HP Rethinking Wisdom of Spinning Off PC Division 239
bdking writes "After signing off on former CEO Leo Apotheker's proposal to spin off or sell HP's personal computer unit, the company's braintrust is reassessing the wisdom of dumping a division that contributes nearly 30% of revenue and holds together a valuable supply chain."
HP appears concerned not so much for the revenue generated by PC hardware, but instead by access to various distribution and supply channels. It seems that just announcing a spin-off has affected their access to retail distributors.
My thoughts (Score:4, Insightful)
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Well, I don't care what anyone says, the mid-range and high-end HP printers are still among the best. As much as I think HP seems poised to jump into a deep dark chasm, I hesitate to imagine what will happen if it actually does. I'm not terribly interested in their PCs and was stung by two of their notebooks, and their low-end printers are just as shitty as Lexmark's or Canon's, but if you're looking at mid-range color printers or at high end stuff, HP is tough to beat.
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Have you tried Brother's printers. They work pretty well, are reasonably priced and have Linux drivers that work. I have been using their Laser printer for the past 3 years now and it has never disappointed me.
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My personal preference is toward Samsung printers. They publish their own Linux drivers and haven't let me down in terms of reliability/performance.
I heard Canon is suing them for making their printers shaped like a rectangle with paper trays. ;P
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On that note, my next home printer is going to 90% be a brother or cannon, I just can't seem to find myself to like HP photo printing (not sure about brother, cannon is amazing), which is a feature I require for my printers :)
My B&W laser is a Brother. It's cheap to run, prints relatively quickly, and has built in Ethernet and Wireless capabilities. It works great, even under Linux, and the only computer I've run that required me to actually download/install a driver was a Windows XP laptop.... the built-in foomatic driver in CUPS has support for the printer.
My colour laser is a Lexmark. It isn't as cheap to run as the B&W laser, but it's still fairly inexpensive to run. The print quality is pretty good, too. I usually d
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Don't forget the cheap and DRM unencumbered ink and toner. From what I understand, the page counter in their toner cartridges is entirely mechanical and easy to reset.
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Yup. I wouldn't touch their low-end consumer printers. Expensive garbage. But we've got quite a few $300 and up Laserjets, and other than the NIC in one of the three year old units a few months ago (it's now sitting at home on my boss's computer hooked up via USB), they've been rock solid. I have an old 4P and 4000, and replacement parts are readily available, and those two units, well, they don't have any bells and whistles, but damn if they don't just blood well work.
Brother (Score:2)
Another satisfied Brother user. The designed-to-be-refilled toner cartridges are great.
As for linux drivers, I find that's always the tip of the iceberg. Lack of linux drivers is an excellent indicator that windows versions get drop FAST, and crappy drivers in general. Canon, I'm looking at you.
Postscript (Score:2)
I refuse to buy a printer that doesn't support postscript. Who needs vendor-specific drivers when there have been standardized page-layout languages for decades?
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PCL works as well as postscript.
The point is to avoid printers that require binary drivers or which try to leech off the system CPU to do the rasterization. Printers that do their own rasterization are not that much more expensive.
Personally I have an HP LaserJet 1200. It's served me well for many years, though it's cartridges are getting pretty pricy nowadays. Even with the price increases, though, it's still a lot cheaper to run than any inkjet I've ever seen.
When shopping for a printer, check t
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Then when your cheap crap won't work under Linux, a new version of Windows, or OS/X, don't come whining to slashdot that there are no drivers available.
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My impression of the Brother linux drives is "lousy!!". The 410jw can't scan over a network, and every system upgrade means TRYING to find out how to reinstall the drivers. It's bad enough that I went out and bought an HP Officejet after buying a new Brother printer. I could get it to scan if attached via USB cable, but not over the network.
OTOH, the HP would only print in draft mode on anything other than bog-standard paper. This is vile as one of my major uses involves printing on colored paper, and a
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You get what you pay for, my friend. Stay away from those cheep ass consumer printers and get something good. If the HP printer you bought doesn't use PCL or Postscript, throw it in the trash and buy a real printer.
If a printer needs drivers, it was designed for Windows.
