HP Officially Out of TouchPads
First time accepted submitter AtomicAdam writes
"I guess all that waiting and hoping was in vain. HP just sent out an email officially claiming to be out of TouchPads. 'Dear Valued Customer: Making sure customers have a positive experience when they purchase our products is a priority for us. In some cases, limited inventory makes it challenging to fulfill all customer orders. As you signed up for updates on the HP TouchPad, we wanted you to know that we are officially out of stock. Some retailers will have some stock available, but our online inventory is depleted.'"
Apparently, I signed up to be notified if they ever released them for retail sale and got no updates, except for a "we're first offering them for sale (for a limited time) to employees" email. Nothing since.
They did not actually, they just wont sell them to you. That is unless you buy an hp computer bundle through best buy. http://www.google.com/m/url?ei=LWqrTvi6CZOMlgfMbA&q=http://www.slashgear.com/best-buy-offers-new-hp-touchpad-bundle-deal-28191812/&ved=0CCMQqQIwAw&usg=AFQjCNEJfEDLbDNEDHTspYRHuXTN1ylM9Q
AnimePapers.org: Anime Wallpapers Handled With Care
In the firesale, I ordered about a half dozen Touchpads from various websites, and the only one that ended up coming through was from HP Small/Medium Business.
I ordered on August 21st, and I received September 21st.
Does this count as irrefutable proof that $500 is more than most people are willing to spend for a tablet, but $100-200 is perfectly reasonable? Perhaps not irrefutable, but still, maybe some other tech companies will take notice.
Funny may not give karma, but +5 Informative never made anyone snort coffee out their nose.
I recieved the two I ordered.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
I had managed to get two orders for a 16gb model in on the Small/Medium Business site. One was before they said they were out of stock. The second one I placed after they had declared that stock was depleted. There was a link going around that let you add it to your cart even though the product page said "out of stock."
They sent an email not long after stating that my order would be cancelled due to being placed after they ran out. Then, a few weeks ago I got two emails saying my order would be shipped within two weeks, specifying two different order numbers.
Sure enough, this past week I got two 16gb Touchpads via Fedex. So, it wasn't just the employees that wiped out the supply, but all the past-posted orders as well.
I tried like hell to get in on the firesale. It didn't bother me that I didn't manage to get one, but the several rounds of "you're in, we've charged your card, your ship date is X... oops, psyche, no TP for you" pissed me right the hell off. Nonetheless, as a palm pre owner and a bit of a fanboy, I really wanted one. I finally caved and grabbed one off craigslist, unopened, for $200. For the hardware and compared to what else you can get out there, $200 is still a steal.
So now I have one, and of course I've got it dual-booting with CM7, but you know what? I still leave it in webOS most of the time. Aside from the glaring lack of an sftp client app for webOS, it does everything I want it to do. And it's slicker, more elegant, just hands-down nicer to use than either iOS or android (Ice Cream might make me re-evaluate, but as things stand). WebOS was the BeOS of our time, and I just hope it will live for at least a few more cycles on the hardware. Two hundred bucks *easily* well spent.
Yea I dont really understand it either, unless a few of them had families to give them out to, but this is slashdot the closest thing to a family most have around here is a porn site and a bag of cheetos... its technology, it aint going to get more expensive with time
I managed to get one from the university bookstore I work at in the first round of the firesale. But then an alum donated a bunch of Xooms for us EECS students... So mine is up for sale. Any takers???
My blood hurts...
Welll....The OS is fucking superior to iOS - it really is quite nice. It needs more polish, but the multi-tasking is damned nice. The card interface is brilliant and is more intuitive than iOS (full disclosure: I own an iPhone 4 as does my wife and I run OSX in virtualization on PC's on VMWare Workstation despite Apple's odd restrictions). Sure, there aren't 1000 fart apps for it (I found just 1) but as a content consumption and unified communications device it borders on excellent...and you get the ability to play Flash. Overclock the sucker (did I mention that HP embraces Home-brew?) and add some cool hacks and you have a bitchin' beast that as a bonus plays Angry Birds. I can read e-books, .pdfs, remotely connect to my PC and servers, edit MS Office docs...
I have access to an iPad and Playbook at work, as do my colleagues, And I've played with both over several weeks. Meh. 9 out of 39 of us bought TouchPads for what it can do, and for the potential to run Android in a dual-boot config. That was my primary reason for jumping on the low-cost 32Gb Touch pad - running Android...until I started using WebOS and dove deep into modding the device. Too bad HP will let it die a painful death. WebOS, we hardly knew ye...
Did anyone else besides this blogger of unknown repute receive this alleged e-mail notice? I didn't. I requested the same e-mail updates as he allegedly did, yet I've received nothing at all. The only explanation I can conjecture is that HP's SMTP servers are dragging the process out for who knows how many hours or days.
Their new business plan is to go back to what worked in the past, too bad times have changed.
I placed two orders. The first was using the cart trick when HP was saying that they were out of stock and was for 3 touchpads. The second was the next day just after HP had updated their SMB site to say that they were out of 16GB models but still had 32GB models and it was also for 3 touchpads.
The reason for the second order was just in case the first order was cancelled. At least with the second order I could argue that HP was advertising stock at the time I placed the order. I ended up getting all 6. All of them are spoken for as gifts for friends and family.
