HP and Apple Separate; Apple gets Custody 213
Kasracer writes "Yesterday, The Register reported that HP separated from Apple's iPod selling agreement. 'Doing its best to erase Carly Fiorina's mistakes, HP has culled an iPod reselling agreement in place with Apple since January of 2004.' It is unclear whether or not HP will create an mp3 player or partner with another computer to fill the void."
Is it just me... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is it just me... (Score:5, Insightful)
It worked for Apple because it got iPods in more retail outlets, expanded production lines, spread liability and production expense, and got iTunes put on HP computers.
It worked for HP by allowing them to associate themselves with the cool cachet of the iPod brand.
That was the idea, anyway. I think Apple got a lot more out of the deal, though, which is why HP pulled the plug.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
Salesmen used to pitch it at me that it was exactly the same, but that the HP version was designed to be more compatible with a Wintel PC (that is, that it was already formatted FAT32 instead of HFS+, please correct me if I'm wrong).
But yes, I think the HP iPod was just a case of shameless corporate me-too-ism. They got a fabrication/marketing deal with Apple when they were selling like hotcakes. It probably pulled in some dollars, but to me it's just a sign of how intellectually bankrupt HP is.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:4, Informative)
FAT32 is the default file system for Apple iPod now, unless you reformat it. If you do have a Mac, reformatting it and putting Journaled HFS+ isn't that bad of an idea, though journaling itself isn't totally necessary.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
The journaling helps in case a file gets corrupted. So long as you keep backups, it isn't all that necessary, but I think journalling can save time fixing the file, at the expense of a little bit of capacity.
I think now, if you install an iPod using a PC, it defaults to FAT32 because there isn't a free or included HFS+ driver for Windows. On a Mac, I think you get the choice of FAT32 or HFS+, I am not sure. The manual claimed that to use iPod with a Mac, it has to be HFS+, but I managed to
Re:Is it just me... (Score:3, Insightful)
It doesn't guarantee a file isn't corrupt.
The problem under OS X is the preference files are not flushed to disk when they should be. (They occasionally get corrupted and cause grief)
HFS+ is the default file system (Score:5, Informative)
There used to be FAT32 iPods and HFS+ iPods from the factory, but not any more.
iPods don't journal their HFS+. I'm honestly not quite sure what good journalling HFS+ is anyway, I've seen many friends have their drive go corrupt even with journalling on, and it does slow things down a skosh too.
Re:HFS+ is the default file system (Score:2)
Why does everyone misunderstand journaling? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why does everyone misunderstand journaling? (Score:2)
This is the way Windows works. If I wanted Windows, I'd buy Windows. I don't want Windows. I have a Mac.
Re:Why does everyone misunderstand journaling? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why does everyone misunderstand journaling? (Score:2, Interesting)
Do *you* want software like this? Your puttering around double click a spreadsheet on your desktop.
Popup:
Hey! I just freed up some RAM that wasn't being used! This memory allocation can be hard what with all the crappy memory leaking software out there. Have a nice day!"
Popup:
"Hey! Someone on your LAN, your laptop I think, just pinged you, but I STOPPED that ATTACK! Hurrah for me and have a nice day! And Be Safe!"
Pop
Re:HFS+ is the default file system (Score:2)
Re:HFS+ is the default file system (Score:2)
That's not true of all of them. A friend of mine has an iPod Shuffle, for instance, and tried to make it work without the software before he installed the software (he was used to other models that simply play wha
Not sure why that would matter. (Score:3, Informative)
I can see a salesperson saying something stupid like that. After all, mauve databases have the most RAM.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
No wonder they split. (Score:4, Informative)
That's not much in the scheme of things, and even less when you consider the size of most of HP's other markets.
Re:No wonder they split. (Score:2, Insightful)
Many customers went so far as ordering an out of stock Apple version instead of buying the in-stock HP ipod - Last Christmas season we quiickly sold out of Apple iPods and only then did the HP units start to move.
Technically the only real difference between the two is that Apple provides support for only the Apple branded ones, same with HP
Re:No wonder they split. (Score:2)
Maybe. For me the HP brand is a major disincentive. As the owner of a Compaq/HP Presario R3000, what HP did to the OS alone will assure I never buy anything from the company again, at home or work.