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Another vote for Brother. In this case, you actually can have all three of "faster, better, cheaper."
AFAICT they've never done the advertising campaign to get that "enterprise-class" cachet (which in turn, again AFAICT, is based purely on what MBAs tell other MBAs, and has nothing whatsoever to do with quality or features) so you won't see many of them in big-corp workgroups. But if you're choosing a printer yourself for your home or small business, they're the way to go.
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Granted, it's just light home use - we've probably only put a few reams of paper through it total - but that's still pretty impressive
Afaict for a decent laser printer that is nothing unusual. Unlike inkets laser printers seem fine with periods of non-use and even the low end ones have pretty big cartridges.
According to it's specs your printer should do 3500 pages (that's 7 reams single sided or 3.5 reams duplex) on the included "standard yeild" cartridge. I'm sure other printers I have looked at in a similar size/price range had were pretty similar specs.
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+1. I also like how they have an app to print stuff wirelessly from both iOS and Android.
Used their inkjet MFC with great results for several years, just recently replaced it with a color laser which is also good.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Never have I seen software that is more baroque, or less reliable, at the seemingly simple task of sending PCL or postscript over a network to a printer with an embedded RIP.
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You have obviously not tried HP scanner software. Our scanner will not work on Windows (it did when new, but the UI was so confusing no one managed to do what they actually wanted to). It works on Linux OK though. Before we found that out, we switched to Cannon.
No more HP stuff here!
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If you use an HP multifunction printer, its your own darn fault if bad things happen. I thought everyone knew to avoid those things.
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Ha! My dad bought an HP desktop several years ago (his last off-the-shelf system, now we're building them from parts) - and his HP scanner wouldn't work with it. Something to do with the USB chipset in the motherboard prevented HP's scanner from working with an HP PC.
Yes, a USB device with specific incompatibilities with a specific computer, by the same manufacturer.
+1000. Universal Print Driver should be killed.... (Score:2)
Xerox Printers (Score:2)
I'm sure everyone has their opinion, but after throwing away a bunch of $2000 HP printers in the last year, we've had enough.
I started buying Xerox and Oki printers and so far, they have been fantastic.
Your timing is prescient - all of our HP printers were recently replaced by Xerox machines at my workplace. They do put out some nice prints, although I wouldn't say they are better than the HP ones. I'm fairly insensitive to print-quality -- however, yesterday at a meeting with some clients that rarely see print-outs from my office, someone asked if we had just gotten new printers.
Anyway -- I have noticed that what I would call our Xerox "workgroup-class" printers are really loud. The analogy "It sounds l
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We just got the same thing at our office and in addition to the noise is the fun of finding out where to turn off automatic form feed, since everybody is now dumping a blank page after every job
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The HP Probooks-- specifically the 4000 line-- are remarkably good, and are among the best laptops Ive used.
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I picked up a demo 8460p elitebook. Its about as thick and heavy as most contestants on the Biggest Loser. Its like something out of Dell's late 1990s lineup. Its faux MacBook casing isn't helping matters either.
For around the same price I'm switching to Lenovo, getting a much slimmer and nicer machine, and a heck of a lot less crapware on the standard image.
Considering how many elitebooks have failed for us in the past couple of years (25%) as well as their docks, I'm happy to get rid of HP. May you have
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That includes dock failures. The laptop themselves have a better rate without the dock issues.
Its major faults were:
1. Drive failure. Not sure if we got a run of duds, but I think 5% alone here.
2. Fan failure. CPU fan would stick to 100% then die completely after a few days. Another 5%.
All of these machines save one or two are pampered and usually docked. No heavy loads or anything. Just bum hardware.
I have a couple of machines that don't use the standard image and its ridiculous how bad these HPs are. 3
Re:My thoughts (Score:4, Interesting)
their low-end printers are just as shitty as Lexmark's or Canon's
Somewhere in China there's a factory that makes the internals for ALL cheap printers and depending on incoming orders puts them in a slightly different case and slaps a different sticker on the box. Ditto the laptops, clothes, etc.
