Kudos To HP! Making WebOS Open Source Deserves Praise.
If you own a Saturn automobile, you know just how terrible it can be when a company goes belly up without ever releasing their proprietary information to the general public or others within their industry. Those who still drive their beloved Saturn cars are discovering that as problems arise, especially with the Saturn’s onboard computer, they are completely at the mercy of GM. General Motors, which owned Saturn, may very well charge more than your local mechanic, but your local mechanic cannot access a Saturn’s onboard computer. The reason for that is simple: before Saturn went bust, the company held very tightly to its trade secrets and the Saturn onboard computer program remained a protected property. GM, as the parent company of Saturn, retained the coding and now uses it to compel the remaining Saturn owners to use their service centers. Hewlett-Packard is taking the exact opposite approach with their webOS. By making webOS into an open source program, anyone with computer programming ability will be able to acquire, alter and write applications for webOS.
HP had a pretty bad 2011 on the tablet computer front. After having their tablet computer, the Touchpad, crushed by the sales numbers of the Apple iPad 2, the Kindle Fire arrived to metaphorically bulldoze a small mountain of dirt into the grave. Hewlett-Packard gave the tablet computer market the old college try and the company lost obscene amounts of money in the process. HP liquidated the last of the Touchpads for $100 and $149 when the Touchpads bore a $500 and $600 MSRP earlier in the year. HP had a bad year on the tablet computer front.
So, HP announced they were no longer competing for that market. In washing their hands of the tablet computer market, HP could have divorced itself from the customers who had invested in their product and moved on to their next big project. Instead, HP executives announced that webOS, the operating system that runs the Touchpad tablet computer, would be released as open source software.
By making webOS open source, computer programmers may write applications of their own for their Touchpads. They can use webOS to run other hardware, like smartphones, digital cameras or gaming devices. If you become annoyed with how your electronic device is operating, you could write an app in webOS to reprogram it!
In addition to being consumer-friendly, making webOS into open source software, HP is giving a psychological pat on the back to its programmers. Because the enthusiasm exists for webOS, in spite of poor Touchpad sales, HP is essentially telling its programmers and researchers, “You had a good product; it just didn’t sell.” That kind of encouragement is remarkably cool from a multibillion dollar company.
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