Look at it this way folks. Xerox Webster remains the company's largest global location, with more than 5 million square feet of office, manufacturing, lab and warehouse space. The campus encompasses 600 acres of prime building land and approximately 50 buildings. If it was me, I'd sell the raw land to business or residential developers, clean up the campus and sell the more desirable buildings piecemeal and demolish manufacturing structures devoted to specific products such as ink - especially huge cavernous warehouses. Yes, he may hold on to a couple of acres, refurbish a building and house all the "bleeding-edge" technologies and give Xerox a new lease on life with a much, much smaller footprint and vastly fewer employees - mostly young graduates from RIT, U of R, etc. And pocket a few million along the way.
Only thing that gives me pause is that people who know how to maintain aging computer systems and relevant data are being retained. Maybe Carl wants to sell the customer information to the highest bidder.