Its like being astounded that the quality of the clothes at walmart, target, and kohls are all about the same, when they all came outta the same political prisoner staffed sweatshop and arrived onshore inside the same shipping container. Its not like the more expensive store sprinkles their clothes with "cool dust" or something. At the bottom, its all just junk.
Since the support for all of them is going to be a call center in India where a dude tells you to reinstall XP even if you tell him you have a mac, you may as well just buy the cheapest one.
This does not explain why Brother's printers just absolutely rock. Work on linux outta the box, scanner/fax function works outta the box, supports ipv6 for something like a decade. Rare to have a mechanical problem, rarely jams. "Just works" kinda like HP stuff used to B.C. (Before Carly)
There is a swamp at the bottom of the barrel where it all sucks, but a step up from that and there's some good products out there.
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I recommend Brother printers to anyone that asks me for advice. I've never had a complaint, never had a breakdown.
They are awesome. Ours is 10 years old and still as good as the day it was bought.
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Agreed, I have nothing but great stuff to say about my Brother printer. Cheap price, excellent usability, long lifetime including toner carts, really good drivers even for OS's that are newer than the printer, and a ton of advanced features that normally are only available for high end printers.
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Ok, I'm going to do my own "ask Slashdot" here. Anyone have any good suggestions for a business-grade color laser multifunction printer? (I only need the printer and scanner; I don't know why they bother with fax any more.) A used model is fine.
I've had very good success in the past buying used HP printers on Ebay, first a LaserJet 2100M and then a LaserJet 2300d, which I still use. This 2300 is great; it supports Postscript, and has a 600N J3113A JetDirect ethernet card in it, so it's just used as a ne
Re:My thoughts (Score:5, Insightful)
I always had a rule when purchasing PCs. Now, this rule has since lost much of it's impact, since one of the manufacturers went poof, and the other two merged -
Never buy a computer with PACK/PAQ in the name. At the time, this included Hewlett Packard, Compaq, and Packard Bell
Although losing much of it's impact, the rule still stands (at least for me)
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I've never heard this rule, but it immediately resonated with my experience.
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Yes, because HP has shown themselves to be masters of the art of running a business....
Buying a HP computer not HP stock (Score:2)
Yes, because HP has shown themselves to be masters of the art of running a business....
I thought we were discussing buying a HP computer not HP stock? If they build a decent PC its an option, who cares about the boardroom/c-suite antics. Many computers are purchased from local white box PC clone shops. How likely are they to be around next year, yet they seem to remain an option.
That said, it is terribly sad to be thinking of HP in this way.
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The AC above made fun of Slashdotters' business savvy, in a discussion about HP, who have shown they can't run a business to save their lives. It doesn't matter about how decent their PCs are if their boardroom antics threaten to cripple that; they're even planning to divest that division.
As for local white box PC clone shops, apparently they're about as likely to be around next year as HP (and especially its PC division) is, probably more likely even.
That said, it is terribly sad to be thinking of HP in t
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The AC above made fun of Slashdotters' business savvy, in a discussion about HP, who have shown they can't run a business to save their lives. It doesn't matter about how decent their PCs are if their boardroom antics threaten to cripple that
This discussion began with "I won't purchase an HP device", I think it is reasonable to return to that point. Regardless of the antics of the executives and board members *if* the folks in operations build a decent PC it remains a decent PC.
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Not if it's going to have support dropped in a month. I'm sure your local shop has better prospects than that, and even if not, it's better to spend the money locally than on an apparently inept multinational corp that has already said it's going to divest that business. What moron would buy from them, when they can either gamble their money with a local shop, or buy from one of the other large competitors like Dell, Lenovo, etc. (the thread starter didn't specify laptops or desktops, so local shops might
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Even if divested the new owner will most likely honor warranties, offer drivers, etc. As I think Lenovo does for old IBM ThinkPads.
Regarding ineptitude, my point is that I really only care if the folks in engineering and operations are inept.
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Even if divested the new owner will most likely honor warranties, offer drivers, etc. As I think Lenovo does for old IBM ThinkPads.
There's no guarantee of that, and in fact there's been plenty of cases where companies have shut down operations of a department and left their customers in a lurch. I saw this when I worked for Freescale and they shut down our division, screwing over all the customers who had designed their parts in and had millions of them installed around the world.
