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Dell, Dell Lightning, Dell Venue Pro, HTC, HTC 7 Pro, HTC HD7, LG, Microsoft, Samsung, WP7, WPCentral, news, palm pre 2, pre 2, windows phone 7

Windows Phone 7 launches with a bevy of handsets [the competition]

October 11th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Dell Venue Pro

iPhone OS (now iOS) launched on just the iPhone. Android launched on just the G1. webOS launched on just the Pre. While these operating systems all have spread onto multiple devices and show no signs of slowing down. Microsoft, on the other hand, tends to take a different and more aggressive approach to product launches. That was fully evident today with the official unveiling of Windows Phone 7 and its associated hardware. The typography-heavy operating system was present on no fewer than ten new handsets from LG, Samsung, and Dell. Oh, and HTC was there with five (5!) models on hand.

And wow, does all that look nice. We’re particularly jealous of the Dell Venue Pro. And the HTC HD7. And the HTC 7 Pro. The buzz is strong, as Windows Phone 7 is clearly a very strong entrant. Sure, it won’t have copy-paste until next year, and won’t be available in Europe until the end of October, or the USA in early November, but navigation on the demo units was smooth, hardware was solid, and a lot of the apps shown off were pretty darned impressive (especially that gaming magic).

Our pals Phil, Daniel, and George knocked today’s coverage out of New York out of the metaphorical park over at our newly relaunched sister site WPCentral. There you’ll find everything you ever wanted to know (and plenty you didn’t even know you wanted to know) about Windows Phone 7 and all of these fancy-pants handsets. Here’s hoping that after the Palm Pre 2, our friends in Sunnyvale can knock it out of the park with the next handset. Clearly, Microsoft has stepped up to the plate and brought all of their best ammunition.

Oh, and WPCentral already kicked their first post-7 podcast (though their 112th overall). As you’ve likely already surmised, it’s a doozy.


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3PAR, Dell, HP, acquisition, cloud computing, cloud storage, news

HP wins 3PAR with $2.4 billion bid, Dell left defeated at the altar

September 2nd 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

HP snatches 3PAR from Dell's wedding altar

In a bidding war that ended like a scene out of The Graduate, HP finally placed the winning bid for cloud storage and database automation firm 3PAR. The offer, clocking in at a hefty $2.4 billion is sure to make 3PAR’s shareholders very happy, and has finally proved to be too rich for Dell, who last offered $32 a share only to be topped by HP’s $33/share bid.

To recap, HP and Dell have been going at it since last week, with Dell making the initial unsolicited offer of $1.15 billion. Yes, if you’re doing the math right, that means HP is spending more than double the opening bid. Clearly, HP really wanted this one. And yes, this is also twice what HP paid for Palm, and this is for a company most hadn’t heard of before the bidding war began.

Pending approval from 3PAR’s shareholders, HP expects the acquisition to close by the end of the year, with HP integrating 3PAR’s automated database management and cloud storage systems into their various enterprise offerings.

Source: HP; Thanks to everybody that sent this in!

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3PAR, Dell, HP, HP Software and Solutions, Stratavia, acquisition, cloud computing, cloud storage, news

Dell tops HP’s bid for 3PAR, HP buys Stratavia to mask the pain; Update: HP re-ups bid; Updated x3

August 27th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Dell buys 3PAR

After HP upped the ante by $500 million, all eyes turned to Dell in the surprise bidding war for cloud storage firm 3PAR. With both tech giants looking to continue the aggressive expansion of their respective enterprise services divisions, an acquisition like 3PAR would add significant assets to their portfolios. Alas, for HP there were not wedding bells to be heard, as Dell would have nothing of this raised bid and submitted a counter-offer to top HP’s.

From the looks of things, that’s good enough for 3PAR, as the 3PAR board has formally accepted Dell’s $1.52 billion bid. Granted, Dell didn’t raise the stakes as much as HP did during the last round, but $1.52 billion is more cash than $1.5 billion, and in this game more dollars wins.

To sooth the sting of the love lost, HP instead announced that they were buying Denver-based database and application automation company Stratavia for an undisclosed wad of cash. Stratavia will become part of HP’s Software and Solutions division and will help the company improve their time-to-market for software systems development. The company’s assets will also be leverage to enhance HP’s cloud computing and storage systems, with Stratavia’s database and application packaging automation solutions serving to accelerate delivery to customers. Alas, ‘tis better to have loved and lost, than never to have loved at all.

Source: New York Times, MarketWatch; Thanks to everybody that sent this in!

