• Will other companies license HP’s webOS? And will this strategy work?


    Hewlett-Packard’s confirmation last week that it is in talks with a number of companies to license webOS set off a flurry of speculation over the potential partners HP is negotiating with.

    I don’t have any inside scoop on those companies, or where the negotiations stand, though HP CEO Leo Apotheker said there is “no time pressure” to complete a deal. However, from talking with a range of analysts, it seems there are two schools of thought: either HP is talking to a handset maker looking to hedge its bets on Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) Android platform, or a nontraditional company such as Amazon.com.

    I’m still undecided on which side will prevail, but I’m leaning more toward the handset maker route. Before I explain why, let’s take a look at the pros and cons of each side.

    A traditional handset OEM could be in the cards, but it would have to be a company that does not compete with HP’s core business. Analysts told me that HP also seems to be looking for a partnership akin to the one Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) struck with Nokia (NYSE:NOK) on Windows Phone 7. HP is “looking for partners that will focus on webOS either primarily or exclusively,” NPD Group analyst Ross Rubin said. 

    Samsung was named by Bloomberg as a possible partner for HP on webOS, but others include LG and Motorola Mobility (NYSE:MMI). Forrester Research analyst Charles Golvin said HP might try and push for a deal with a company like LG, Samsung or Sony that could put webOS into TVs, household appliances, automated home control units and other connected devices. HP bought Palm, he said, “to have a platform they could control,” and licensing webOS to a direct handset and tablet competitor is “not antithetical to that strategy but doesn’t support it.”

    A key benefit of licensing webOS to a handset OEM is that it could help HP achieve greater scale, especially if it is a company that could bring webOS to other devices beyond what HP plans to do. However, it would depend on how the deal is structured, because the downsides are, of course, that the devices could compete with, and potentially undercut, HP’s efforts.

    Which company is most likely to license webOS from Hewlett-Packard? -On the flipside there is Amazon, which analysts argued could be a compelling partner for HP that wouldn’t compete as directly with it as OEMs would. Amazon has “assets that are reasonably close to what Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) has in terms of a cloud-based, high-velocity transaction-based business model that doesn’t need to monetize on hardware,” said CCS Insight analyst John Jackson.

    Working with Amazon could be a win-win, especially if Amazon put webOS on the Kindle, said Recon Analytics analyst (and FierceWireless contributor) Roger Entner. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos strongly hinted in May that the company will produce a tablet soon. Amazon has the service-delivery mechanisms in place to allow webOS to compete more directly with iOS and Android, giving it a leg up on Windows Phone and Research In Motion’s (NASDAQ:RIMM) BlackBerry. The downside, as Golvin pointed out, is that Amazon’s cloud-based services would compete with HP’s own, though HP’s cloud services are more focused on the enterprise market than consumers.

    HP hasn’t said which way it is leaning, but has given indications of its intent. In an interview this week with AllThingsD, Todd Bradley, executive vice president of HP’s Personal Systems Group, said the company is focused on working with a partner that will “expand the [webOS] ecosystem” and take the platform in a new direction, rather than compete head-to-head with HP. “That’s exactly what we would look for, someone who would go in spaces that we are not in,” he said.

    My bet is that, although a deal with Amazon has a lot of potential, HP will forgo working with Bezos, partly because of the cloud services competition and partly because there might not be as much value for Amazon. Moreover, the onus is on HP to find a partner–they need the platform to scale up, and they have to get someone to bite.

    Which companies could that be? I would argue for LG or Motorola. Unlike Samsung, neither really competes with HP in PCs or printers, and neither has found the kind of success HTC and Samsung have with Android. LG just cut its smartphone sales targets for 2011, and Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha recently indicated the company might be open to the possibility of combining resources with a software company. Both could use webOS as a strong hedge against Android.  