Not too surprising (Score:5, Interesting)
As the Register article points out, it points out that HP really wasn't about "invent", despite their logo.
Partner with... what? (Score:5, Funny)
Does nobody edit these submissions?
Re:Partner with... what? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Partner with... what? (Score:2)
Re:Tomorrow's headline. (Score:2)
IBM and Earth Simulator could not be reached for comment.
Re:Partner with... what? (Score:2)
"Does nobody edit these submissions?"
You're new here, aren't you.
If only, if only (Score:5, Funny)
"So, this is an iPod, right?"
"No way, man. It's an HP iPod"
"But it looks like an iPod"
(pause) "Righteous! But it's totally an HP iPod. See this logo on the back?"
"But I wanted to get one of those iPods my friends have. I thought this was one."
(longer pause)
Re:If only, if only (Score:2)
Re:If only, if only (Score:4, Funny)
Re:If only, if only (Score:2)
HP's "digital enterprise strategy" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:HP's "digital enterprise strategy" (Score:3, Funny)
Re:HP's "digital enterprise strategy" (Score:2)
Printing is still their biggest business, but they also do a solid business in corporate Windows servers. Which of the other business groups will get chopped? Consulting? Digital cameras?
Re:HP's "digital enterprise strategy" (Score:2)
Not that she wasn't a completely horrible and clueless CEO (she was), but didn't pretty much every technology company not called Ap
No just the calculators. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No just the calculators. (Score:2)
Carly Fiorina was their mistake. (Score:2)
Agreed %110!!! And I was shocked to hear that she was on the list for the president of the World Bank.
FalconRe: Carly Fiorina was their mistake. (Score:2)
Re:No just the calculators. (Score:2)
While I'd agree that Compaq makes some awful computers, my gf's Packard Bell is ok - good performance, silent, okay styling.
Admittedly, both the motherboard and the hard drive died after about 18 months...
HP calculators (Score:2)
The day they quit making calculators is the day everybody knew HP's strategy was going to become utterly wrong.
Yea I was real disappointed HP stopped maker their calculators. I've still got my HP 15C but wanted to replace it with an HP 28. Then I found out they discontinued their calculators.
FalconRe:HP's "digital enterprise strategy" (Score:3, Informative)
But look at this....
http://www.hp.com/calculators/ [hp.com]
Not sure about the rest of you (Score:5, Interesting)
How did such an agreement ever make sense from HP's point of view? When people buy an iPod they're often buying into the ethos as well as the functionality. They want the brand. HP re-marketing iPods is just brand dilution. And there was nothing special about 'their' model anyway.
Don't be so hard on them (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't be so hard on them (Score:2, Interesting)
HP couldn't figure out how to incorporate a 50MB Windows driver that required 15 background processes to make it work.
Re:Don't be so hard on them (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't be so hard on them (Score:2)
Re:Don't be so hard on them (Score:2)
Re:Don't be so hard on them (Score:3, Funny)
(*Even though its a joke, typing that still made me feel dirty, and not in a good way)
They have to wait until 2006 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They have to wait until 2006 (Score:2)
Non-Competition agreement (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Non-Competition agreement (Score:2)
While not just a music player, does that include their IPaqs? I would think it wouldbe easy to get around it with their PDAs.
Re:Non-Competition agreement (Score:2)
Not really surprising (Score:2, Interesting)
Why the HP iPod failed (Score:5, Funny)
Good. (Score:5, Interesting)
I hate to sound like one of those people who say "Apple is perfect and everyone should copy them" but one of the good things Apple has done recently is simplify and standardize their line and ComHPaq should really follow. PowerMac and PowerBook have been around for ages, and even if people might not know the name "powermac" (thinking instead of it as just "a Macintosh") there are just as many people who think *any* notebook is "a powerbook." iMac and iBook have both been around for over 5 years. Those items, plus the iPod, are the core of their line and just about everyone knows them. Those items, plus the Mac mini, eMac, and displays, are pretty much Apple's *entire line*, so it's easy to figure out what's going on, there is very little overlap and, even more importantly, clear distinctions as to *why* you should buy one over another--not just categories for categories' sake. (The only fuzziness comes from the 12" PowerBook. Lots of people ask me about that versus the iBooks, especially now that the iBooks have G4s. Otherwise, everything else is clear as day. People pretty much look at the line and figure out what they want in a few minutes.)