Regarding ineptitude, my p
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Swap thrashing (Score:2)
Time to reboot and upgrade the kernel or something.
HPlix? (Score:3)
Did I miss something? Is HP begin run by Reed Hastings now?
-dZ.
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BGDAAAA!! (Score:2)
Re:BGDAAAA!! (Score:5, Funny)
Fire the board (Score:5, Interesting)
Fire the board, they showed their stripes years ago with Carly, and again with other bungled decisions. They have got to be the most incompetent board for any company of their size in the world. The board lost the HP way long ago, and it hasn't changed that much since then.
The whole rotting thing has got to go and the culture has to restored from the top. Nothing less will do.
Re:Fire the board (Score:4, Interesting)
I was going to suggest that they fire the CEO and get someone who will do the job for less compensation and no golden parachute. I figure if they do that then their applicant pool would open up to up and comers who want to prove themselves while hopefully turning away those who just want a big payday.
But your idea of firing the board probably makes more sense.
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The new CEO is just that. She's getting paid $1/year in compensation - and a significant portion (2/3?) of her stock options are based on the HP stock hitting certain $ values at certain points in the future.
If they let her go, her parachute is worth 1.5 times her yearly compensation.
Bonuses are the only way she can get cash outright.
Had found the original info from Google Stocks on HPQ, they do news-by-day and list when articles came out graphed to the price, was at some other site when I saw it a few wee
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Re:Fire the board (Score:5, Insightful)
I recommend looking at who's currently on the board at HP. It explains everything. There's a ridiculous number of hedge fund managers and similar type people. They've only got one real HP person on the board and that person is from enterprise marketing or something like that. No one on the board understands their products or what they do except possibly this marketing person.
You would think a company like HP would have at least a few people who've run tech companies on their board.
Re:Fire the board (Score:5, Insightful)
It would't necessarily generate better leadership; but 8-12 incomprehensible guys allegedly named "Robert" somewhere in the far east would provide incomprehensible decisions and inconsistent directions for several factors of ten less money...
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Actually since they understand the product better than the board and have a good idea of how the customers use and view the product they probably would generate better leadership.
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Replace the board with members of the Psychic Hotline, and then have Dave Packard's ghost as CEO. No matter how badly it fails, it can't fail worse than the current board.
MBA bullshit. (Score:4, Insightful)
flop. thats what you get if you hire too much suits or put them in charge.
Re:MBA bullshit. (Score:4, Insightful)
It has little to do with having an MBA. These boards are usually staffed with people assigned by majority holders for their ability to "maximize profits". But companies can only grow so much and the economy goes up and down. Investors don't want waves, only inclines. To keep their well paid jobs these MBA's, as you call them, do whatever they can. This usually means some imaginative book keeping, slashing staff, and trying to outsource where possible. The really good MBA's only stick around for a short period since their work always have a quick fall to follow. And who wants to be on a sinking ship?
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Corporations have an obligation to turn a profit.
They do not have an obligation to turn an obscene profit, short-term profits, a high stock-market value, nor to line the pockets of executives and board members with "golden parachute" options.
The whole world's corporations need to get back to research, innovation, and a focus on quality products. To hell with the hedge fund managers, the banks, and all the rest of the blood-suckers who do NOTHING for the economy except bleed it dry.
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What do you by really good? Really good for them you mean.
Uh, yes. The really good ones come into a company, strip it bare to pump up their bonuses and then get out early enough to blame the collapse on their successor; the bad ones are that successor.
Engineering bullshit. (Score:2)
Thats what happens when engineers take over running of corporation. Everything is geared towards teaching of maximizing profit minimizing costs in those programs in ultimate end, and even if some programs incorporate business concepts like systems management and so on, the engineers types eventually lack on strategic planning and vision.
The PC business is a tough business to be in. You have a lot of competition. Dell, Lenovo, Apple. The home consumer market is more willing to hold on to their PC for 2 more
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As an aside, Lenovo has moved into tablets, servers and financial services. Lenovo bladeservers, diskarrays and consultants are probably right around the corner.
