of stories about the recession's effect on the tech industry.

Over the last few months, there have been countless stories of cutbacks at companies large and small. Real people are losing jobs. For some, that means losing their homes or being forced to change careers. In this series, CNET News is telling the stories of many of the people on the receiving end of the hits recently sustained by the tech industry.

Click for special report
Click for complete special report

But there is another side to layoffs that doesn't get told very often. That's the story of the people who do the laying off, those who make the decisions about who stays and who goes. Do they deserve our sympathy or our derision?

In most cases, the answer is neither. While there will always be an evil schemer or two out there, most executives who conduct layoffs realize they're cutting into their company's most valuable asset: the employees. Sure, it's a corporate cliche, but most of them do believe it.

We talked to the chief executive of a Web 2.0 company that recently axed a bit less than 10 percent of its workforce and asked him to walk us through the process. Not surprisingly, he did so on condition of anonymity. He's running his third company now. This business is his second Web 2.0 outfit, and is generating revenues from a mix of sources, including subscription fees and advertising. It's an established business, not a brand new Web start-up.

The job cut process, as he described it, was driven by raw numbers and business instinct. No Seven Stages of Grief here, just plain old business sense. Like it or not, this is how it usually works in corporate America:

Q: Why did you do layoffs?
CEO: It's clear that 2009 is going to be a different year than we had anticipated. There's no question that we're in a recession, and we expect that next year could be severe. It's really important for companies to do everything they can to keep costs low, and be able to sustain themselves.

This layoff was based not on an actual decline in revenues, then, but a projection?
CEO: We did see some softness in Q3 and Q4, and projections are that the softness is going to continue. One of the things that makes this very difficult is the uncertainty. It's very hard to plan for next year.

It reminds me of back in the bubble days, where people were expecting the bubble to burst. But until it burst, it wasn't rational to behave as if it were going to.

How many people did you lay off, and was it a one-time thing, or should we expect more in 2009?
CEO: We let go less than 10 percent, and that is the most difficult aspect. You don't want the layoff to be too big, and you don't want it to be too small. If it's too big, then you've impacted too many people and damaged your ability to execute. If it's too small, you run the risk of having to do it again, and doing that suggests that it's not going to be a one-time thing, but that it's an ongoing thing. And that creates huge amounts of anxiety. So that is the real risk.

It's hard to say what will happen next year. You take risks either way. We say we're doing this so we never have to do it again.

Could you have foreseen this?
CEO: People were expecting a meltdown on Wall Street. It reminds me of back in the bubble days, when people were expecting the bubble to burst. But until it burst, it wasn't rational to behave as if it were going to. Alan Greenspan talked about irrational exuberance in 1996, and it wasn't until 2000 that the exuberance really burst, so it's a very hard thing. In retrospect, sure, there are things we should have done. And it is possible that in six months from now, we'll be saying that in retrospect we didn't know it was going to get this bad. You may see another wave in six months. And it's possible that we all make it through, that the economy picks up.

When did you have that "I'm going to throw up" moment and realize that you were going to have to let people go?
CEO: I don't know if it was like that. It's hard to say exactly when we made the decision. It came to a process of forecasting our business and determining what an acceptable expense ratio was for the business going forward. When we reforecast our business for the second half of the year and evaluated the risk, we realized that our cost basis was just too high.

Any CEO who needs to wait for their board to tell them what to do in terms of their expense structure is not doing the right job.

So when you realize that you have to trim your staff, who gets involved?
CEO: It starts with the heads of our business units, the people who have (profit and loss accounting) responsibility, and the people who are responsible for your revenue lines as well as the bottom line of the business. You first have to have a really strong gut check as to where you feel the business is going to go. You certainly would rather figure out ways of generating more revenue, and the first conversation wasn't about how to we cut costs. We asked, "How can we respond to the changing market conditions? Let's not just think of this as the market getting smaller, but the market is changing, and we ought to adjust our strategy to match. There may be positive ways to do that." And eventually you have to talk to the board.

You don't start with the board?
CEO: There's been a lot of discussion about this. For example, Sequoia brought in their CEOs and told them: This is the way it's got to be. But any CEO who needs to wait for their board to tell them what to do in terms of their expense structure is not doing the right job. It's the management team that ultimately has to make the call. Boards can give advice and ultimately judge the effectiveness of the CEO, but this is something the management team has to own.

I would never want to be a Sequoia portfolio company. Those guys are so heavy-handed in the way they treat their companies. They see the CEOs as interchangeable. I think a lot of people did layoffs because of the slideshow.

