HTC Considering Buying Own OS
An anonymous reader writes "HTC Corp chairwoman Cher Wang announced that the company is interested in buying an operating system. From the article: 'After the global PC heavyweight Hewlett-Packard Co. (HP) announced on Aug. 18 a plan to spin off its PC business and stop sales of its TouchPad tablet that uses the WebOS operating system, a slew of manufacturers like HTC and Samsung reportedly have been trying to acquire the WebOS platform to expand their mobile market reach. 'We have given it thought and we have discussed it internally, but we will not do it on impulse,' Wang said in an interview with the Economic Observer of China.'"
So they don't realize that they have their position in the cellphone-market BECAUSE they use Android insted of IN SPITE of it?
Prosp long and liver.
Why are they trying to buy a failed OS that nobody uses? I could understand it if it came with some IP of note, but it doesn't. Plus let's be honest it will expand their consumer base by almost nobody that matters - a few geeks who made a poor purchasing decision.
I'm not one to harp on about Open Source and Linux, but in this one case it is a situation where HTC should be investing that cash into their own Linux/Android branch rather than buying WebOS which is worth little or nothing.
I bought the HTC Thunderbolt primarily for the OS and the market that comes with it. Apple and Google are the two dominant players because of their market/store not because of the OS alone. If HTC came up with a spectacular "killer-app" and gave WebOS exclusivity in some fashion than it might have a chance of people caring about it.
Any company with a sense of customer service, even a poor one, wouldn't drop support to existing products like that. You'd be more likely to see whatever was already in the production channels come to market depending on how much was invested in them before you'd see the company change gears to make devices with their own OS...as long as they weren't purchasing it just for the IP. They won't just sign a deal and say the next day that they absolutely won't support their existing products.
I'd love to see HTC pick up WebOS, but I'm not going to hold my breath on it.
So they don't realize that they have their position in the cellphone-market BECAUSE they use Android insted of IN SPITE of it?
No, they have. They realized that they were completely dependent on Google to draw in customers for them, and that they had no way to differentiate themselves from a half-dozen competitors that are in exactly the same business, not to mention any number of HTC wannabes that could pop up at any moment.
And they noticed that their customers could jump ship as soon as they qualified for an upgrade with no reason to look back. That's all great if you're a customer (or Google) but it's terrifying for HTC.
That's also why IBM (and now HP) dumped their PC business.
Yes, I'm sure their shareholders would love them to turn their backs on the millions of customers who've turned HTC into a more-or-less household name.
expect these companies to drop support for their android phones the minute the paperwork is signed
<sarcasm>Like how Samsung dropped support for Android and Windows Phone (ie Windows Mobile 7) once they started shipping their Bada phones?</sarcasm>
Or following your own logic, Motorola is going to drop support for any non-Android phone any day now, which means it's a perfectly stable Android company.
You're a pro-Apple troll, probably using iOS now. Go away unless you have something to contribute.
So basically instead of sense or touchwiz or whatever you ran webOS as your "skin", and it handled the multi-tasking and other interface elements... but the apps themselves were android apps that ran inside "cards"..... I'd sign up for that.
"Waste not one watt!" - CZ
They can always run with Nokia's abandoned Meego OS. They wouldn't even need to buy it out.
I would recommend that they buy out myriadgroup who make Alien Dalvik to ease porting of Android apps to their own store. I always suspected that myriadgroup was trying to get bought out by Nokia before Feb 19.
Unicode in Slashdot
I'd wonder if they've considered the TRON OS. Of course, hardly anyone in the US has ever heard of it, despite its being one of the most-installed OSs in the rest of the world. But the US is no longer an important part of the phone industry, y'know. And 99% of the customers don't know or care what OS the phone is running.
You'd think they'd be attracted to an OS that was designed for small gadgets, and which started life with strong support for all the world's languages, not just English.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
The Amiga will rise again!
Indeed, M$ and Apple are going after them over patents, not over copyright issues. Wether they buy an OS or develop it themselves, it'll have to address the same issues: data formats, streaming, power management, etc, etc. In all of these areas either they make sure that the OS they buy doesn't come with patent-encumbered solutions, or they have to design new solutions themselves. Both ways it is a technical/legal nightmare. They'll better team together around Google and buy together a pool of patents, then go after the bad guys using these patents. Buying WebOS might be a way to get a bunch of useful patents btw. As long as the law does not change, they have to play the patent game. Launching another OS would just be a diversion imho.
