HP exec says company will re-enter smartphone market, is working on a device that offers a unique experience

HP exec says company will reenter smartphone market, is working on a device with a unique experience

HP and phones? It’s not over, apparently. The company‘s Senior Director of Consumer PCs and Tablets for Asia-Pacific, Yam Su Yin, has told The Indian Express that HP isn’t done with smartphones and is already working on a new device. While its focus (for now) remains on tablets, laptops and its all-in-ones, it’s wisely decided not to ignore the ever-increasing influence of smartphones, despite that whole messy Palm saga. When asked about a chances of a future HP smartphone, she said: “The answer is yes but I cannot give a timetable. It would be silly if we say no. HP has to be in the game.”

“Being late you have to create a different set of proposition[s]. There are still things that can be done. It’s not late. When HP has a smartphone, it will give a differentiated experience.” We’d put money on an Android device being in the works, given several of HP’s recent product launches, but to compete in the increasingly two-horse smartphone race, HP will have to ensure that its “differentiated experience” offers something pretty pervasive to win over customers.

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Via: @krestivo (Twitter)

Source: Indian Express

WSJ: Google working on an Android-powered game system, smart watch and new Nexus Q

According to the Wall Street Journal, Google might make another foray into living room hardware as it’s currently developing an Android powered gaming console. Since that’s just not enough of a rumor bomb, the talkative “people familiar with the matter” also claim a wristwatch and followup to its “postponedNexus Q project are on the way. If you believe the rumors, its reason for jumping into all these categories is to beat products Apple is reportedly developing in the same categories, with at least one of them launching this fall. Finally, the leaks indicate Google’s next major Android update will be “tailored to low-cost devices in developing countries,” and are ready to go in a much wider variety of devices.

That could mean laptops or even appliances running the rumored Key Lime Pie flavor of Android, built by manufacturers like Samsung which is already working on a watch of its own. Also mentioned is HP, which the report goes on to claim is building laptops that run Android. Companies like Ouya, Mad Catz, Pebble and GEAK probably think Mountain View is already late to the party, but official OS-level support and heavily marketed hardware could take these segments to the next level.

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Source: Wall Street Journal

HP Slate 21 Is An All-In-One PC That Runs On Android

HP’s Slate 21 is an Android-powered all-in-one PC which features a 21.5-inch display.

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HP Slate 21 All-in-One bizarrely blends Android tablet and desktop

HP‘s Slate series of tablets is getting ideas above its station, with the new HP Slate 21 trying to edge in on the company’s all-in-one range. The odd hybrid runs Android on an NVIDIA Tegra 4 chip, rather than Windows as you might expect from an HP all-in-one PC, and is fronted by a 21.5-inch

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HP announces Slate 21 AIO, a $400 21.5-inch Android tablet with Tegra 4

HP launches Slate 21 AIO, 215inch Android tablet with Tegra 4

What do you do if your home turf of PC sales is being eroded by tablets? If your answer is “sell tablets as desktops,” then you’re on Meg Whitman’s wavelength. At an event in Beijing, HP announced a 21.5-inch, Android-powered tablet that’s expressly designed as a desktop unit. The HP Slate 21 AIO comes with a full-HD touchscreen and NVIDIA’s Tegra 4 internals, running Android 4.2.2. Prospective owners won’t need to purchase an artists’ easel, however, as there’s a handy rear kickstand that’ll let you stand it upright or at a 30-ish degree angle (pictured after the break), making us hope that its digitizer is sensitive enough for pen-based drawing. There’s no word on pricing or availability, but there’s a press release, translated from Chinese, after the break, if you’d like to know more.

Update: You’ll now find the English-language PR after the break. The unit will launch in the US in September at a starting price of $400.

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Via: CNET

HP Slate 7 Review

HP’s first go-around with a tablet didn’t actually go so well. The webOS-based TouchPad didn’t last long and was quickly discontinued. However, the company is back with another slate, only this time it’s running the more widely-adopted Android operating system, and it seems as though HP wants to give tablets another whack with its first-ever

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The Daily Roundup for 06.14.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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HP Pavilion 14 Chromebook review: a first attempt at Chrome OS that cuts too many corners

HP Pavilion 14 Chromebook review: a first attempt at Chrome OS that cuts too many corners

Things have been pretty quiet on the Chromebook front since the launch of Google’s gorgeous, but pricey flagship, the Pixel. It’s arguably a hard product to beat, but then again, the Chromebook battle is really taking place at the low end of the market with machines like Acer’s inexpensive $199 C7 and Samsung’s delightful $249 ARM-based model. This is exactly the arena HP’s decided to enter with its $329 Pavilion 14, the first Chromebook with a 14-inch display. Apparently, the company’s research indicates there’s room for a larger Chromebook that’s used primarily at home where thickness, weight and battery life are less critical. While that’s difficult for road warriors like us to understand, it only takes a visit to Best Buy to see row upon row of large, cheap, generic Windows laptops, so perhaps HP is onto something. Like Acer’s C7, the Pavilion 14 is a Chromebook based on an existing PC chassis. It features an Intel Celeron processor, 2GB RAM, a 16GB SSD and Bluetooth. So how does it compare to the aforementioned competition? Is there a market for a larger Chromebook that mostly lives at home? Read on to find out.

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Rubinstein laments loss of Palm in light of webOS-influenced industry

This week former CEO of Palm Jon Rubinstein spoke up on Palm and the software and user interface elements the company created that are now being adopted industry-wide. For those that knew the mobile operating system webOS as created by the former company called Palm, the release of iOS 7 – as well as many

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Jon Rubinstein: Hewlett Packard’s purchase of Palm was a waste

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Finally, Jon Rubinstein is ready to re-open the wounds sustained from HP’s bungled acquisition of Palm. When Fierce Wireless asked the former CEO what he’d do differently, he said that selling the company to Hewlett Packard was “a waste,” and that he probably wouldn’t do the same again. He also revealed that the company’s awkward exclusive relationship with Sprint was caused by last-minute withdrawals from Verizon and Vodafone. If you’re curious about Rubinstein’s feelings on how webOS has influenced mobile operating systems and his new roles with Amazon and Qualcomm, head on down to the source link.

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Source: Fierce Wireless