How long does it take to put a layoff together?
CEO: For us it was a matter of weeks. We did want to have a structured conversation with the board about what we were proposing. It's very important to have a back and forth, get their advice and their opinions. Also, we wanted to invest enough time in this to make sure we were making the right moves, that it was the right degree, and that we were structuring the company appropriately, and weren't just thinking of this in a one-dimensional way, which is "how do we cut people?"

It was, instead, "how do we structure the company to adapt to the changing conditions?" And that may include other organizational and strategic changes beyond just cutting people. And that's very important. We also wanted to look closely at other ways to cut expenses and generate revenue.

Was there anyone who, at the end of the planning process, changed status, from staying to going, or the reverse?
CEO: Yes. You're trying to figure out the best mix to make the company successful going forward, and that's an iterative process. And in some cases, we wanted to make sure that there weren't opportunities for people in other parts of the company. We took into consideration not the performance of people, but their skill sets and how they could contribute going forward.

How did you tell people?
CEO: We spent a lot of time thinking through the process. The management team went offsite several times to discuss it. We talked through the logistics on how the day would work, and we iterated on it. We really thought through how this would happen. The details of it really do matter.

We decided the best way to do it was to talk to the people individually first. We tried to figure out how we could get the message to people one-on-one, in person, explaining it to them so they knew first, rather than doing a whole announcement and then tapping people on the shoulder. We told people one by one, by their direct managers, and then we had exit interviews, and then we told the rest of the company what was going on. To the extent we had managers who would be eliminated, we told them beforehand.

Did anyone, on the way out, do any bridge burning?
CEO: No one. It was moving, actually. And I haven't seen many stories about people being nasty or bitter. I think people have been pretty mature about this.

If you've put enough thought and work and diligence into the decision, then you can be at peace with it.

What did you do afterward? Did you go out drinking with everyone who was left behind and toast the departed?
CEO: We did. We set a time for everyone to get together and say proper goodbyes. I think it's a real mistake to treat people you've let go as if they're not people or not part of the family anymore or it's too awkward to look them in the face. That's not respecting them the way they deserve.

What's it like to go home after a day like that, to go home to your family and your kids and realize that other people are going home now without jobs, and will be worrying about Christmas and paying for schools?
CEO: It's tough. But once you've made the decision, if you've put enough thought and work and diligence into the decision, then you can be at peace with it. If you did it on a whim or because a board member told you to or because it seemed fashionable, then I assume you would feel more uncomfortable. If you've really done your job, then you can be at peace.

The best thing you can say is that you have thought through what you were doing long enough to know that it was the right thing. My obligation is to the company, and I've got to think about how I can create something sustainable for everybody, and worry about the jobs we still have here as well the jobs we have to cut.

And the next day? What's it like for you?
CEO: For me, it was checking in with people. The key thing is to focus on the company that you have after the layoff. It creates the ability for you to set a new tone. If there was any complacency in the company, this is an opportunity to make sure that doesn't exist anymore. It's really about moving forward, and having people realize that this company is moving forward.

Have you been in touch with people who are no longer with you to help them out in any way? How's it going?
CEO: Yes. It's a tough market. But we do try to help everyone who's laid off. If we can help them get a job or make introductions, we have been doing that. We're tracking everybody and how they're ending up. There's only so much we can do, but we do think it's important.

Has anybody landed a new gig yet?
CEO: Yes.

What advice would you give to people who are doing this for the first time?
CEO: To be as honest as you can about the process.

But this is not a process that lends itself to being open. If I'm at a company and I know times are tough, and you're the CEO and you know a month from now you're going to do layoffs, do you let me know that a month from now I might not have a job?
CEO: That's the hardest part. Which is why, once you've come to the determination that you're going to cut costs or do layoffs, it's best to move as quickly as you can. Then you're not in the awkward space where you have to be circumspect with your team.

Do you let them know you're making those plans?
CEO: No. I think you can acknowledge the circumstances of the company. You can talk about the forecasts looking dim. But you have to balance being candid with sowing widespread anxiety around the company.

If somebody comes to you, and asks you directly: "Am I going to get laid off?", what do you tell them?
CEO: If the answer is, "We don't know," that's the answer I would give them. But I don't think it's good to suggest something will happen that won't. Usually the answer is, "We are looking seriously at how to lower costs." The truth is that very rarely does this happen.

I'm surprised. It's like people are afraid to ask because they are afraid of the answer.
CEO: That dynamic came into play the day of. People were, at some level, expecting it. And therefore when the day finally came, people looked at is an opportunity to move on.