HTC makes Android, Windows and Brew phones. Why would this make them dump them all?
+1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
They miss the point of why they're being sued. It's not because Android may or may not infringe on patents. It's because they're a competitor in an extremely lucrative market, and they'll still be a competitor - and a target - regardless of what OS their phones use.
and seeing how netflix and skype went, i'll be the first one to buy a handset from HTC and Samsung before they dump android just to not have it supported by developers
There are several cool zombie like OS:es that is ripe for resurrection: AmigaOS, MorphOS, Plan 9 and Haiku. One could even put an OpenStep foundation on top of any of these or something more conventional OS like Linux or xBSD and tap some similarities with iOS.
- Henrik
- when the Shadows descend -
WebOS is one of those mobile OS's that reminds me of BeOS. The techies love it. But fails to get a strong customer base.
I think it was mostly due with Palms hacking WebOS to in essence Hack into iTunes to gets its media (for iPod Support) causing its main competitor Apple to keep changing their method to block WebOS, from accessing its system without Apples permission.
So Early Adopters would have shaky Music support where it is supported one day then the next it will stop then they will have 2 week later they will have it again then stop. Granted I don't approve of Apple locking down iTunes to only Apple devices, however Palm just ignoring Apples policies just because they don't like them isn't good enough, and ends up hurting their customers more then just saying we don't support iTunes but they these other popular services.
In the mean time while Palm is fighting it gave Android the time to perfect its system and get it out, without all the baggage that Palm has made for itself.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
Although.. I bought an HP TouchPad in the firesale intending to move it to Android from webOS, but actually it's a nice OS (although it has its limits). There's already an application library for it, not huge, but a good start. It would be a shame to see webOS vanish completely..
Never email donotemail@WeAreSpammers.com
Or following your own logic, Motorola is going to drop support for any non-Android phone any day now, which means it's a perfectly stable Android company.
That one is believable since Google is buying Motorola's phone division.
Why not just use FreeBSD with its 2 clause license?
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
Then they can use the freedom to not submit patches back and choose to implement non-GPL stuff if the GPL is too scary.
Having "their own OS" doesn't avoid the patent-lawsuit problem, but they are big enough to play the patent cross licensing game. Then they can "be the bully" and go after the patent-less.
Always want to do things on impulse.
A Phone and Android is not enough these days. In order to compete you need a network, an Application store and a stream of income that develops from that. Google sucks up all the added value from Android.
This makes sense. Android is almost too much of a commodity. It doesn't let them differentiate their products outside of hardware and that's not "sticky" enough. There is a constant stream of leap-frogging Android phone hardware. As a big Apple user that now has two firesale Touchpads I think this is smart. WebOS is sharp...really sharp. It's polished. The apps are good. You will now have a lot of new WebOS fans after the HP debacle...and it puts you in the game immediately where as other options require a lot more work to polish and deploy. After using my Touchpads (now that they are tweaked to be fast...) I'd consider an HTC phone running WebOS as my next phone...
And yet all of the carriers only offer replacement if a phone goes bad while under contract. Support? The only phones that even have any kind of actual tech support are Win7 versions as you can get an answer from MS, otherwise you might as well buy a plain feature phone instead of any type of smart phone since the carrier isn't going to offer more then replacement while it's under contract.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
HP-UX for smart phones!
So they don't realize that they have their position in the cellphone-market BECAUSE they use Android insted of IN SPITE of it?
Maybe they want WebOS because of it’s patents?
Maybe you noticed that there is a bit of a patent race between the Apple / Google etc. as they buy up Motorola etc. It does not do HTC any good to have hitched it’s company to Android and see Apple et. al. shut it down.
With WebOS in it’s back pocket, HTC can threaten to counter sue if anybody sues them.
One just have to love the ill defined patens being issued.
I switched to Android (HTC Touch Pro 2 to HTC Evo) last year because MS dropped WM6.5. I understand the need for differentiation from all the other Android phone mfgrs (Samsung, Motorola, LG, and others). I like Android a lot, so if HTC moves to yet another OS, I might take HTC off of my shopping list.