    Like I said, I don’t know how this will turn out (Representatives from LG and Motorola declined to comment, and an Amazon representative did not immediately respond to requests for comment).  But to any potential licensees out there, Leo Apotheker is waiting for your call. –Phil

    FierceWireless

     
  • Cohen: ‘This is the Dawn of a New Movement, This is an Awakening’

    CWA’s first-ever national “Town Hall” phone call drew more than 5,000 participants Wednesday night, as local stewards and officers discussed the high-stakes battles that their governors and legislatures are waging against unions and all working families.
    CWA Union News

     
  • This is What Democracy Looks Like

    A week of rapidly organized rallies and marches continued today in Wisconsin, drawing tens of thousands of residents to the state capitol to condemn Gov. Scott Walker’s attacks on collective bargaining rights for public workers.
    CWA Union News

     
  • Nokia C6-01 heading to Bell this March

    Bell is getting their Q1 lineup together. On tap is a step up in specs from the Nokia C6-00 with the addition of the Nokia C6-01. This device is similar to the C6-00 but comes with a different OS and a better camera. We’ve been informed that this will be dropping sometime in the March [...]

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    1. Bell Nokia N97 now available!
    2. Nokia C3 “Coming Soon” and heading to Rogers
    3. Nokia N97 coming to Bell December 10th

    MobileSyrup.com

     
  • Samsung confirms tablet for later this year

    Samsung confirmed it will release a tablet product in the second half of this year, days after pictures of the purported device popped up on the Web.

    “While Samsung is aiming to bring a device to market in the second half of this year, we have not yet confirmed the markets for launch or detailed product specifications,” the company said in a statement to InformationWeek. Pictures of the device, dubbed the “GalaxyTab,” began floating around last week after the Twitter account of Samsung’s South African blog inadvertently posted images of the gadget and a brief snippet of information about its specifications. The information was subsequently removed.

    Though details on the device are few and far between, it is reported to have a 7-inch display and run Google’s Android platform.

    Apple’s (NASDAQ:AAPL) breakaway success with the iPad tablet–the company has sold more than 2 million units so far–has set off a frenzy among computer makers and handset vendors alike to get into the tablet game. Verizon Wireless (NYSE:VZ) plans to launch an Android tablet, and Verizon Wireless CEO Lowell McAdam has said that LG, Motorola (NASDAQ:MOT) and Samsung are in the running to build tablets for the carrier.

    Still, some sounded cautious tones about the new market opportunity. “It’s an interesting market,” Tudor Brown, the president of ARM Holdings, told the Financial Times. “What we have to be very careful of is projecting just how big that particular part of the market is going to be, because it’s very early days since any of these tablets have been on the market.”

    For more:
    - see this InformationWeek article
    - see this ZDNet article
    - see this FT article

    Related Articles:
    Android, Windows square off in tablet arena

    Verizon launching up to five LTE phones by mid-2011
    Apple sells 2M iPads in 60 days
    Verizon’s Google tablet: a ruse or the real McCoy?
    Motorola demos LTE-equipped Android tablet

    FierceWireless

     
  • Download This: Goal.com Mobile World Cup 2010 Edition

    We previously covered Goal.com Mobile here around a month or so back but  felt it somewhat necessary to remind you guys and gals about this free app.  For those of you getting geeked up over the World Cup, we recommend checking out the updated version of this title.  A special tab has been added to the application which provides plenty of up-to-the-minute coverage of the events.

    World Cup tab features:

    • Top news with corresponding photos
    • Live Scores with play-by-play details
    • Player ratings
    • Teams with schedule and lineup details
    • Fixtures and Results by day
    • Group Stage with team standings
    • Knockout Stage with the final tournament schedule
    • News articles can be emailed to friends or shared via Twitter or Facebook
    • Users have the ability to customize which teams and news feeds they are most interested in
    • Access information anytime, anywhere with offline reading
    • The most comprehensive news coverage provided by a team of 550 reporters, including 10 based in South Africa for the finals







    Win one of seven Motorola droid handsets being given out! Click here to see how it works!

    NOTE: Download This: Goal.com Mobile World Cup 2010 Edition originally appeared on AndroidGuys. If you are reading this elsewhere, it was done without the consent of the author.

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