Coming up Thursday: A bustling green-tech industry readjusts its expectations

December 2, 2008 4:53 PM PST

HALF MOON BAY, Calif.--When bonds are paying yields like stocks and blue-chip companies are severely undervalued, who wants to invest in equities, let alone an IPO?

Those are just some of the challenges companies face in attracting investors in this current economic climate, noted panelists Tuesday during the AlwaysOn Venture Summit West conference here.

Despite the dire economic climate and the market meltdown, the panelists noted "good companies" will still have an opportunity to go public--it just may take longer.

Investors, such as mutual funds, asset managers, pension funds and hedge funds, are holding a significant amount of cash on the sidelines, as a defensive move to guard against clients pulling money out of the funds they are invested in and as a means to keep their powder dry, noted Leslie Pfrang, a managing director and head of specialist sales at Deutsche Bank.

And investors apparently don't mind that their funds are holding onto such a large hoard of cash instead of investing in equities, given cash is now considered an asset class, noted John Rende, a partner with Weintraub Capital Management. Rende and Pfrang were both speakers on "The Buy Side Today" panel.

With the harsh economic climate washing out a number of companies that had hoped to launch an initial public offering, the survivors will likely lead to a bumper crop of stronger and more profitable IPOs, said Lise Buyer, founder of IPO advisory firm Class V Group, who also served as a speaker on the "Are the IPO Glory Days Over Forever" panel.

"Everyone should act as though there will not be another round of funding," Buyer said. "You should operate with what you have, because it may be all you get."

And as older, or late-stage, private companies seek to land another funding round, Josh Tanzer, managing director of private equity firm Revolution Partners, advised companies to demonstrate to potential investors that they not only have momentum in growing their revenue but also momentum in profitability.

December 2, 2008 4:00 AM PST

Editors note: This is the first in a series of stories about the recession's effect on the tech industry.

Patricia Sueltz has had her share of blunt bosses.

LogLogic CEO Patricia Sueltz

(Credit: LogLogic)

At IBM, Sueltz was CEO Lou Gerstner's technical assistant during Big Blue's dramatic turnaround in the 1990s. After that, she ran the services division at Sun Microsystems for CEO Scott McNealy during the dot-com bust from which many believe Sun has never truly recovered.

But not even the acerbic McNealy could have cooked up what 56-year-old Sueltz saw in front of her two months ago: A PowerPoint slide of a blue-shaded, gothic headstone with "R.I.P. Good Times" written in red. It was the first of 56 now-infamous slides used by venture capitalists at Sequoia Capital in a tough talk delivered to the executives of the companies in which they'd invested.

And if that wasn't enough, the third slide, a mangled pig on a butcher's block, drove home the point: The economy is heading south, rapidly. And if you want to save your company, you'd better find a way to trim the fat. Personally, Sueltz appreciated the blunt message.

"I'll take that over a bunch of saccharine, sugarcoated messages," said Sueltz, now chief executive of software start-up LogLogic.

Not everyone appreciated the dark humor, back when it was unclear just how bad the economy would get. But by now they should acknowledge the Sequoia venture capitalists had a point. By most measures, the high-tech industry appears headed for one of its many busts as the global economy sinks into recession. Industry research firms have been downgrading and downgrading their corporate spending forecasts for 2009. The PC market is in the dumps. E-commerce spending, for the first time, was down for the first three weeks of November from the same period a year ago. Even online ad spending, though still growing at a healthy clip, isn't expected to expand as rapidly as earlier forecasts. If you're not working for Apple, it seems, these could be the most trying times in decades.

For the tech industry, of course, booms and busts are nothing new. Venture-backed booms generate hundreds of start-ups and drive out aging companies that are no longer innovating. The busts separate the weaklings from the survivors, the smart ideas from, well, the not-so-smart. The PC boom in the 1980s drove out old tech giants like Digital Equipment Corp. and Wang. The PC bust consolidated that industry, just as the dot-com bust separated the survivors from the Pets.coms of the world.

Click for special report
Click for complete special report

Now? The Web 2.0 expansion of the last three years is just a boomlet compared to other industry expansions, and plenty of start-up employees are already losing their jobs. But the biggest concern for the tech industry isn't overinvestment in start-ups: It's the overall economy. Taking the air out of the Web 2.0 community likely won't impact as many people as a single round of layoffs at a giant like Sun, which recently announced plans to cut up to 6,000 jobs. Even healthy tech bellwethers like Hewlett-Packard are telling employees to take time off before the end of the year--a slightly more palatable option to layoffs.

