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Archive for September, 2011

Chrome taking over the #2 browser spot

September 30th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

Chrome v Firefox
It is looking like data provided by statcounter who tracks the browser usage, based on the analytics it shows that Chrome will be pass Firefox by the number 2 spot that is just behind IE in just December. From the numbers on Wednesday user shares in September was at 2..6% and Firefox was at 26.8, and IE was at a staggering 41.7%.

If the trends established thus far this year continue, Chrome will come close to matching Firefox’s usage share in November, then pass its rival in December, when Chrome will account for approximately 26.6% of all browsers and Firefox will have a 25.3% share.

Amazon could be losing on the Kindle Fire

September 29th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

Kindle
Yesterday Amazon introduced the Kindle Fire, and by no means do I think this will be the tablet to take down the iPad. Here are a few reasons why I think the Kindle will be OK at best.

• The Kindle Fire’s 7″ screen compared to the 10″ iPad (a bigger difference than the numbers make it seem; a 7″ screen is only 45% as large as the iPad’s 10″ screen.)
• The Fire has 8GB of storage compared to the iPad at 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB.
• The iPad has two cameras and a 3G option; the Kindle Fire has neither

The thing that it can do is the ability to watch movies, music and web browsing, but wait a second, pretty much every tablet can do it. The most interesting thing about it will be that it looks like Amazon might be losing money on this product, most estimates say around $50, now this isn’t unheard of, many companies that have the ability to sell software and other things have used a price advantage to get people to buy the product and rely on accessories and applications to make up the difference. But at $199 it is affordable and you will see people who can’t get an iPad getting this machine.

iPhone 5 possible for October 14th

September 28th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

iphone.
So as we all know by now the iPhone 5 announcement event will be held on October 4th. From what I have read the Phone will be available on October 14th from some sources. One big indicator of this is that Apple is restricting vacation days for the weekend of the 14th so it looks like Apple is going into overdrive on that weekend. It is not unlike Apple to hold an event for a new product and have it release shortly after it, we would be looking at a 10 day turn around on this one and it has been a long time coming. There is also speculation that the iOS5 will be released on the 12th of October so everything seems to be aligned now we wait for October 4th to see if all of these rumors and speculations are in fact true.

Facebooks iPad app finally coming?

September 27th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

FBA
So I have read reports that are saying that the long awaited Facebook app for the iPad is finally going to be here. Apparently Facebook will be announcing this at the iPhone 5 launch on October 4th. There has been speculation even that this app has been completed since the month of May. Though the reason for this has been cited as the rocky relationship Facebook has with Apple and timing. Now for those who may not know the two companies haven’t been the best of friends, an example of this Facebook stopped Facebook Connect in Ping because Apple didn’t give Facebook any warning about this feature which would have taken a major deal of bandwidth on Facebooks side of things. Also there was the speculation of Facebook being integrated into the iOS well that fell apart and now Twitter is integrated. However from the signs of things, they been able to kiss and make up on this finally being able to announce this app on a big day shows that Apple is serious about all of this.

Netflix sets up streaming with Dreamworks

September 26th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

NFDW
A lot has been said about Netflix and the changes that have been made in the last couple of months. We have the original change of pricing and splitting up DVD rentals and streaming. From there we have the whole division of the company, making Netflix just a streaming company and having Qwikster be the company that deals with the mailing of DVD’s and have even opened the video game business up which is a nice addition. Then we have the whole dealings with Starz. A company that doesn’t want a full sum of money but yet a tier based system such like what you pay for in your cable bill. So people can subscribe to Netflix and add the Starz package and Starz wants to get a piece of that. Well a movie studio has signed a streaming deal with Netflix. One Dreamworks studios. The terms have not fully been released but it looks like the streaming deal will officially start in 2013. Finally something positive to come out of all of this is that some studios have been asking for too much on Netflix. Hopefully more companies will follow suit.

Let the streaming battle begin

September 25th, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

So it looks like Netflix is going to have what could possibly be a Blockbuster/Dish streaming service coming down the line here. Dish bought out Blockbuster for a mere $320 million and now it is all starting to become clear. The real question becomes how will Dish be able to leverage this with the problems Netflix has been having. Mainly the focus goes on the Starz deal that is still in the works. Startz wants there to be a tier for their movies and series, although once again as I stated in a post of mine what if you already have Starz? I mean let me put something into perspective for you, Torchwood Miracle Day was on Starz and just ended a week or so ago. Yet no episodes were on Netflix yet if you had Starz on cable/dish you could on demand them. I don’t think Starz would be losing subscribers to Netflix if they kept the same deal in place and let people watch the series for a limited time streaming. I do feel that putting Netflix in a position like this is just dirty pool by leveraging the fact Netflix is losing its customer base because it broke up its streaming and DVD service. So Netflix could be hungry to get more people streaming, but what will Netflix see if it has to charge $20 per month for Streaming? What added value would you have to give the customer, most people are already complaining about its poor selection at $7.99 and with companies like Showtime and HBO not on board who knows what they could really add. However Dish could have the advantage and might be able to make deals with these companies since they already sell the products through their dish services. This competition could be refreshing and could make Netflix make a positive move for its customers or it could just fail.