Update: HP just announced that they have revised their proposal up to $1.8 billion dollars, or $27.00 per share. They’re not fooling around, as they note in their press release:

The proposal represents an 11 percent premium above the most recent price offered by Dell Inc. of $24.30 per share. HP’s proposal is not subject to any financing contingency and has been approved by HP’s board of directors

Update 2: Dell went ahead and matched HP’s offer and 3Par accepted. No word if HP will try to jump in again. Thanks to everybody who sent this in!

Update 3: …and HP has re-upped their bid again, this time to $30 per share, or $2 billion. Gotta say, we’re with @foxycar on this one.

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3PAR, Dell, HP, HP Enterprise Services, Palm, acquisition, cloud computing, cloud storage, news, webOS, webOS 2.0

HP seriously outbids Dell for 3PAR cloud storage firm

August 23rd 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

HP, all inWhen companies start throwing around billions of dollars in a bidding war, we tend to pick our heads up from our phones to see what all the fuss is about. In this case, Palm overlords HP kept throwing in more chips until Dell folded, winning the pot containing cloud storage firm 3PAR at the cost of $1.6 billion. HP’s bid came in a nearly $500 million higher than Dell’s best offer.

So what is all the fuss over 3PAR? It turns out that despite their lack of profit over their decade-long existence, 3PAR has managed to push the envelope in cloud computing and storage. With both HP and Dell aggressively expanding their services divisions, 3PAR looked to be an attractive acquisition. As with HP’s purchase of Palm, there’s a lot of potential in 3PAR’s intellectual property, and all it needed was the kind of application of dollars that HP can provide.

While it seems pretty clear that HP’s intent with the 3PAR purchase is to expand the offerings of their Enterprise Services division, we can’t help but imagine/hope that this could also be tied to Palm and webOS. With its heavy cloud dependency, robust cloud storage and power is of high importance to webOS. In fact, if HP’s right about Palm and that all they needed was dollars to make the changes needed to bring in the millions of customers previously hoped for, then Palm’s servers are going to need some serious upgrading anyway. And who knows what sort of cloud-based services webOS 2.0 might end up supporting; this 3PAR acquisition could end up being more important for Palm and webOS than it seems on the surface.

Of course, the acquisition is still contingent upon approval of the bid by 3PAR’s shareholders (the company went public in 2007). And if the sudden rise in 3PAR’s stock price is any indication – up an astounding 45% today alone – investors expect that Dell may up the ante and counter-bid HP’s impressive offer.

Source: Reuters; Thanks to everybody that sent this in!

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Amazon, Apple, Dell, Fortune, HP, HP PSG, HP Personal Systems Group, James Cameron, Jeff Bezos, Jonathan Ive, Larry Page, Mike Arrington, PSG, Palm, PalmOne, Personal Systems Group, Sergei Brin, Steve Jobs, Todd Bradley, google, mark hurd, news

Todd Bradley, HP Exec and former PalmOne CEO, named top tech exec

July 12th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Todd Bradley, Executive Vice President, HP Personal Systems Group

Fortune has put together another list of names they want to recognize for excellence, and this time it was the smartest people in the technology industry. Executive Vice President of HP’s Personal Systems Group, and Palm chief Jon Rubinstein’s immediate supervisor, Todd Bradley grabbed the title of Smartest Executive on Fortune’s list (smartest exec is not to be confused with smartest CEO, a title unsurprisingly claimed by Apple chief Steve Jobs).

Bradley is a familiar name to Palm fans, as he was CEO of PalmOne (the hardware arm of Palm) from 2001 to 2005 during the transition to the smartphone, at which point he was recruited by Hewlett Packard CEO Mark Hurd to head up the Personal Systems Group of HP. Since taking charge of the Personal Systems Group, Bradley has taken the desktops, laptops, and mobile devices arm of HP to new heights. They’ve toppled Dell as the world’s largest and jumped to $42 billion in annual revenue with a 300% increase in profit.

Reading the tea leaves, Bradley sees the future of HP and the Personal Systems Group in the mobile ecosystem. As such, it’s ironic and humorous that as the head of the Personal Systems Group, Bradley will once again be in charge of newly-acquired subsidiary Palm, Inc.

Bradley finds himself on the list with such tech luminaries as the aforementioned Steve Jobs, Google founders Sergei Brin and Larry Page, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, Apple designed Jonathan Ive, analyst Mike Arrington, and film-maker James Cameron (for his pioneering 3D cinema work).