Even worse, economists aren't sure how long this recession will last: A few months? A few years? Starting today, CNET News begins a series of profiles of people in various technology sectors--from the start-up execs getting a stern talking-to from their investors to the holiday shoppers in one of the housing foreclosure epicenters, Modesto, Calif. Their expectations and their means are often wildly different, but in a way, they're in this together: For tech executives, their employees, and even their customers, these are uncharted waters because the industry, as we know it today, has never faced this sort of economic uncertainty.

Saltwater in the face
For Sueltz, running a small company in bad times is a new experience. She's been at huge companies in bad times, and responding to problems isn't easy at companies like IBM and Sun--sort of like turning an aircraft carrier. At a start-up, the challenges are different: it's like being in a small ocean-going boat. Every wave, every gust of wind, feels like it could capsize you.

"But, you know, the best way to deal with it is to get right out in front," Sueltz said. "Sometimes it's good to get that saltwater in the face."

The gregarious mother of two started her career in the 1970s as a rare, female telephone pole climber for the old Pacific Telephone & Telegraph (some joke that must be where she got her famously strong handshake). Sueltz kiddingly portrays herself as one of the old-timers in tech these days, but there's little question that her decades of experience have taught her what to do in tough times.

There were plenty of bad days at IBM in the early 1990s. Hard as it may be to imagine for young people now, IBM had the makings of a company in a death spiral. Like DEC, losses were mounting, and the company was ill-prepared to compete with younger, more nimble competitors. It took Gerstner, an RJR Nabisco executive with no tech industry experience, to turn things around. The biggest lesson for Sueltz during those years working closely with Gerstner was making decisions fast, and sticking with them.

At one point, Gerstner laid off more than 200,000 people in 18 months, Sueltz recalls. No doubt, the impact was brutal, and old IBM towns like Poughkeepsie in upstate New York have never really recovered. But the alternative, IBM going under, was even worse. "It was a pretty horrendous time," Sueltz said. "But I learned from Lou. Swiftness, again, is so important. You have to be firm in what you do."

Sueltz went to work for Sun in 1999 and at one point was the executive responsible for 17,000 employees in Sun's services arm. Few big tech companies were as badly impacted by the dot-com bust as Sun, which grew fat off start-up customers and big financial companies rebuilding their networks for the online world. Unfortunately, when the spending spree ended, McNealy was slow to cut costs. He believed Sun revenues would quickly rebound. They didn't.

Sueltz, who is still friends with many Sun executives, would never actually blame her old boss for being an optimist. McNealy, the son of an auto executive from Detroit, understood the human impact of layoffs, and he believed his company's greatest asset was its employees, from the engineers in Sun Labs to the sales force. McNealy's bet turned out to be wrong, but Sueltz understood that trying to be decent when you have to make hard decisions is the least an executive can do.

Venture capitalists had a blunt message

(Credit: Sequoia Capital)

After stints at Salesforce.com and start-up SurfControl, Sueltz became the chief executive of the security software company LogLogic; she started there a year ago this week. The San Jose, Calif., company, which makes software to track and store data on the network (a must-have to meet some regulatory requirements) has raised $44 million from venture investors and has 150 employees. There have already been a handful of layoffs over the summer (Sueltz won't say how many), but she's confident the company can be profitable within the next quarter or two, despite the souring economy.

Either way, she was already thinking about the economy when she went to the Sequoia meeting. "The global nature of the (economic problems) is what's worrisome to me," Sueltz said.

While the tombstone and butchered pig slides were splashy, the rest of the presentation was decidedly sober. It was both a lesson in how the economy got into such a pickle and a pessimistic look at what happens next: Possible stagflation, lack of significant consumer spending, an economic correction that could last for years.

The next day, as she briefed her own staff on the Sequoia meeting, the slides from the presentation were already leaking to the tech press. But Sueltz is confident LogLogic can withstand the storm. Costs are down, and their software seems like something corporate customers believe is a priority investment, not something that would be nice to have. "As a small company, I believe we were able to get ahead of the curve," and prepare for a rapidly souring economy.

Decisive action, Sueltz said, will be the key to steering her company through it. "It's that death by a thousand cuts..." she said, "that's completely demoralizing."

Next in the series: A Web 2.0 CEO on laying off staff: "I'm at peace with myself."

December 1, 2008 10:35 PM PST

Intel will target solid-state drives for server computers in a tie up with Hitachi that was announced Monday night.

Intel solid state drive

Intel solid state drive

(Credit: Intel)

Intel and Hitachi Global Storage Technologies (Hitachi GST) said they will "jointly develop and deliver" Serial Attached SCSI (SAS) and Fibre Channel (FC) solid-state drives (SSDs) for servers, workstations, and storage systems.

