Hewlett-Packard is preparing to roll out new tablets based on its webOS platform, acquired with its purchase of struggling phone manufacturer Palm in April. Last month, HP's CTO for global gaming ...
HP's TouchPad tablet will be available to buy this June, according to the company's CEO Leo Apotheker. He was speaking at an event to unveil HP's wider strategy around tablets, webOS and cloud ...
WebOS, the software behind HP’s failed TouchPad tablet and Palm’s failed Pre smartphones, is getting another shot at life as an open source operating system. That means anyone, from bedroom ...
According to the PalmPad trademark filing, HP will use the PalmPad name for "computers, computer hardware, computer software, computer peripherals, portable computers, handheld and mobile computers, ...
Before we start, there needs to be a moment of silence for WebOS, set onto the uncertain path of open-source, there to fade into obscurity or find relevance in some niche of the mobile computing world ...
Is this HP’s new webOS tablet? We learned yesterday that HP has plans to include netbooks in its lineup of webOS devices. Today, we got more details on the company plans for webOS tablets. Yes, ...
It looks like the tablets we’re actually excited about seeing—HP’s tablets running Palm’s webOS—are a month away, February 9, to be precise. Hopefully we ...
Hewlett-Packard will release a tablet PC based on Palm’s webOS operating system in “early 2011,” the head of HP’s PC division said Thursday. HP’s tablet plans have been under close watch since it ...
When the Palm Pre smartphone first introduced us to the webOS operating system in June of 2009, many felt that it had a bright future ahead of it. Apple's iPhone was selling hand over fist, and Google ...
Hewlett-Packard chief executive Meg Whitman said Friday that the company plans to manufacture a WebOS tablet in 2013, even as the company winds down the WebOS-based TouchPad tablet. In what is the ...
If anyone still had any remaining doubts that HP is planning to announce a new webOS powered tablet next month, an executive dispelled them during an interview on CNBC yesterday. Wondering how they ...