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Caldera layoffs include key programmer

The 51 employees who lost their jobs in the latest round of layoffs at Caldera International include a programmer who helped lead a key part of the company's strategy of making its Linux and Unix operating systems work in the same way. Juergen G.
Written by Stephen Shankland, Contributor

The 51 employees who lost their jobs in the latest round of layoffs at Caldera International include a programmer who helped lead a key part of the company's strategy of making its Linux and Unix operating systems work in the same way.

Juergen G. Kienhoefer helped write the Linux Kernel Personality (LKP) software, which lets Linux programs run unmodified on Caldera's higher-end Open Unix software.

Earlier this month, Orem, Utah-based Caldera announced layoffs, restructuring, an $18.8 million loss, and a reverse stock split to try to prevent delisting from the Nasdaq. Caldera started as a Linux company but earlier this year acquired two versions of Unix from Santa Cruz Operation, which now is named after its Tarentella software product. Included in the acquisition were hundreds of employees. Kienhoefer was among them.

Fifty-one of the Caldera's 618 employees lost their jobs in the latest layoffs, Cantrell said. The cuts were from all departments, including marketing, development and administration. The company laid off workers earlier this year as well. --Stephen Shankland, Special to ZDNet News

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