Workstation Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Workstation stocks.

Workstation Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 5 HOLX Hologic Second Quarter 2024 Earnings: Revenues Beat Expectations, EPS Lags
May 3 DELL Dell Technologies (DELL) Rises Higher Than Market: Key Facts
May 3 DELL BILL Holdings (BILL) Q3 Earnings Top Estimates, Revenues Up Y/Y
May 3 DELL Sluggish Consumer Spending Hurts ETSY's Q1 Marketplace Revenues
May 3 DELL WESCO (WCC) Q1 Earnings Miss Estimates, Sales Decline Y/Y
May 3 DELL Block (SQ) Q1 Earnings & Revenues Beat Estimates, Rise Y/Y
May 3 DELL MACOM (MTSI) Q2 Earnings Beat Estimates, Revenues Rise Y/Y
May 3 DELL GoDaddy (GDDY) Q1 Earnings Beat Estimates, Revenues Rise Y/Y
May 3 HOLX Hologic, Inc. (NASDAQ:HOLX) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 HOLX Hologic's (HOLX) Q2 Earnings Beat Estimates, 2024 View Up
May 3 DELL Apple (AAPL) Q2 Earnings Beat Estimates, Shares Up on Solid View
May 3 DELL Paylocity (PCTY) Q3 Earnings and Revenues Surpass Estimates
May 3 DELL Dell Technologies Inc. (DELL) is Attracting Investor Attention: Here is What You Should Know
May 3 DELL Arrow Electronics (ARW) Q1 Earnings Beat, Revenues Fall Y/Y
May 3 HOLX Q2 2024 Hologic Inc Earnings Call
May 3 HOLX Hologic, Inc. (HOLX) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 3 HOLX Hologic (HOLX) Reports Q2 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
May 2 HOLX Hologic Inc. (HOLX) Surpasses Q2 Fiscal 2024 Earnings and Revenue Estimates
May 2 HOLX Hologic (HOLX) Q2 Earnings and Revenues Beat Estimates
May 2 HOLX Hologic Fiscal Q2 Earnings, Revenue Decline; Q3 Outlook Issued, Fiscal 2024 Estimates Revised -- Shares Up After Hours
Workstation

A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or scientific applications. Intended primarily to be used by one person at a time, they are commonly connected to a local area network and run multi-user operating systems. The term workstation has also been used loosely to refer to everything from a mainframe computer terminal to a PC connected to a network, but the most common form refers to the class of hardware offered by several current and defunct companies such as Sun Microsystems, Silicon Graphics, Apollo Computer, DEC, HP, NeXT and IBM which opened the door for the 3D graphics animation revolution of the late 1990s.
Workstations offer higher performance than mainstream personal computers, especially with respect to CPU and graphics, memory capacity, and multitasking capability. Workstations are optimized for the visualization and manipulation of different types of complex data such as 3D mechanical design, engineering simulation (e.g., computational fluid dynamics), animation and rendering of images, and mathematical plots. Typically, the form factor is that of a desktop computer, consist of a high resolution display, a keyboard and a mouse at a minimum, but also offer multiple displays, graphics tablets, 3D mice (devices for manipulating 3D objects and navigating scenes), etc. Workstations were the first segment of the computer market to present advanced accessories and collaboration tools.
The increasing capabilities of mainstream PCs in the late 1990s have blurred the lines between PCs and technical/scientific workstations. Typical workstations previously employed proprietary hardware which made them distinct from PCs; for instance IBM used RISC-based CPUs for its workstations and Intel x86 CPUs for its business/consumer PCs during the 1990s and 2000s. However, by the early 2000s this difference largely disappeared, as workstations now use highly commoditized hardware dominated by large PC vendors, such as Dell, Hewlett-Packard (later HP Inc.) and Fujitsu, selling Microsoft Windows or Linux systems running on x86-64 processors.

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