OTOH, only a few people even recognize the names 'Presario' and 'Pavilion' (nothing like carrying two lines that totally overlap; I see no difference today compared to how the lines were when HP & CPQ were two companies) and beond the general product names, look at the items--d4100y, d4100e, a1050y, a1010y, a1030e, a1000y, SR1020T, SR1010Z, SR1020V. (Yes, the mix of upper- and lower-case letters is just as ComHPaq describes them.) What the fuck is all that?
Re:Good. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Good. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good. (Score:3, Interesting)
Or how about the PowerMac G5 dual 2Ghz machine? What revision is it? Is it one of the machines from a couple years ago with all the goodies, or is it the newer low end 2Ghz model that's been stripped of some of the high end features?
Or the iMac. Is it one of the gumdrop CRT ones? D
Used computers (Score:2)
If I'm looking for a used computer, and they don't give the specs, but just the model #, t
Re:Good. (Score:3, Interesting)
There are exceptions to this, but I'm not sure if they really are exceptions, or the companies think they are exceptions.
One of the main ones is luxury vehicles. European brands (MB, BMW, Saab, Volvo) never named their cars, and stuck to number/letter combinations. When Honda introduced Acura, they kept to the Japanese idea of naming vehicles, but, when Infiniti and Lexus were introduced, Nissan and Toyota, respectively, wanted to e
Re:Good. (Score:2)
Um, almost a good point. (Score:4, Informative)
Quick correction.......
Same price, different warranty, different accessories, and yes, an HP logo. But nice try! Go work for CNN or Fox.
Re:Good. (Score:2)
Re:Good. (Score:2, Informative)
Recently however RadioShack and Apple started working together [appleinsider.com]. If Apple is undercutting HPs distribution by going straight to the retailers why should HP stay in this particular game.
Re:Good. (Score:2)
Dell shoppers don't care about the model number (Score:2)
Dell shoppers look for the most specs (GHz, GB, pixels, pages per second, etc) in their price range. The Dell site is actually quite fun in that respect, they have many models and lots of accessories, one can easily spend an hour comparing prices and features.
Invent? (Score:3, Insightful)
This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PCs (Score:4, Interesting)
Just look at their line of PC's. They are just branded and assembled from off the shelf parts and motherboards leaving really nothing to distinguish them from the hundreds other PC assemblers. They don't even have unique software to offer as it all comes from another company (MSFT) now. HP Invent? Sure, if the definition of Invention is it take some product and slap on a sticker.
Their whole business model, outside of printers, is to resell other companies products as their own brand.
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
With the emergence of Taiwan, I would be shorting HP pretty soon.
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
As for the original point about Microsoft, that's really the effect more than the cause. HP also pushes Linux a lot, and anything else they can get off-the-shelf with minimal effort. The entire compu
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
Now that they're moving towards just supporting Windows Server on Itanium (no more HP-UX on PA-RISC, Tru64 and VMS on Alpha, or NonStop), they've become Microsoft's bitch.
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
Where'd you read that? They support a full range of OSes on Itanium and will for the foreseeable future.
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
Re:This means an end of iTunes bundling with HP PC (Score:2)
That's true in some cases, but not the entire story. HP doesn't just place a giant order to the factory for a bunch of motherboards. The company has specific performance and compatibility standards that must be met. If that can be done with off the shelf products, so much the better - it's less expensive because a new part does not need to be manufactured. But you'll find that in many instances, the parts in an HP computer (
Apple did it (Score:2)
My favorite quote from the article... (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't make me laugh. Sony pre-announced the VAIO Pocket over one year ago. In that time, Apple has sold, what, something like 18 million plus iPods?
3Q2005 iPod sales ~= 6.2 million units
2Q2005 iPod sales ~= 5.3 million units
1Q2005 iPod sales ~= 4.5 million units
4Q2004 iPod sales ~= 2.0 million units
3Q2004 iPod sales ~= 0.86 million units
Do Mr. Robinson and The Register seriously think that the VAIO Pocket is going to "kill" a product line which has sold nearly 20 million units just in the time since Sony pre-announced the VAIO Pocket? Never mind what the rest of the world has already said concerning the viability of the VAIO Pocket...