While Hitachi is a large supplier of hard disk drives, Intel manufactures and sells consumer and enterprise-class solid-state drives (and the flash memory chips inside the drives). The enterprise-class X25-E Extreme SSDs that Intel offers now are based on Serial ATA (SATA) technology. As are its consumer-class drives.

Solid-state drives are generally faster than hard-disk drives, particularly at reading data.

"The combination of a leading Enterprise drive supplier with a NAND technology and manufacturing leader will produce world-class solutions in terms of reliability, performance and system compatibility," the companies said in a statement.

The agreement is exclusive to the two companies with the first Serial Attached SCSI and Fibre Channel products expected to be available in early 2010. Both Serial Attached SCSI and Fibre Channel are interfaces typically used in servers.

The companies said the SSDs will not replace hard disk drives but complement them. "The new generation of solid-state drive technology complements existing enterprise-class hard disk drives and is intended for use in storage applications that require extremely high Input/Output Operations Per Second (IOPS) performance and power efficiency," according to the two companies.

Hitachi GST said it will continue to provide its customers with both "traditional" hard-disk drives in addition to the SSDs.

The new SSDs will be "branded and exclusively sold and supported by Hitachi GST" and use Intel NAND flash memory and SSD technology.

Hitachi said it will use its expertise in drive firmware, reliability, qualification and system integration in combination with Intel's technology and manufacturing capabilities.

Originally posted at Nanotech - The Circuits Blog
Brooke Crothers is a former editor at large at CNET News.com, and has been an editor for the Asian weekly version of the Wall Street Journal. He writes for the CNET Blog Network, and is not a current employee of CNET. Contact him at mbcrothers@gmail.com. Disclosure.
December 1, 2008 7:00 PM PST

940 versus 940. That may be the confusing Intel-AMD processor model-number juxtaposing that consumers can look forward to next year.

A Chinese Web site has posted details of Advanced Micro Devices' upcoming Phenom II desktop processors, of which at least two are due to be launched at the Consumer Electronics Show in January.

The post on HKEPC lists more than a dozen new models due to be launched during the next eight months. AMD is now moving its chips to 45-nanometer process technology from an older 65-nanometer process. Generally, smaller geometries result in faster and more power-efficient processors.

Processors listed include the quad-core Phenom II X4 920 and Phenom II X4 940 due in January, rated at 2.8GHz and 3.0GHz, respectively.

Interestingly (and maybe not coincidentally), AMD's high-end Phenom II X4 920 and 940 model numbers match those of Intel's Core i7-920 (2.66GHz) and i7-940 (2.93GHz).

Both the AMD and Intel models are 45nm quad-core desktop processors with large caches. High-end Phenom II processors come with 8MB of cache memory. Typically, the more cache memory, the better the performance.

Other processors listed include the Phenom II X4 810 and 805, both due in February, rated at 2.6GHz and 2.5GHz, respectively, according to HKEPC. These have 6MB of cache memory.

HKEPC also lists triple-core Phenom II X3 processors and Athlon X4 processors.

The site also posted a table showing new naming scheme for the processors.

AMD will bring out its first generation of 45nm processors just as Intel is beginning commercial shipments of its second-generation 45nm product, the Core i7, which Intel officially introduced on November 17.

Originally posted at Nanotech - The Circuits Blog
Brooke Crothers is a former editor at large at CNET News.com, and has been an editor for the Asian weekly version of the Wall Street Journal. He writes for the CNET Blog Network, and is not a current employee of CNET. Contact him at mbcrothers@gmail.com. Disclosure.
December 1, 2008 2:24 PM PST

Shares of Dell and Qualcomm plunged by double digits Monday, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average went into a free-fall of nearly 700 points on news that the economy is officially in a recession.

(Credit: Yahoo Finance)

The Dow closed down 679.95 points, or 7.7 percent, to end the day at 8,149.09, breaking a five-day run at posting gains.

Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell further, declining 8.95 percent, or 137.50 points, to end at 1,398.07. And the CNET Tech Index dropped 7 percent to 1,014.20.

Despite reports that retailers fared better than expected over Black Friday, PC maker Dell saw its shares give up 10 percent during the regular trading session to close at $10.05 a share.

Shares of Qualcomm dropped nearly 10.8 percent to $29.96 a share at the session's close, and Comcast stumbled 10.9 percent to end the day at $15.45 a share.

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Confessions of a man who does the layoffs

It's easy to vilify the guy who hands out the pink slips. But contrary to popular notions, these aren't decisions that are taken lightly, at least with the executive we interviewed.


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