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HP Forum Archive 20

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HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #1 Posted by Eric Smith on 29 Aug 2011, 12:20 p.m.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424053111904787404576535211589514334.html

      
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #2 Posted by geoff quickfall on 29 Aug 2011, 12:49 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by Eric Smith

OUCH

            
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #3 Posted by M. Joury on 29 Aug 2011, 1:37 p.m.,
in response to message #2 by geoff quickfall

I particularly like (if like is the right word) in reference to the PC business:

Quote:
Dumping it is a beautiful absurdity that one analyst, Jayson Noland of Robert W. Baird & Co., described as "like McDonald's getting out of the hamburger business."
                  
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #4 Posted by Namir on 29 Aug 2011, 3:19 p.m.,
in response to message #3 by M. Joury

Who said a corporation cannot commit suicide?

                        
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #5 Posted by Paul Gaster on 29 Aug 2011, 3:51 p.m.,
in response to message #4 by Namir

Another ugly article: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/27/business/for-seamless-transitions-at-the-top-dont-consult-hewlett-packard.html?_r=4&partner=rss&emc=rss

“I didn’t know there was such a thing as corporate suicide, but now we know that there is,” a former H.P. director, the venture capitalist Tom Perkins, told me this week. “It’s just astonishing.”

                  
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #6 Posted by hugh steers on 31 Aug 2011, 7:54 p.m.,
in response to message #3 by M. Joury

until quite recently, McDonald's were not in the burger business! at least measured by revenue.

they used to make more money on the real estate, when buying buildings for franchise and leasing them to the franchisee than actually on burgers. weird huh!

it's why they were consistently rated the worst burger.

      
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #7 Posted by Howard Owen on 29 Aug 2011, 6:46 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by Eric Smith

Scath-ing adj: 1. See link above.

      
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #8 Posted by db (martinez, ca.) on 29 Aug 2011, 7:52 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by Eric Smith

was cleaning CPUs using alcohol this weekend with a friend from high school (class of '73). He's been in the Silicon Valley computer business for about 35 years. He knows what a Luddite i am and said in passing that sales of laptop and desktop computers (the business as we know it) is about to disappear and be replaced by the tablets and pads. Maybe hp is in on this "secret".

The reason for him saying that was to tell me that in 2 or three years, all the fooling around will be done on those ipad type things (with programs running on the internet) leaving very little real work to be done (ie autocad etc.) - and less sales for - laptops and such. So he said that this generation of what we call computers will be the last "cheap" one. In the next couple of years there will be fewer made, fewer companies, less competition, and twice to three times the price for the next generation of what i am typing this on.

Not sure which direction this post paddled the canoe towards, but there it is.

            
Re: HP's One-Year Plan (WSJ)
Message #9 Posted by Michael de Estrada on 29 Aug 2011, 8:30 p.m.,
in response to message #8 by db (martinez, ca.)

Sounds like your friend needs to take a few classes in economics.

Reminds me of when 30 years ago some bright young manager told me that engineers like me would be replaced with "thinking" computers. He later on lost his job when the company downsized, but I still kept mine. :)

Edited: 29 Aug 2011, 8:34 p.m.


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