Source: Fortune, Via: webOSroundup

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Apple, Dell, Featured Articles, HP, HTC, Lenovo, Microsoft, Motorola, Palm, RIM, Sony, google, news, nokia, poll

Who do you want to buy Palm?

April 12th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Palm Pre and Pixi

It was a hypothetical question we floated a few months back for a Round Table session, but recently it seems that our hypotheticals are moving more towards the realm of reality. Our friends over at Engadget beat us to the punch on this one, and put together a fantastic list and summary of the companies thought to be considering a bid for purchasing Palm, but we thought it’s something that we should ask to our more targeted webOS audience: who do you think should buy Palm? Poll after the break, as are those comments in which you so want to sound off.

read more

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Bloomberg, Dell, Featured Articles, Goldman Sachs, HTC, Lenovo, Palm, Qatalyst Partners, news, sale

Bloomberg: Palm putting itself up for sale

April 11th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Palm for sale?

While we can’t say we’re completely surprised, we are still surprised. Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein has long advocated that Palm’s plan is to go it alone and that they had a path to return to profitability, but Bloomberg is now reporting Palm is putting itself up for sale. According to “three people familiar with the situation,” Palm is working with Goldman Sachs and Qatalyst Partners to find a proper suitor. Bids are expected to come in as early as this week. According to those sources, both HTC and Lenovo are keenly interested in acquiring Palm, and Dell had expressed interest, but has since decided against making an offer. As we would expect, all parties rumored to be involved have declined to comment, but if Bloomberg’s sources are to be believed, Palm’s days as an independent company might be over very soon.

Thanks to everybody that sent this in!

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China, China Mobile, China Telecom, China Unicom, Dell, Dell Mini 3i, Palm, android, blackberry, iPhone, news

Report: China Telecom in talks to carry Palm devices “early next year”

November 23rd 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

China

It’s a small blurb in a Reuters article mainly about BlackBerries in China, but here’s the important part for us:

"China Telecom aims to sell BlackBerry handsets and Palm smartphones in China by early next year, as it tries to gain share from its two larger mobile telecom rivals, a source familiar with the situation said on Monday."

China Telecom is China’s smallest major cellular network (though the largest Chinese CDMA network), trailing behind rivals China Unicom and China Mobile. China Unicom recently launch the iPhone in China, though its high price has apparently limited the iPhone’s success. China Mobile, on the other hand, will be launching Dell’s new smartphone offering, the Android-running Dell Mini 3i.

This also is not the first time we’ve heard of China Telecom pursuing Palm. It was reported back in August that the carrier was in talks to carry Palm devices.

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3Com, Apple, CEO, Dell, Ed Colligan, Editorials, Elevation Partners, GM, HP, Handspring, IBM, Intel, Jon Rubinstein, Microsoft, Palm, Palm Pre, PalmOne, PalmSource, Saturn, Treo, US Robotics, news, pre, webOS

Why Dell can’t – and shouldn’t – buy Palm

June 16th 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Dell, Palm

For whatever reason, there’s been chatter circulating for years now about Dell being interested in (or journalistically prodded to be so) buying up Palm, Inc. Ever since the January unveiling of the Palm Pre that chatter has periodically ebbed and flowed more loudly than usual, but still with little basis for the argument, save Dell’s supposedly secret and floundering desire to get into the lucrative smartphone game.

So what’s the deal? Palm’s a cash-strapped company that’s practically a born-again start-up these days. Dell is the stumbling patriarch of the commodity computing house. As Saul Hansell of The New York Times notes, they’re two very different companies:

Dell is built on the idea that a computer is a commodity. Up until only recently, it was the most efficient packager of Intel chips and Microsoft operating systems and the most effective distributor of these devices to big companies.

The opposite of Dell’s model, of course, is that of Apple and Palm. Apple often describes itself as a software company that makes its own hardware in order to control the environment on which its software runs. It serves a smaller, but more lucrative market of customers who want something distinct from commodity software on commodity platforms. Palm is taking the same approach with its Pre smartphone and WebOS software.

Dell’s business model would have to change and adapt for something like a Palm takeover. For an example of how well a giant commodity corporation can handle something “different” while still juggling their juggernaut business you needn’t look any further than General Motors and their Saturn brand. GM was the Dell of the automotive world, but tried to make Saturn “a different kind of car company,” and while Saturns were arguably not bad vehicles, GM didn’t understand how to handle a different company like Saturn, even one that was of their own creation.