A look back on Apotheker’s reign as CEO of HP

September 24th, 2011 by Gregg

hp
These last few blogs have been very HP focused and for good reason. When you have a player like HP who has been struggling as of late you really see a major change can happen to shake up a big company. I found a timeline about the reign of Apotheker and felt it would be interesting to share what has happened in less than a year of a Leo Apotheker’s reign of as CEO of HP. Thanks to Bloomberg for this breakdown.

Feb. 7, 2010: Apotheker resigns from SAP AG after 10 months as CEO. He presided over SAP’s first annual revenue decline since 2003 as customers, hit by the recession, delayed software purchases. During his time as CEO, SAP slashed more than 3,000 jobs, its first major cuts since the company was created.

Aug. 6, 2010: Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd resigns after an investigation found he had a personal relationship with a contractor who received numerous inappropriate payments from the company. Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak takes over as interim CEO.

Aug. 9, 2010: Oracle CEO Larry Ellison says “the HP board just made the worst personnel decision since the idiots on the Apple board fired Steve Jobs,” by forcing out Hurd, Ellison’s friend.

Sept. 6, 2010: Oracle Corp. hires Hurd as a president and board member, reporting to Ellison.

Sept. 7, 2010: Hewlett-Packard sues to block Hurd from working at Oracle, saying the appointment may cause Hewlett-Packard to lose customers, trade secrets and its competitive advantage.

Sept. 20, 2010: Hewlett-Packard and Oracle say they resolved litigation over Hurd’s job at Oracle.

Sept. 30, 2010: Hewlett-Packard names Apotheker president and CEO. It also appoints Ray Lane, a managing partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, as chairman.

Oct. 1, 2010: Ellison tells the Wall Street Journal that “HP had several good internal candidates…but instead they pick a guy who was recently fired because he did such a bad job of running SAP.” He adds, “The HP board needs to resign en masse…right away. The madness must stop.”

Jan. 5, 2011: Hewlett-Packard Chief Marketing Officer Michael Mendenhall resigns, replaced by Bill Wohl, a vice president for communications at SAP.

Jan. 20, 2011: Hewlett-Packard announces a board shakeup in the wake of criticism over the way it handled Hurd’s departure. Four directors leave, and Whitman is among five new members named. Whitman joins the board after a failed bid to become California’s governor.

Feb. 9, 2011: Hewlett-Packard unveils the TouchPad tablet computer, which runs the WebOS software it acquired in its purchase of Palm Inc. in 2010 for $1.2 billion.

Feb. 22, 2011: Hewlett-Packard lowers its 2011 revenue forecast to $130 billion to $131.5 billion, the first of three reductions under Apotheker. The company also misses analysts’ estimates with its second-quarter sales and profit projections. Shares plunge the most in more than six years when markets open the next day.

March 9, 2011: Apotheker says he will put WebOS software in every PC shipped by Hewlett-Packard. He also plans to use acquisitions to expand in software and will reverse Hurd’s emphasis on cost-cutting. “HP has lost its soul,” he says.

March 14, 2011: Apotheker raises Hewlett-Packard’s dividend for the first time since 1998, increasing it 50 percent to 12 cents a share. The company also announces plans to introduce a cloud- computing service.

March 22, 2011: Oracle says it will stop all software development on Intel Corp.’s Itanium chip, a product Hewlett- Packard uses in its servers. Oracle gained a rival chip called Sparc through its 2010 purchase of Sun Microsystems Inc.

March 23, 2011: Hewlett-Packard, the biggest producer of servers that use Itanium, says Oracle’s plan to drop support for the chip is a “shameless gambit” that jeopardizes customers and will cost hundreds of millions of dollars in lost productivity.

April 18, 2011: Hewlett-Packard says Thomas Hogan, executive vice president for enterprise business sales and marketing, has decided to leave. Jan Zadak will assume that role on May 1, the company says.

May 17, 2011: Hewlett-Packard cuts its fiscal 2011 sales forecast for the second time on Apotheker’s watch, to a range of $129 billion to $130 billion. The company also forecasts full- year earnings excluding some items that missed analysts’ estimates as consumers shun PCs and services margins narrow.

May 20, 2011: Hewlett-Packard Senior Vice President Marius Haas is departing for private-equity firm KKR & Co., two people familiar with the matter say.

