Jon Rubinstein joins Qualcomm board of directors

Jon Rubinstein reportedly joins Qualcomm board

When Jon Rubinstein left HP, it wasn’t certain whether he would retire (again) or once more respond to the siren’s call of technology. Clearly, he couldn’t resist — Qualcomm has confirmed that Rubinstein is joining its board of directors. It’s not hard to understand why the firm would be interested, mind you. Between NeXT, Apple, Palm and HP, Rubinstein has extensive experience with Silicon Valley technology in general, and mobile in particular. While Qualcomm is already doing blockbuster business without his help, it no doubt wants to keep the money train going. Us? We’re just happy to see a familiar name back in the limelight.

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Source: Qualcomm

WindsorNot: the 4-inch webOS smartphone that never saw the light of day

The HP WindsorNot a 4inch WebOS smartphone that never saw the light of day

The downfall of webOS left more than a few canceled devices in its wake, but the most elusive of the bunch tends to be the WindsorNot: a touch-only smartphone. We’ve seen hints of it here and there, but the shy little device has largely been kept under wraps — until now. The dedicated folks at webOS Nation have managed to get their hands on a functional prototype. The 4-inch devices seems to lie somewhere between a Pre3 and HP Touchpad, aping the hardware specifications of the former while adopting the latter’s software version: webOS 3.0. The tweaked software does feature a smartphone-sized keyboard, but webOS Nation says some of the OS’ trappings are difficult to read, and were clearly meant to be refined for the smaller screen before release. The phone’s form, on the other hand, seems to be top notch, indicating that the project was canned before the software team had a chance to catch up. Check out the source link for a full walkthrough of the device and a brief history lesson of webOS’ last days.

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Source: webOS Nation

The Hail Mary Products of Desperate Companies

The Hail Mary Products of Desperate Companies

When the chips are down and it looks like a company is on a one-way trip to shutdown town, you often see a Hail Mary product. It’s the long shot, the one thing that could save the company. Sometimes it …

Epic Palm post-mortem details a lost legacy

It’s not every day you hear of a smartphone technology getting its own massive 22,000 word, 55-page write up. But that’s just what’s been announced this week as the article known as “Palm: I’m Ready to Wallow Now” is offered up on the back of the decades-long history of the operating system. Writer Thom Holwerda speaks of the death of the mobile operating system and the long – surprisingly long – life it had before its demise.

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The history of Palm, as Holwerda tells it, begins before the company was created. Back when one of the several co-founders Jeff Hawkins learned about handwriting recognition and studied it well before the birth of the first Palm Pilot. He even goes back to the 1960s to see the RAND Corporation’s showing of the GRAIL Project and the creation of the RAND tablet. Have a peek at a demonstration video of the Rand tablet with Alan Kay from back in those fabulously exciting times here:

From there – and from several other sources, of course – handwriting recognition was born into the public conscious. From there, 6,000 words later, Holwerda begins what ends up speaking one of several times about the reader. It’s interesting how – since this text is based online in a blog-centric environment – Holwerda makes it clear that the article is long. Extremely, massively long. He makes guide points throughout the body of the text to make sure the reader understands where they are – what a world we live in!

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Holwerda goes on to speak on how the Palm V came to be, how the hardware in the Palm collection came to influence the smartphone world and how Palm’s webOS mobile operating system was eventually pushed to the Smartphone. It becomes clear how Palm went down a road where they could have been great – a chart included above shows what his view was and is on how Palm’s approach with mobile could have taken on iOS and Apple in the sweet spot between too few features and too many features – Android going down that tunnel, too.

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And There’s the death of Palm and webOS, complete with the “wallowing” promised in the title of the piece. Truly astounding is the read that’ll have you either gripping your kneecaps in anticipation of a new page or crashing and falling asleep at every turn. Do you want to know everything there is to know about Palm? You’re in luck – it’s just been written.

[via OSnews]


Epic Palm post-mortem details a lost legacy is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Apple’s Jobs patent firestorm threat revealed in no-hire lawsuit

Apple‘s Steve Jobs allegedly threatened Palm with a patent nightmare if the company’s execs didn’t agree to a no-hire talent poaching policy, new court filings suggest, with Google, Intel, and others all cited as implicit in the pact. Jobs’ proposal, detailed by a legal filing quoting former Palm CEO Edward Colligan, was made back in 2007, with the Apple co-founder concerned about employees switching between the big names in tech at the time, and heavily suggesting that Palm should opt in to a no-hire treaty, or face a potential firestorm of patent lawsuits.

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“In 2007, I received a call from Steve Jobs, the Chief Executive Officer of Apple. In the months before the call, several employees had moved between the two companies. On the call, Mr. Jobs expressed concern about employees being hired away from Apple by Palm. As a solution, Mr. Jobs proposed an arrangement between Palm and Apple by which neither company would hire the other’s employees, including high tech employees. Mr. Jobs also suggested that if Palm did not agree to such an arrangement, Palm could face lawsuits alleging infringements of Apple’s many patents” Edward Colligan, ex-CEO, Palm

The threat was detailed as part of a civil lawsuit by five in the technology industry, who claim Apple, Intel, Google, and a number of other firms all secretly collaborated to keep wages down. According to emails sent from Colligan to Jobs, the Palm CEO refused to agree to the pact, describing it as “not only wrong” but “likely illegal”; he also counter-threatened with patent lawsuits of his own.