They talk about differentiation while most of their phones look the same, have similar specs and similar prices. HTC Sensation? Just like the HTC Desire HD
Wikipedia claims that the Sensation is a newer phone with a slightly faster CPU and more built-in flash memory than the Desire HD, and the Evo 3D is essentially a Sensation with an autostereoscopic display. Another issue is that some United States cellular carriers demand to have an exclusive phone with an exclusive name. Samsung skirts the carriers' demands in its ads by referring to its carrier-branded versions of the Galaxy S as "Samsung Captivate, a Galaxy S phone", or "Samsung Fascinate, a Galaxy S phone".
HTC is thinking with its Wang?
They've got an environment running on BREW [...] in the HTC Smart released last year. And what happened to the Smart? It sank without trace.
One big problem with BREW is that developing applications for it is a much bigger hassle than for Android.
It was small, efficient, object-oriented and had a very nice interface.
Last I heard, Taiwan's MITI had purchased it, but I've never heard of their doing anything w/ it, nor of anything of it save for Jerry Kaplan suing Microsoft a while back....
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
I don't really know, but does WebOS have to pay the Microsoft Patent tax ?
right? now that they're having a fire sale themselves, they seem like the perfect pairing with HTC.
Just like Microsoft has a monopoly on operating systems because it has all the apps. Android and IOS have a monopoly because they have all the apps.
I don't think developers will be interested in making versions of their software for WebOS. For this reason I don't see this changing ever. So in other words if they decide to buy this OS and decide to use it on their phone they WILL go belly up.
Seriously, HP, IBM, etc are simply gutting themselves because they have put idiotic MBAs in charge. No real engineers. They would be better off having engineers develop products and then hiring marketers who can sell things, rather than hiring worthless marketers who then grip that they can not sell what engineers produce.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
I actually think that IBM does have vision, and made the right move. The thing about IBM is that it does keep reinventing itself, and the PC was just a stage in its evolution.
HP now tries to mimic that, but it has no clue.
RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
I have worked for both companies. Believe me, IBM's Palmisano is running IBM into the ground. He is as short sighted as HP's Apotheker, but has has a head start.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
for fragmentation. ffs.
Does Motorola even HAVE any meaningful non-Android phones that aren't 1-cent throwaways for TracFone and the "Jitterbug" crowd? Google or not, Android is what saved Motorola from irrelevance at the high end of the market.
Google's ownership of Moto probably means they aren't going to START making Windows phones, but it's hard to pull out of a market you were never in to begin with. It would be kind of like accusing Nokia of abandoning Android if Microsoft buys them outright.
Why everybody insists on calling WebOS an operating system? I thought HP blew $1.2 bln to buy a JavaScript library (similar to YUI, JQuery, etc.). The underlying OS (Linux) exposed some API through that framework? -- oh my -- big deal.
could they avoid the microsoft fee for any sold android device if they use webos as an operation system with android compatibility? i got a touchpad and have to admit: webOS is really nice. the apps which exist are excellent.
The Party can't control the Apple App store and all the upgrade-lockdown technology without causing a big flap with Apple.
Android is too easily hackable and can be circumvented.
The solution is obviously a mobile OS owned, distributed and pushed by a Chinese company---whose employees have to do what the government says or they go to jail.
So if somebody in government insists on inserting spyware on certain (or all) suspicious people, they just tell HTC to do so and it does.
Not that I think it's that much different in the USA (if you control Windows Update, you can insert anything on anybody's PC, once you get the GUID), but there may be some (flimsy) legal protections for citizens when in-country.
So they don't realize that they have their position in the cellphone-market BECAUSE they use Android instead of IN SPITE of it?
That was the past. The present is that Google owns Motorola and will be competing with HTC.
Under those circumstances, why would you not want a possible escape hatch? Perhaps nothing will happen. But perhaps something will cause this to be a better idea than it seems at first...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
How about Meego? (snicker) Intel and Nokia seem to be abandoning it.
WebOS only needs correct positioning in the market and a new hot selling device (like the Palm Pre back then) with serious techno power under the hood. HTC has proven to be able to do both. Other than that, I'm glad to see the firesale of HP Veer units because in US at least they are all locked to AT&T, which means my hard work in developing the HP Veer Unlocker Software ( http://www.palmunlocker.com/ ) will hopefully pay off!
Maybe we could sell HTC Windows 8, Nobody else wants it. Maybe if we give them green stamps in addition they will buy it.