Hewlett-Packard has passed around invitations to a WebOS
event Feb. 9 that appears to mean the introduction of its tablet is
finally imminent. That said, don’t expect to see any hints of an HP
tablet at this week’s Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
More exactly, tablets may be the case at the event
next month. The invitation for the media event reads: “Think big. Think
small. Think beyond.” Will HP have two sizes to show off? Three? All
that’s known for now is that the PC maker, which first announced plans
to purchase Palm and its popular WebOS in April 2010, has for some time
been working on a tablet running an updated version of the operating
system.
Jon Rubinstein, the former Apple employee who became CEO
of Palm after spearheading the Palm Pre and WebOS, and who’s now in
charge of Palm within HP, has promised an early 2011 launch of the
tablet (tablets!), but has revealed little more.
In mid-December, BMO Capital Markets analyst Keith Bachman, after a trip through Asia, told analysts on a call that the HP tablet would arrive in March, and it appears he was right.
He also hit the nail on the head in offering, “Everyone
we met [on the Asia trip] is planning to build tablets. ... It will be
a very crowded market in 2011.”
At CES, a number of new competitors to the HP tablet –or more exactly, the Apple iPad – will be introduced.
Toshiba is expected to introduce a tentatively titled Toshiba Tablet,
running Google’s Android 2.4, known as “Honeycomb,” and featuring a
10.1-inch display (on the diagonal). According to the Associated Press,
a Nvidia dual-core Tegra 2 chip and WiFi-only connectivity will be on
board, and the tape measure will show it to be just a hair larger than
the iPad, at just over half an inch thick.
Netbook pioneer Asus has hinted
that it will introduce a handful of tablets, at least two of which will
also run Honeycomb and feature 10-inch displays. Expect one tablet with
a detachable keyboard, and another with a slide-out keyboard.
Other Android-running tablets will also come from television-maker Vizio (which will also introduce a smartphone), e-reader-maker Pandigital and the newly slim and light Motorola, which on Jan. 4 shed an enterprise portion of the company, a move that should enable it to now better focus on smartphones and tablets.
In a Jan. 4 research note on Motorola Mobility Holdings
from financial services firm Jefferies & Co., analysts Peter Misek
and Jason North highlighted a fact about the planned Motorola tablet
that may work to HPs advantage.
“While Android has certainly helped Motorola, and others,
to turn its sales figures around, the widespread adoption of the OS may
make it difficult for Motorola to differentiate its handsets and
tablets from a slew of competitors offerings [that] will be using the
same OS,” they wrote.
HP's Rubinstein, in discussing the second incarnation of
WebOS, told attendees at the December D:Dive Into Mobile event that
this is just the beginning.
Helping HP to differentiate itself from the crowd may
just the beginning of what HP's mobile investment proves it has to
offer.