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That didn’t apparently worry Steve Jobs, who in reply made reference to the difference in legal budgets between Apple and Palm – writing “I’m sure you realize the asymmetry in the financial resources of our respective companies” to counter Colligan’s argument that the only outcome of a patent fight would be richer lawyers – as well as belittling Palm’s patent strength itself. “My advice is to take a look at our patent portfolio before you make a final decision here” Jobs concluded in his email.

Elsewhere in the case, Google’s Eric Schmidt will be questioned by lawyers in February, after supposedly telling the company’s human resources director to keep no-hire agreements off the books so as to avoid legal headaches down the line. Asked about whether Google should share details of the agreements with others in the industry, “Schmidt responded that he preferred it be shared ‘verbally, since I don’t want to create a paper trail over which we can be sued later?’” according to a filing.

Today, Google maintains that it has “always actively and aggressively recruited top talent,” while Apple has not yet commented on the claims. Palm owner HP is also yet to comment.

[via CNET; via Apple Insider; via Reuters]


Apple’s Jobs patent firestorm threat revealed in no-hire lawsuit is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The No-Hire Emails That Incriminate Apple, Google, Adobe and More

A court filing has just been made public which sheds light on the “no-hire” gentleman’s agreements that have pervaded the tech industry—and reveals how Steve Jobs threatened litigation to prevent companies from stealing his staff. More »

[CEATEC 2012] KDDI presents a new palm authentication app for Smartphones

KDDI’s booth was rather uneventful this year and has not much to show, unless maybe this very cool new palm authentication app for Smartphones. Unlike Fujitsu Palm Reader technology, KDDI’s palm authentication app will actually read your “palm” and take a picture of your palm and its lines and memories it for future use. Thanks to today’s Hi-resolution sensors, Cameras embedded on smartphones can take pretty accurate details of objects and in our case every …

KDDI’s smartphone palm authentication app unveiled at CEATEC 2012 (hands-on)

KDDI's smartphone palm authentication app unveiled at CEATEC 2012 handson

Sidestepping lockscreen codes and fingerprint scanners — and without any new hardware demands — KDDI has unveiled a new palm authentication app that takes advantage of the high-resolution camera on its Android smartphones. Scanning in tandem with the flash, we gave it a try on a HTC J, here at CEATEC in Japan. After a brief setup, which involves positioning your hand to fit between some red markers, the phone was soon calibrated to our hands. Then, after locking the device, attempting to unlock it will send you to the palm authentication screen, seen above, where (hopefully) only your mitts will be able to gain access.

The time it takes to check your hand remains a little longer than it would take you to drum in your typical four-digit PIN, but in our brief test, it was able to discriminate between two Engadget editors’ hands. Better still, you’ll be able to give the app a try yourself tomorrow, when it goes on free trial on Google Play. Until it does, see how it’s all meant to work in our hands-on video after the break.

Continue reading KDDI’s smartphone palm authentication app unveiled at CEATEC 2012 (hands-on)

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KDDI’s smartphone palm authentication app unveiled at CEATEC 2012 (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Oct 2012 21:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP rumored to dive into smartphone and tablet market again

HP CEO Meg Whitman has already said that the company plans to release their own smartphone at some point, but details were pretty scarce. We even spotted a possible HP smartphone in some benchmark details that same day. So, it’s not too surprising that the company is reported to have said that they plan on getting back into the smartphone and tablet business.

Jefferies analyst Peter Misek said that he thinks HP will “aggressively attack” the smartphone and tablet markets in a research note to investors yesterday. Misek noted that it would be a risky investment for HP, though, which isn’t too surprising since the company only has a brief history of maintaining a smartphone and tablet lineup, thanks to their acquisition of Palm.

Misek noted that “to date almost all PC OEMs have failed to gain significant traction in consumer tablets/smartphones,” with exception to a few obvious companies of course. Then again, HP will most likely have to make a move like this at some point. With the world slowly moving toward a post-PC era, HP will eventually have to hop on the train and get going.

Whitman even said herself that the company will need to offer a smartphone and tablet, which can only point to signs that we’ll definitely see more mobile products from HP soon. And it’ll be interesting to see what the company comes with. Will they model their new devices after their previous webOS-based models, or will they completely start from the ground up?

[via ZDNet]


HP rumored to dive into smartphone and tablet market again is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


webOS team becomes Gram, isn’t heavy on mission statements

webOS team becomes Gram, isn't heavy on mission statements

HP’s webOS team has been keeping busy with its open source project, but it’s time for a new challenge in the form of Gram: a fresh HP-funded offshoot focused on “software, user experience, the cloud, engineering, and partnering.” We’re not quite sure where that list could lead, but webOS, Enyo and cloud services are all expected to play a role in future endeavors. Judging from the fancy flyer after the break, a lot of energy is going into brand-building right now, along with a dose of secrecy, but hopefully some more concrete details will happen along soon.

Continue reading webOS team becomes Gram, isn’t heavy on mission statements

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webOS team becomes Gram, isn’t heavy on mission statements originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 15 Aug 2012 06:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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