June 1, 2011: Leo Apotheker says Hewlett-Packard will consider licensing the WebOS software to other device manufacturers.

June 8, 2011: Hewlett-Packard sends a letter to Oracle demanding that the software maker keep supporting Intel’s Itanium chip.

June 15, 2011: Hewlett-Packard sues Oracle, claiming that Oracle has moved from partner to “bitter antagonist.” The suit cites Oracle’s hiring of Hurd last year, and the announcement that it would no longer support its database software on Hewlett-Packard servers that use the Itanium chip.

June 29, 2011: Oracle asks a California judge to reject an effort by Hewlett-Packard to seal court filings in the lawsuit over Hurd and the Itanium chip.

July 11, 2011: Apotheker reorganizes the PC unit as part of a push to broaden use of the WebOS software gained in its Palm acquisition. Jon Rubinstein, Palm’s former CEO, is put in charge of product development for PCs, tablets and smartphones. Senior Vice President Stephen DeWitt is tapped to lead a new unit devoted to expanding use of WebOS.

July 21, 2011: Hewlett-Packard says it will buy back $10 billion of its stock to buoy its languishing shares. Before the announcement, the shares had dropped 14 percent in 2011.

Aug. 18, 2011: In a sweeping overhaul, Hewlett-Packard agrees to buy software maker Autonomy Corp. for $10.3 billion and says it is considering a spinoff of its PC unit. The company also discontinues products running WebOS. Apotheker trims the fiscal 2011 sales forecast for the third time, to a range of $127.2 billion to $127.6 billion.

Aug. 30, 2011: Oracle accuses Hewlett-Packard of fraud and libel, saying a settlement agreement between the two companies over Oracle’s hiring of Hurd was unfair. Oracle also claims Hewlett-Packard defamed the company by saying it bullies customers.

Sept. 9, 2011: Dominique Senequier, a director with ties to Apotheker, will leave the board in March, Hewlett-Packard says in a regulatory filing.

Sept. 22, 2011: Hewlett-Packard names Whitman as CEO, and Chairman Ray Lane becomes executive chairman. During her decade as CEO at EBay, she took the company public and pioneered e- commerce for small businesses. Yet in the final years of her tenure, she couldn’t halt a slowdown in sales growth.

HP names new CEO

September 23rd, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

Meg
Just yesterday I wrote about how HP was going to remove Apotherker as CEO. So now that has come to be. They have announced that Meg Whitman as president and CEO of HP. Also Ray Lane has been promoted from non-executive chairman to executive chairman or the board of directors. All of these moves have been announced by HP and are effective now. Whitman has this to say about her appointment as CEO of HP, “I am honored and excited to lead HP. I believe HP matters – it matters to Silicon Valley, California, the country and the world.” Now the question becomes where is the focus going to be? HP just started making moves to become more of a software solution than a hardware solution. Does Meg pull back from that stance or try to leverage it the best she can to make it work. HP has made some big moves as of late, most notably giving away all of their HP touchpads for almost nothing compared to the tablets that are on the market now. Meg has a true uphill battle to make HP a better company.

HP maybe looking for a new CEO but don’t feel bad for him

September 22nd, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

CEO
So HP has done awful this pass year, with the fail of the touchpad and them calling for a new direction in stopping major PC production and going software solutions. As of right now the current CEO Leo Apotheker has been in the seat of power for less than a year. November 1st of last year being the day he took power. Well I will tell you something that I have learned. If the board decides that Mr. Apotheker has done a poor job and looks to get rid of him, he will still have made a pretty penny. To start he will get $2.4 million dollars plus his average bonus received over the period of his employment which will equal installments over 18 months. Now that is great for someone who did such a poor job but also he will get 76,000 HP shares to go along with all of that. Plus get this he got $4.6 million in relocation benefits and from what I have read since he has been there for more than 60 days he gets to keep it! The only thing that makes sense is if he is fired within 16 months he will be paying back part of his signing bonus of $4 million which would breakdown to about $2.4 million dollars. Pretty good deal if he can make it a year and a half.

Apple’s next Media event October 4th

September 21st, 2011 by Joseph Ruthaford

Tim Cook
Apple is holding their next media event on Oct. 4th. This most certainly will be the announcement of the release of the iPhone 5. It has been said by sources that not only will the iPhone 5 be featured in this event but also that it will be released shortly after the event. Most are speculating in a week or 2 after the event which will put the release right in the middle of October which most sources have speculated since the summer. Plus this event also holds a bit more value to it since it is the first event with the new CEO of Apple Tim Cook. So overall October 4th is going to be a huge day for Apple, not only are you going to see the iPhone 5 but you will see the new CEO in action and every has to wonder how he will do.

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