Personally, after using WebOS for the last 3 weeks, I prefer it over Apple's iOS. I have an iPad 2 from work which I have been using for the last 3 months. Of course, the big difference is the lack of apps for WebOS. If HP had followed their PC model and sold the Touchpad for just over cost, they would have had a good chance of competing with Apple. But HP doesn't seem to be able to get out of their own way these days.
Now I await the cyanogenmod version of Ice Cream Sandwich so that I can load my favorite apps. Until then, I will be using the Touchpad for email, web, and social media, which is 80% of my online activity from my couch.
The fuss is because it's a hundred dollar tablet that isn't four years old, not because it's actually anything special.
My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
No, but not making enough on the first production run, deliberatly running out and then ramping up production *is* a good way. It builds hype. People are natural followers - if they see a product is so hugely popular it's out of stock, they want it all the more. Then it's just a matter of working out the optimal time to feed this pent-up demand. Wait too long, and they'll go to your competitor.
I'm sorry, but this is just a plain ol' fashioned cluster fsck.
Buy WebOS from Palm. Get it to a point where its actually cool beans. Release a product that first users proclaim may in fact be an iPad killer. Kill the product and dump it nearly at cost. Discover that people are really interested in the product, and promises them you'll keep them in touch and that there will probably be enough to sell another round (first hinting that there may be as many as a million, and ultimately that there'll at least be 200,000.) Then after waiting months, being told "Tough noogies!", we sold them all to BEST BUY and other distributors. So you're not going to see these beauties without our strategic partner clipping you for fistful of Benjamins.
So Meg, I get it, HPs little serial brain fart left its partners out in the cold, holding their manly bits and looking really stupid. Embarrassing really. So your fist act as Honcho du Jour, was to get down on your knees and give them a big warm smooch. Make their owwy all better. The thing is, you did it on the backs of your customers. The people who actually thought something of HPs products and their commitment to customer satisfaction. So what we have now to show for our interest and patient waiting is an electronic nasty-gram of your middle finger, telling us once more that HP doesn't give a flying fsck at a rolling doughnut for it's customers. You know, a business does this enough, and after a little while, surprise, it doesn't have any customers.
So I say screw the Touchpad, You've "Lucyed" me one time too many, I don't wanna play football with you anymore. Meg has already indicated that she's killing WebOS, the Touchpad is a dead end, a lost cause, and Touchpad owners and users can go straight to heel, because the entire product line has no future. This has all been a exercise in brain damage and a company that has so lost its way that it's found new and creative ways to piss off its supply chain, its retailers, its customers and its strategic partners. Meg, sweetheart, I understand your hands are full and honestly I see how you got yourself wedged, So I'll cut you some slack, but if this is any hint of HPs future, I don't see a rosy outcome for you or HP.
No, I bought about 30 of the damn things and they arrived within 1 and 2 weeks. I don't and never have worked for HP. I guess you weren't in the know.
"That's right...I said it."
Actually, WebOS is something special, it was just too little, too late.
Good-bye
There, fixed it for you.
I got my UK TouchPad in the firesale (116 pounds for 32GB model - yes, rip-off Britain strikes again) and whilst webOS is OK, it's not as stunning as people make out. The card model isn't the greatest thing since sliced bread - your "flick to minimise" has to be precisely co-ordinated otherwise you end up having to use the bezel button instead (the number of times I've just scrolled instead of minimising is annoying). The lack of a close button on the windows mean two actions instead of one (flick+flick or bezel button+flick) to get finally close an app.
However, it's the lack of apps that's the real killer of WebOS - whilst software written for the various Pre mobile phone models had slowly increased, the ones that are TouchPad compatible (i.e. didn't run in a small Pre phone emulator) were building up even more slowly. So much so, there was an embarrassing trumpeting by HP recently that they'd hit 1,000 apps for the TouchPad, a mark that I suspect Android and iPad tablets exceeded within a week of their release (and that was a couple of years ago too!).
For example, I can't find a decent free fullscreen webOS chess or Sudoku for the TouchPad (they are either for the Palm Pre phone or cost money), whereas there are dozens of each on Android. It's why I'm now mostly using CyanogenMod 7 on my TouchPad - there's loads of apps on my Android TouchPad now don't have webOS equivalents (even with Preware installed, which I do have).
HP, AMD, and Nokia all seem to be suffering from the same illness. High CEO turnover with each CEO looking to make ends meet. If Ballmer gets fired, I'll expect MS to catch it and be in the tank in ten years. Not that I like Ballmer or that I think he's doing a good job. At least he's a long-term CEO that is keeping the giant profitable.
Put identity in the browser.
This whole scenario seems incredible. HP buys Palm, assets, people, hardware - then drops the hardware to build their own. Fine they are a hardware company- makes sense. Then they say they are going to roll out WebOS everywhere to interconnect printers, phone, tablets, PCs, etc. Then the announce WebOS is dead (except as an embedded OS), then announce they are getting out of the PC business altogether. The whole damn thing is madness.
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
One difference: if Ballmer is fired, he will be replaced by another long-time MS executive. IBM does the same sort of thing.
HP is different. HP hires outsiders from completely different sorts of businesses.