Palm Plans Future Devices Despite HP Bid, Developer Says
Before Hewlett-Packard made its $1.2 billion bid
in April for Palm, the troubled mobile phone company's top executives were
trying to keep morale high and devices moving off store shelves with upbeat
comments about their product road map.
At one point, Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein optimistically said Palm was
"making great
progress on future products."
With HP's acquisition process under way (the
Federal Trade Commission approved the purchase June 1) and HP executives
having commented that their focus was Palm's
WebOS platform rather than its smartphones, new siblings for the Palm Pre
and Pixi seemed unlikely. However, during a developer Web seminar in mid-June,
a comment by a member of Palm's developer relations team indicated otherwise.
"I'm not allowed to talk about future road maps, especially because we're
in the process of being acquired by HP, so I can't say," said Josh
Marinacci, according to the Wall Street Journal's All Things Digital blog. "But, yes, we
have a road map. We are working on future devices. And a new version of the OS.
So I think you're going to find the next year very exciting."
The news didn't come as a surprise to everyone, though.
"I certainly expected, when the acquisition was announced, that Palm would
continue to make devices that would be integrated into its road map. That's why
I was surprised several weeks ago to hear comments from HP executives that said
the acquisition was entirely about acquiring WebOS for connected devices like
printers and other Internet appliances," Technology Business Research
analyst Ken Hyers told eWEEK. "I completely agree that WebOS offers
enormous advantages for creating connected appliances, but I believe that there
are significant opportunities on smartphones and tablets where HP can leverage
Palm expertise to improve their existing device product line."
Hyers added that HP should be more publicly clear about what its intentions are
regarding Palm, and what technologies it's committed to.
"Beyond the existing software and patent portfolio, Palm has a large share
of human capital in the form of engineers and developers for smartphone devices
that it needs to retain if it intends to leverage the acquisition for
smartphone and tablet development," he said.
Analyst Roger Kay, with Endpoint Technologies, also put an emphasis on Palm's
employees.
"I'm not sure a member of the development team is really in a position to
articulate corporate strategy," Kay told eWEEK. "Pretty clearly, the
company has to do something in the interim period between the announcement and
consummation of the deal, but at this point, only the CEO or
the HP management team would be qualified to speak authoritatively about
product road maps."
Kay added, "While everyone waits, [Palm] continues to work on existing
product plans."
