HP set to decide future of Palm, webOS this week

Posted:
in iPad edited January 2014
HP is rumored to have finished the initial bidding process for its webOS unit and will hold an all-hands meeting tomorrow that may reveal its future plans for selling or spinning off the group, according to people familiar with the company's plans.



After acquiring Palm last year for $1.2 billion but then canceling its webOS hardware program just weeks after finally delivering its new Touchpad tablet using the new technology, HP has left the future of its Palm team up in the air along with the rest of its Personal Systems Group.



In addition to encompassing its short lived mobile webOS aspirations, HP's PSG unit also builds the company's line of Windows-based personal computers, the sales of which make HP the world's largest vendor of PCs in the US and globally.



However, ever since the company's then chief executive Léo Apotheker made an announcement on August 18 that HP would be evaluating what to do with its PSG unit, potentially selling it or spinning it off into a subsidiary, the fate of webOS has hung in the balance, suffering from uncertainty and lacking a clear future.



HP appeared to be clearly uninterested in investing the capital needed to launch webOS as a major competitor to Apple's iOS, Google's Android, RIM's BlackBerry OS and Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 platforms; such a task would be very difficult even if HP made it a company priority.



Prior to HP's purchase, the main problems Palm had in bringing webOS to market were the lack of both the ongoing investment capital required to support an expensive initial development effort, and the market presence capable of selling the resulting products, two issues HP was supposed to solve as its new owner, leveraging its experience and position as a major PC maker.



While webOS is now largely finished and its hardware was ready to sell, HP's cancellation of the hardware side of the equation, motivated by dismal sales, means that a spinoff of Palm would result in a return to square one for the group, forcing it to formulate a new licensing business in a market where even Microsoft has had a very difficult time assembling a viable ecosystem of mobile licensees.



That makes the most likely outcome for webOS a direct sale to a third party (such as Amazon) that wants to own its own mobile environment without having to start from scratch.







HP's PSG has also completed work on the Enyo development framework for webOS, which could be used by either an existing mobile platform or by a software vendor to create web-based software for existing platforms.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 14
    gqbgqb Posts: 1,934member
    Gotta love a decisive company like HP.
  • Reply 2 of 14
    However unlikely this is, I think Apple should buy it, only to prevent any kind of scenario where Google or a Google partner would be able to leverage Web OS patents against Apple. The other scenario I would love to see would be Oracle buying not just Web OS, but all of HP. That would make the Oracle/Google java dispute 10x more interesting.
  • Reply 3 of 14
    I thought they were going to be using WebOS to drive their printers and such? I guess that is going out the window as well?
  • Reply 4 of 14
    bdkennedy1bdkennedy1 Posts: 1,459member
    I feel sorry for all of HP's employees.
  • Reply 5 of 14
    Ded.

    ............................................______ __

    ....................................,.-'"...................``~.,

    .............................,.-"..................................."-.,

    .........................,/...............................................":,

    .....................,?........................... ...........................\\,

    .................../.................................................. .........,}

    ................./.................................................. ....,:`^`..}

    .............../.................................................. .,:"........./

    ..............?.....__............................ .............:`.........../

    ............./__.(....."~-,_..............................,:`........../

    .........../(_...."~,_........"~,_....................,:`..... ..._/

    ..........{.._$;_......"=,_......."-,_.......,.-~-,},.~";/....}

    ...........((.....*~_......."=-._......";,,./`..../"............../

    ...,,,___.\\`~,......"~.,....................`.... .}............../

    ............(....`=-,,.......`........................(......;_,,-"

    ............/.`~,......`-...............................\\....../\\

    .............\\`~.*-,.....................................|,./.....\\,__

    ,,_..........}.>-._\\...................................|.......... ....`=~-,

    .....`=~-,_\\_......`\\,.................................\\

    ...................`=~-,,.\\,...............................\\

    ................................`:,,.............. .............`\\..............__

    .....................................`=-,...................,%`>--==``

    ........................................_\\....... ...._,-%.......`\\

    ...................................,<`.._|_,-&``................`
  • Reply 6 of 14
    tipootipoo Posts: 1,141member
    Sell WebOS to HTC or someone else for a pittance, then proceed to slowly kill yourself as you are.
  • Reply 7 of 14
    With a comment like that, one wonders if HP is at a crossroads like Apple's of 1997. But there's just no one to come back and turn it all around.
  • Reply 8 of 14
    jragostajragosta Posts: 10,473member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Michael Wilkie View Post


    However unlikely this is, I think Apple should buy it, only to prevent any kind of scenario where Google or a Google partner would be able to leverage Web OS patents against Apple.



    Plus, there might actually be something there that Apple could use.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Michael Wilkie View Post


    The other scenario I would love to see would be Oracle buying not just Web OS, but all of HP. That would make the Oracle/Google java dispute 10x more interesting.



    Personally, I kind of hope for this solution. I bought a TouchPad for my daughter in the $99 clearance sale and would like it if there were software updates so that it will have a longer useful life.
  • Reply 9 of 14
    I think Meg is going to auction webOS on eBay
  • Reply 10 of 14
    HP: Train wreck. I n s l o w m o t i o n . . . .
  • Reply 11 of 14
    ikolikol Posts: 369member
    So Amazon buys webOS. Then what?
  • Reply 12 of 14
    This is kind of a shame that WebOS seems to be in limboland. WebOS was actually fairly decent. While not remotely a competitor to Apple's mobile operating system, the user experience was fairly enjoyable. I personally liked the notification system of WebOS much better than that used by iOS.
  • Reply 13 of 14
    bigpicsbigpics Posts: 1,397member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by xamian View Post


    This is kind of a shame that WebOS seems to be in limboland. WebOS was actually fairly decent. While not remotely a competitor to Apple's mobile operating system, the user experience was fairly enjoyable. I personally liked the notification system of WebOS much better than that used by iOS.



    Sadly, maybe the Amiga of the early 2000's.......
  • Reply 14 of 14
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Michael Wilkie View Post


    However unlikely this is, I think Apple should buy it, only to prevent any kind of scenario where Google or a Google partner would be able to leverage Web OS patents against Apple. The other scenario I would love to see would be Oracle buying not just Web OS, but all of HP. That would make the Oracle/Google java dispute 10x more interesting.



    yea...if they did that they'd be able to sue anyone though...including your precious Apple...so watch what you wish for.
Sign In or Register to comment.