Apple isn't stitting in Cupertino on their hands, I'm certain.
WAL-MART (Score:2, Interesting)
Do you see any Apple powerbooks or ibooks in Wal-Mart? No - and soon you won't see iPods anymore. So the bulk of joe blow americans who buy all their crap and wally world will soon only have the choice of non-iPods mp3 players. Like creative's zen. Which supports wma (i.e. joe blow can use it with yahoo music and not have spend money buy iTunes songs). Which leads us back to Microsoft waging a DR
Re:WAL-MART (Score:4, Informative)
Halo Effect (Score:4, Funny)
It didn't.
I bought two, owned three (Score:4, Interesting)
I drop several hundred bucks each month at Costco just on food. Now I look there first for all other items on my wish list.
Re:I bought two, owned three (Score:2)
Couple of Reasons:
1. No Deep Freeze. Everything there you need to buy 10 of. I can understand if you have a family with multiple kids but it is just two of us in an apartment.
2. Prices aren't that much better on everything else. The nice thing about them is the stuff they carry is different. In other words something that the normal grocery stores don't carry. Plus since the
Obvious reasons why HP sold the Ipod (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Obvious reasons why HP sold the Ipod (Score:2)
Also WalMart and Radio Shack. When I checked WM a few weeks back (right after the new color iPods were released, they had... 20GB b/w screen (HP branded), 4GB mini (HP branded) and 512MB shuffle (no sign of HP branding). So maybe Apple is now direct distributing to WM.
Re:Obvious reasons why HP sold the Ipod (Score:2)
Carly Fiorina.... (Score:2, Funny)
Personally, I think such people shouldn't be fired or allowed to quit. They should be publically executed on the show American Executive Survivor. Something for the family.
Re:Carly Fiorina.... (Score:2)
Condemn her if you want, I rejoice in her stupidity as confirmation of evolution in action. For all those who fear the huge soulless corporations, let her be an object lesson. If we can get the government out of the business of propping them up, most of those corporations can't survive the loss of their founder by more than 10-20 years. Small nimble companies are much better adapted to serving the customer.
Think about it. how many 19th century
Re:Carly Fiorina.... (Score:2)
Nice to be right once in a while (Score:2)
Having said that, the question is: Are they any smarter now? If you look across their total product landscape, it's hard to see how.
HP, like Coca-Cola, is one of those brands that's both massive and powerful -- but not especially smart or self-aware.
Re:Do you think... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Do you think... (Score:3, Informative)
It sounds so much better.
Re:Do you think... (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft is not concerned about the physical player per se, but every iPod that's sold means there's one more person who won't be buying music from an online store that uses Windows Media format. So Microsoft does have something to lose.
Just the fact that Apple and MS are market rivals doesn't mean that MS would try to threaten a company like HP from promoting Apple products.
What are you talking about? They've already done that! [usdoj.gov] Year
Re:Do you think... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Do you think... (Score:5, Informative)
In 1997 Microsoft bought $150 million of special, non-voting Apple stock. $150 million bucks might sound like a lot of money, but remember that at the time Apple had over a billion dollars of cash on hand and a market cap in the 8 billion dollar range.
Microsoft's holdings in Apple today don't even make the top ten institutional holders. You are completely wrong [yahoo.com], in other words.
HP/Compaq Invented Hard Disk MP3 Players (Score:2)
HP did. Well, specifically Compaq [wikipedia.org].
Re:I never quite got,,, (Score:2)
And the HP packaging.
Technologically, they're completely identical.
Re:Any which way but up. (Score:3, Insightful)
I've worked for 2 fortune 500 companies, and no, there often is no logic to these deals. My suspicion is that most of them get done in the club house after a round or two of golf and some cocktails.
It was so bad that when we had ideas to make things run smoother the catch phrase was 'That would make sense'. Meaning, good idea, it would probably work and save the company a ton of money but either management will refuse to consider it or if they try to impl
Re:Farly Ciorina (Score:2)