HP Admits Apple Could Surpass Them in 2012

What would happen if tablets were counted as PCs? According to Meg Whitman, CEO of the worlds largest PC manufacturer HP, Apple would overtake them in 2012. While responding to questions from French newspaper Le Figaro, Meg Whitman had the following to say about Apple overtaking HP in PC sales:

Yes. I think it’s possible if you integrate tablets. Apple does a great job. We need to improve our game and our products to take over the leadership position. Apple could go past HP in 2012. We will try to become the champion in 2013. It takes time for the products on which I have come to influence the market.

As tablets continue to cannibalize netbook sales, it only makes sense to consider the tablet a PC moving forward. With the uncertainty around the future of HP webOS, I have to wonder what she is hinting at to help HP reclaim the title in 2013.

[Via TechCrunch]


HP webOS Future Still in Limbo

According to The Verge, HP CEO Meg Whitman announced to HP employees that the future of webOS is still unknown. It appears their recent attempts to sell-off the webOS platform has not panned out.

From the article, Meg Whitman is quoted as saying:

“It’s really important to me to make the right decision, not the fast decision,” she told those gathered with her on the HP campus, adding that a decision would come in the next three to four weeks. […] “If HP decides [to keep webOS], we’re going to do it in a very significant way over a multi-year period,” she said, adding that “it’s a very expensive proposition, but HP can make that bet.”

If HP were to keep webOS, I wonder how they would make that happen. Considering that their TouchPad sales were only seen as successful after they dropped the price to $99, I don’t hold too much faith in webOS with HP still at the helm.


HP Fishing For webOS Buyer

It appears HP is leaning towards selling off the webOS unit, instead of keeping it in-house or open sourcing the platform. From Reuters:

Hewlett-Packard Co is evaluating a potential sale of its webOS software platform in a deal that could fetch hundreds of millions of dollars but likely less than the $1.2 billion the company paid for Palm Inc in 2010, said four sources close to the matter.

The article asserts that multiple companies have shown interest in purchasing webOS, with the aim of gaining patents rather than continuing to extend the platform.


Windows 8 “SecureBoot” Lockout a Non-Issue at Dell and HP

Just a few days back, I wrote how Windows 8 “SecureBoot” could lock out non-Windows operating systems, and how Linux advocates were voicing their concerns. Have no fear, Ed Bott of ZDNet has posted an article outlining how Dell and HP plan to handle this issue:

In an e-mail exchange and a follow-up phone conversation, a Dell spokesperson told me, “Dell has plans to make SecureBoot an enable/disable option in BIOS setup.”

[…]

I also contacted HP’s PC division, where a spokesperson had to scramble to find anyone within the organization who was even familiar with the issue.

[…]

The spokesperson confirmed for me that HP has no plans to participate in any conspiracy against a non-Windows OS: “HP will continue to offer its customers a choice of operating systems. We are working with industry partners to evaluate the options that will best serve our customers.”

The fact that HP had to scramble to find “anyone within the organization who was even familiar with the issue” is disconcerting. While I appreciate Ed doing the research, it was hard getting past his blatant smarmy delivery.


Future of HP webOS Still Uncertain

While HP has made it known that they will continue to be in the PC business, they have been less vocal on the future of webOS. Ina Fried from AllThingsD posted an interesting look at some of HP’s options, but also offered the following gem:

One interesting option — one that has circulated within HP, though has yet to win favor — is to simply give away webOS and its developer tools to the community, allowing it to be an open source alternative for mobile (and potentially other) devices.

I wonder how this would work from a patent/litigation perspective. If HP were to maintain ownership and control of webOS—hence control what goes into the main branch—they could fend off potential lawsuits by filtering user submissions.

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