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This is my number 1 rule of business: never let an MBA run your company.
Ever
I have yet to meet anyone with an MBA, in any capacity, who has any idea of what they're doing.
Derp derp derp! (Score:3, Interesting)
When HP absorbed EDS they thought they'd finally be able to compete in the lucrative snake oil business of large scale "consulting" (a la IBM), but after a massive reorg and an almost precision extraction of any talent prevalent in the EDS husk they're left with nothing but the most clueless of drabs.
To watch them flail around and try to bail out of this self-inflicted situation by dumping their hardware division has been entertaining.
Revenue from pre-bundled demoware (Score:2)
However, their PC tower at a big box store was competitive priced compared with a generic import computer store.
Generally I don't support HP, tho I was very impressed with the Green packaging a friends new printer came with.. no plastic wrappers, instead it all was packaged in a re-usable shopping totebag and accessory pouch.
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Generally I don't support HP, tho I was very impressed with the Green packaging a friends new printer came with.. no plastic wrappers, instead it all was packaged in a re-usable shopping totebag and accessory pouch.
The design of which they probably outsourced to some 'green' marketing company. Nothing wrong with it - but it's hardly why we held HP in such esteem.
From the Michel Dell school of management (Score:2)
shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.
Email from HP about this (Score:3, Funny)
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You might have to ask HP themselves about that...
The obvious name... (Score:3)
Good luck in retail! (Score:2)
Good. (Score:2)
the company's braintrust is reassessing the wisdom of dumping a division that contributes nearly 30% of revenue and holds together a valuable supply chain.
Not to mention a significant chunk of jobs. We have enough unemployed (read: competition to get a job) as it is, thanks.
is anyone surprised? (Score:2)
I'm not going to belabor the point that the spin off wasn't a good idea. The problem now is that they're coming off as indecisive, unsure, rudderless, out of control, pick your metaphor.
Weird trends (Score:2)
HP is lost... (Score:3)
I've had great success with their printers, though. I still think at the mid-to-high business end, they're very solid machines. I recently worked at an office that used Ricoh's, and never again with I touch Ricoh printers. They can't even get simply LDAP right...
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Yeah, I had an HP scanner and it was great. But I moved across the Atlantic so it won't work anymore because the power adapter is 220V and they won't sell me a 110V adapter for less than the cost of a new scanner.
That was one of the reasons why they lost a $1200 sale to Toshiba when I bought my laptop last year.
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It says 220V and I'm not sure I want to risk finding out whether it's lying.
We use HP machines (Score:2)
Shortsighted as usual (Score:2)
HP has an identity problem (Score:2)
Access to retail the problem? (Score:2)
WTF? Seriously? Is there some kind of legitimate fear that stores that can't sell HPs crappy PC's will stop selling their crappy printers? The other major printer companies don't sell PC's, and they seem to be doing just fine.
Not a serious problem. (Score:2)
PERHAPS, HP will bring back manufacturinging (Score:2)
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Surely you're not suggesting HP's new CEO limit themselves to such mediocre core meltdowns when, with just a little more effort, they can achieve China Syndrome proportions?
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Lastly, Win 8 finally appears to be an upgrade that may finally pry people off Win XP and truly offer integration across smartphone, tablet, laptop, desktop and gaming (xbox).
Uh, what?
XP laptop and desktop users are waiting out Windows 7 so they can 'upgrade' to a crappy tablet interface?
That's some good stuff you're smoking.
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Uh, what?
XP laptop and desktop users are waiting out Windows 7 so they can 'upgrade' to a crappy tablet interface?
That's some good stuff you're smoking.
Exactly. If people didn't move to Win 7, they're not moving. The only thing that will get people off Win XP is driver support.
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driver support.
Read: Forced upgrades due to lack of driver support.
Re:Dumbasses! (Score:4, Insightful)
Never make the mistake of underestimating a superb parasite because it is lousy at whatever non-noxious lifeform it is mimicking...
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Brain trust? If I was making decisions like this for a company, I would *THINK* about the effects of the change and how that affects other parts of the company. I would do this *in advance*.
This is why you're not a billionaire hedge-fund manager.