Hewlett-Packard have come a long way from their garage and not always for the better. They started off with measuring instruments and they became #1 in this field with some truly innovative products. It was this that took them from the "garage" to a highly respected and profitable multinational.
Then, about 35 years ago, they became interested in small computers, including the HP-65 programmable pocket calculator in 1975, a marvel of its day. In 1979, they marketed their first real PC (before the term PC was coined), the HP-85/86/87 series. These were highly successful for technical work and tied in perfectly with their instruments (and those of other makers). I developed the world's first computerised ionic contamination tester in 1979, around the HP-85 (later models used the HP-86 and we didn't switch to the PC until 1987). I can't remember the date, I guess about 15 years ago, HP hived off their instruments to Agilent to concentrate on their versions of the PC and peripherals. Their printer business became very successful but on low margins. Their big mistake was a greedy tie-up with Compaq and their PC business has since become rather iffy.
Now it wants to hive off PCs and peripherals and concentrate on software, acquiring UK-based Autonomy to do so. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14582489 and http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14582489
I feel the ghosts of Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard should haunt the corporate headquarters (and the 1939 garage). The change from instruments to PCs was a mistake (Agilent is still #1 in instrumentation "Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A) is the world's premier measurement company and a technology leader in chemical analysis, life sciences, electronics and communications. The company's 18,500 employees serve customers in more than 100 countries. Agilent had net revenues of $5.4 billion in fiscal 2010."). I feel that a change from hardware to software will be an even bigger one, especially with a fairly young academic-based company with a specialised portfolio of products.
I wonder whether HP will be around to celebrate its 80th anniversary in 2019???
Then, about 35 years ago, they became interested in small computers, including the HP-65 programmable pocket calculator in 1975, a marvel of its day. In 1979, they marketed their first real PC (before the term PC was coined), the HP-85/86/87 series. These were highly successful for technical work and tied in perfectly with their instruments (and those of other makers). I developed the world's first computerised ionic contamination tester in 1979, around the HP-85 (later models used the HP-86 and we didn't switch to the PC until 1987). I can't remember the date, I guess about 15 years ago, HP hived off their instruments to Agilent to concentrate on their versions of the PC and peripherals. Their printer business became very successful but on low margins. Their big mistake was a greedy tie-up with Compaq and their PC business has since become rather iffy.
Now it wants to hive off PCs and peripherals and concentrate on software, acquiring UK-based Autonomy to do so. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14582489 and http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14582489
I feel the ghosts of Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard should haunt the corporate headquarters (and the 1939 garage). The change from instruments to PCs was a mistake (Agilent is still #1 in instrumentation "Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A) is the world's premier measurement company and a technology leader in chemical analysis, life sciences, electronics and communications. The company's 18,500 employees serve customers in more than 100 countries. Agilent had net revenues of $5.4 billion in fiscal 2010."). I feel that a change from hardware to software will be an even bigger one, especially with a fairly young academic-based company with a specialised portfolio of products.
I wonder whether HP will be around to celebrate its 80th anniversary in 2019???
Comment