Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Xerox Gets Into Services with $6.4 Bln ACS Acquisition

Add as a preferred source on Google

xeroxThe trend has been developing for a while, but leave it to Xerox to put a nice big punctuation mark on things: the document management and printing company has announced a deal to acquire Affiliated Computer Services for some $6.4 billion in stock and cash. Xerox says the acquisition will enable the company to triple its services revenue to an estimated $10 billion next year, and comes as the company is seeing revenues decline from printer sales and equipment leasing.

“By combining Xerox’s strengths in document technology with ACS’s expertise in managing and automating work processes, we’re creating a new class of solution provider,” said Xerox CEO Ursula M. Burns, in a statement. “A game-changer for Xerox, acquiring ACS helps us expand our business and benefit from stronger revenue and earnings growth.”

Recommended Videos

ACS employs nearly 75,000 people; its core business surrounds business process outsourcing—things like financial management, human resources, IT, transaction processing—as well as technical support and customer relations; most of its clients are government agencies and multinational corporations.

The ACS acquisition is just the latest in a wave of technology companies buying service-related businesses in order to create new revenue streams and bolster their bottom lines. Last year the world’s number one computer maker Hewlett-Packard took over Electronic Data Systems in a deal worth an estimated $13 billion, and just last well number-two computer maker Dell announced it was taking over Perot Systems for $3.9 billion.

The acquisition is Burn’s first major move since taking over the Xerox CEO role on July 1. Xerox plans to let ACS operate as an independent organization that will be run by ACS’s current CEO Lynn Blodgett; Xerox also plans to leverage some of ACS’s expertise to handle some of the company’s internal operations.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
You can now edit videos in Google Vids by simply describing the changes
Gemini Omni powers Google Vids’ new editing tools, and personal avatars are joining too
Google Vids gets Gemini Omni

Google is bringing Gemini Omni and personal avatars to Google Vids, expanding the app’s AI-powered video creation tools for paid users. Gemini Omni can now generate and edit clips through natural language, while personal avatars let users appear in videos without recording themselves on camera.

Vids already offered Veo-powered video generation, AI presenters, screen recording, and tools for turning Slides presentations into narrated videos. Omni expands that setup into a more complete editing workflow, where users can keep refining a clip through conversation instead of rebuilding it after every change.

Read more
NotebookLM just got a new name and a serious upgrade for Google AI Pro subscribers
Gemini Notebook, as it’s now called, will roll out the features that debuted on the Ultra tier last month to Pro users in the coming weeks.
Gemini Notebook branding on a MacBook

Google is retiring the NotebookLM name, and the AI research tool is being rebranded to Gemini Notebook, folding one of the company's most useful products deeper into its main AI brand. Alongside the rebrand, Google is expanding one of the tool's most powerful features to more users, which was previously limited to those on the Google AI Ultra plan.

The upgrade Pro users have been waiting on

Read more
Meta AI will bring parents into the loop when teens mention self-harm
Human reviewers will check flagged teen chats before parents receive self-harm alerts
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

AI chatbots have made it remarkably easy to talk about things people might struggle to share with someone else. For teenagers, that can include deeply personal topics such as anxiety, loneliness, self-harm, and suicide.

Meta is now adding another safeguard for those conversations. The company will begin alerting parents when a supervised teen appears to be in serious distress while speaking to Meta AI, giving families a chance to step in before the situation gets worse.

Read more