Tuesday, March 6, 2012

HP going crazy about hard- and software

What the technology solutions leaders like HP do to scale above the crisis. Some go for restructuring and others for mergers and acquisitions. Similarity is that all accept changes and try to fit snuggly into the new roles defined by conditions for them.

HP continued to make remarkable marks in the personal computer category. Be they HP laptops, desktops, or printers, they managed comfortably to outperform their rivals plentiful in the market when it comes to quality, convenience, user-friendliness, and innovations.

Visibly, over the last few years, the last element has remained conspicuous in absence generally. The company, unquestionably, continues to keep itself abreast with the changing customer demands and has brought about modern desktop, laptop, and printing solutions.

It perhaps could not realize the unapparent transitions that were taking place in the marker as users were (are) being pulled towards new sensations like smartphones and tablets. It is a fact that the company’s top officials have blurted in public.

Underinvestment is a gambit that has been opened up both by immediate past and present chief executive officers.

Top management is now eager to diversify investments in new technologies for individuals as well as businesses. Information management, internet-based system, and security services are the prospective areas of investments. Besides, the company will take a whack at tapping every segment that would be of interest of early adopters: individuals and enterprises.

So, HP laptops would likely benefit from re-engineering and upgrades as much as tablets and cloud computing do. The Palo Alto-based technology maker has gone crazy as it plans to jump into all businesses that mean technology: hardware as well as software.

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