sunbattery's posterous http://sunbattery.posterous.com Most recent posts at sunbattery's posterous posterous.com Fri, 17 Feb 2012 01:34:00 -0800 HP's Whitman Warns On Android, Optimistic On WebOS http://sunbattery.posterous.com/hps-whitman-warns-on-android-optimistic-on-we http://sunbattery.posterous.com/hps-whitman-warns-on-android-optimistic-on-we

HP's Whitman Warns On Android, Optimistic On WebOS

By Eric Zeman.

Google has said over and over that Android will remain an open platform. HP CEO Meg Whitman isn't so sure.

When Google announced its intent to purchase Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, there was an immediate fear that Google would close the OS and work only with Motorola moving forward. Other hardware makers voiced support for the deal publicly, but you can be sure they were cursing behind closed doors. Ever since, Google has said over and over that Android will remain an open platform. HP CEO Meg Whitman isn't so sure.

Speaking to attendees of the HP Global Partner conference in Las Vegas, reports PC World, Whitman contended that "the industry needs another OS," and went on to suggest that Google may change its mind once it owns Motorola. This potential allowed Whitman to talk up the appeal of its own webOS, which it recently decided to launch as an open source project.

Whitman maintains that webOS could remain an important player over the long term. Though it will take time for webOS's full potential as an open source project to be realized, she said that HP will sit in silent support of its mobile platform as it continues to take shape. HP is still excited about webOS's prospects and will continue to contribute to its development.

WebOS was developed by the now-defunct Palm, which HP acquired in 2010. WebOS floundered under HP's ownership, and last August the company announced that it would cease making webOS smartphones and tablets--mere weeks after launching the webOS-powered TouchPad. The company announced its intent to open source the platform in December. Since then, it has begun making individual components available to the community, though the entire OS isn't expected to become available until September of this year.

Whitman is likely wrong about Android. It would be suicide for Google to close off Android and could spark a huge legal war between Google and its hardware partners. Google is activating more than 750,000 new Android devices each and every day. Why would it want to harm that number? Motorola may make decent products, but Samsung is outselling it like mad the world over with its own Android devices.

Were Google to close off Android, it wouldn't just be shooting itself in the foot, it would be lopping off both legs and letting them bleed out.

The idea that the mobile industry needs webOS to stick around is also a bit of a folly. The platform failed for a reason: there are stronger alternatives already in the market. If webOS really had a place in the mobile ecosystem, Palm would have been more successful with it.

There's been a ridiculous amount of consolidation in the platform space. We've seen Symbian, MeeGo, Windows Mobile, Palm OS, and webOS all go away. In their place, we have Android, BlackBerry OS, iOS, and Windows Phone. The market is having a hard enough time supporting these four, as BlackBerry and Windows Phone are struggling up against Android and iOS. What use is webOS at the moment? Though I don't doubt the creative uses to which the open source community will put it, unless it gets major backing from a hardware vendor (something it has already lost) it doesn't have a significant chance of re-entering the market.

Is A Galaxy Note 10.1 Tablet On The Horizon?

BY E.D. Kain.

Samsung's giant Galaxy Note smartphone has been described as a ‘phoneblet' thanks to its massive 5.4" screen.

The innovate smartphone comes with an S Pen stylus, allowing you to take notes or draw sketches directly onto your phone.

And while the big screen may have some downsides when it comes to actually talking on the phone, if rumors are true it's going to be downright tiny compared to the Galaxy Note 10.1.

That is, if there's going to be a tablet version of the not-yet-released smartphone.

While it may be a mistake, Slashgear also points to a casting call for an actor to star in the Galaxy Note 10.1 commercial. Though there's been no official confirmation that a Note tablet is on the way, this is looking like more than just idle speculation.

While I think the Galaxy Note smartphone looks awesome, I still wonder if there's a market for such a large screen. On the other hand, the 10.1 version would be perfect. The extra screen real estate will make the tablet an even better medium for artists and other creative types.

Now I just need to find a way to get to Barcelona at the end of this month for Mobile World Congress 2012.

 

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Fri, 17 Feb 2012 01:31:00 -0800 HP's Whitman Slags Android to Pump WebOS http://sunbattery.posterous.com/hps-whitman-slags-android-to-pump-webos http://sunbattery.posterous.com/hps-whitman-slags-android-to-pump-webos

HP's Whitman Slags Android to Pump WebOS

By Eric Smalley.

Sometimes, when you're down and fighting your way back to your feet, you've got to throw elbows. Or, if your opponents aren't in range, sling FUD.

On Wednesday, at a meeting of the company's channel partners in Las Vegas, HP CEO Meg Whitman talked up Open WebOS, the company's newly open sourced mobile operating system. But she also took a moment to stir up a batch of fear, uncertainty, and doubt about Google's Android. The mobile operating system "may end up being a closed system with their purchase of Motorola," she said. Whitman also described Android as "remarkably fragmented."

The concern about Google's Motorola acquisition is nothing new, and it may be much ado about nothing. Google announced its intention to purchase Motorola in August, and the acquisition was briefly back in the headlines this week when U.S. and European regulators approved the deal.

According to Forrester Research analyst Sarah Rotman-Epps, Google has a vast and growing business that involves distributing Android and other services to many outside phone manufacturers. Whitman's remarks are simply raising old concerns about the Google Motorola merger, she says. Little has changed, and Google has shown no indication that it will favor Motorola over its other partners. "There's too much at stake for Google," Rotman-Epps says.

A Google spokesperson pointed to the company's FAQ about the Motorola acquisition: "Android absolutely will remain open-source. It's in our interest to have as many Android partners (OEMs) as possible."

Linux Foundation executive director Jim Zemlin dismissed the idea that Android could become closed. "First, Google has been a wildly good open source citizen. They are responsible for amazing amounts of useful code being out there for everyone to use," he says. "Second, Android is wildly successful right now so it doesn't make a lot of sense for Google to mess with that success. Why fix what isn't broken?"

Strategically, Whitman's rhetoric is an attempt to position WebOS as a viable alternative to Android. Whitman's remarks follow last month's release of HP's roadmap for taking WebOS open source. Open WebOS 1.0 is scheduled to be released in September. Establishing Open WebOS is likely to take two to four years, according to Whitman.

One of the first milestones on the road map is this week's release of the WebOS open source project governance model. The WebOS project is modeled on the Apache project: WebOS will be licensed under the Apache license. If the WebOS project evolves according to plan, it will be more open than Android. The WebOS governance model allows independent people promoted by merit to branch and merge code in the open. Initially, however, only HP will be allowed to "commit" code.

The Open WebOS project follows HP's failure to make headway against Android and Apple's iOS with its proprietary WebOS platform. HP wrote off $3.3 billion in 2011 for winding down the WebOS device business. That's 2.5 times as much as the company paid to acquire WebOS creator Palm.

HP is clearly looking to leverage the open version of the operating system. Even if WebOS fails to gain traction with hardware OEMs and app developers, HP can use the operating system to avoid relying on platforms owned by other companies, says IDC's Al Hilwa. HP is taking the open source project seriously, he says. "They appear to be conducting a thorough [intellectual property] scrub to avoid many of the issues with Android and seem intent on a more open governance model."

Of course, there's no guarantee that an open WebOS will be any more successful than its proprietary predecessor. Even if it ends up being a more open operating system than Android, it's not clear why WebOS would be better for OEMs, says Rotman-Epps. "I don't know that openness in itself is a virtue for making products with efficiency and scale."

 

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