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This is not to say that Dell is mismanaging their business as poorly as GM, though they did fail to anticipate the fashion-ization of the personal computer that Apple kicked into gear a few years ago and other PC makers, like current market leader HP, caught onto quickly enough to steal a significant slice of Dell’s market share. Dell is struggling to regain their dominant market position with products like the ultra-light premium Adamo laptop, but like HP’s computers they are very much defined by their commodity hardware and Microsoft operating system.

And then there are the financial hurdles to taking over Palm. Despite being a lucrative investment given the relatively new state of the Pre and webOS, the cost to purchase Palm could be a complete loss (save for the expertise of its employees) should webOS fail to gain traction. As much as we hate to think it, that is a distinct possibility. At the same time, the cost to purchase Palm is increasing on a near daily basis, with the stock price smashing through the $14 mark last week, giving Palm a market value of just over $2 billion (a marked improvement over their pre-Pre December 2008 low of  $157 million). If there was any time to stage a takeover of Palm, it was several months ago before the enormous rally in the stock price. At that, the average takeover pays a premium of close to 25%, and a hot company like Palm would likely demand even more cash to be considered as a suitor.

On June 10, 2009, Dell sold new debt bonds to raise $1 billion in fresh cash, bringing their total cash-on-hand to $9 billion, likely enough to purchase Palm three times over. Dell has publicly spoken on their intent to purchase other companies outside the consumer PC world in a bid to expand their addressable market, but as The Wall Street Journal noted, Dell’s primary ambitions are in the data-storage and tech-services area, which certainly does not point in the same direction as Palm.

Dell has bigger problems to contend with than their seemingly misguided smartphone ambitions. In the first quarter of this year, Dell’s revenues declined 23% and their profits dropped a painful 63%. Unlike the other big players in the PC market, Dell is relatively young blood and doesn’t have the same experience buying and integrating other companies into their fold. In the past six years, Dell has made just ten acquisitions, while IBM made 42 and HP purchased a staggering 72 companies (that’s close to one every month).

Palm, on the other hand, likely would not be warm to any takeover overtures. With as hot a property as the Pre has turned out to be, Palm is banking on gaining a significant position in the smartphone marketplace. They’ve had their share of experience working under corporate owners U.S. Robotics and 3Com. Though we do have to thank the takeover by 3Com for the creation of the Treo smartphone (the senior management of Palm left after the takeover in 2000 and formed Handspring, created the Treo, and then was bought by a now-independent Palm three years later), by-and-large takeovers and acquisitions and inter-corporation dealings have been nothing but pain for Palm. Just look at the whole debacle surrounding PalmSource and PalmOne for reasoning why small companies shouldn’t act like big ones.

Palm also has significant investment responsibilities to the Elevation Partners firm, who have dropped $425 million into the company to help finance the turn-around that brought us Jon Rubinstein as Chairman (and now CEO), webOS, and the Pre. Palm isn’t exactly rolling in cash, as of the last quarter they had $219 million in the bank and were burning through dough at a rate of $30 million a month, and that has likely increased significantly with the cost to actually launch the Pre. As they say, you’ve got to spend money to make money. Elevation Partners isn’t in Palm for a quick buck, though their estimated 33% share in Palm is now worth double what they’ve paid into it. With recently departed Palm CEO Ed Colligan soon joining their ranks, Elevation Partners looks to be in the Palm game for the long haul.

So that leaves us with looking for a proper suitor for Palm. The only company with the correct mindset and deep pockets is, of all companies, Apple. As of last check, Apple had over $29 billion cash in the bank, and their product development and design mentality seems to be very similar to that of the newly reborn Palm. But with ex-iPod chief Jon Rubinstein at the head of Palm and numerous former Apple employees working high up in the ranks of Palm (many poached by Rubinstein himself), and Apple still riding high on the success of its iPhone line – a significant source of that $29 billion cash pile – they’re probably more interested in crushing Palm than buying it.

Thankfully, with the potential for enormous expansion of the smartphone market in the next few years, it would be very hard for Apple, Nokia, RIM, or any company to crush Palm. Any undoing of Palm and webOS will be by Palm’s own doing, and so long as they continue along the path we’re on now, that’s not looking likely.

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Dell, Palm, Palm Pre, Palm Pre Rumors, archive, webOS

The Fools think Dell should buy Palm

March 30th 2009 | Posted by Steven Grady

Finally, some serious industry analysts weigh in on the rumored Dell interest in buying Palm. The Motley Fool posted their “5 Reasons Why Dell Should Buy Palm.” This has been a common thought among business types lately. Dell wanted to get into the Smartphone market to compete with Apple, and it was rebuffed by the [...]

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