HP3000-L Archives

August 2000, Week 2

HP3000-L@RAVEN.UTC.EDU

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Subject:
From:
Gavin Scott <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Gavin Scott <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 14 Aug 2000 15:27:34 -0700
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Greg after Wirt:
> Wirt wrote:
>>      http://www.hp.com/ghp/ceo/speeches/reinvent.html
>>      http://www.hp.com/ghp/ceo/speeches/invent.html

> From Reinvent:
[...]
> - ... you may remember that Hewlett-Packard, in fact, invented the very
> first information appliance. It was called the handheld calculator.

I love the things that Carly says publicly.  The list of "garage/invent"
slogans is quite wonderful.

But I'm afraid that I must confuse the incoming class of 2004 by asking the
question:

   Where's the beef?

So far I have not seen any change in HP which, on the whole, still seems to
be more interested in short term profits and chasing other people's ideas of
the future than in INVENTing anything themselves.  The current state of
affairs with the 3000 being ignored as one of HP's great "inventions" is one
small example.

I'll give you another.

One area where I pay more than an average amount of attention to what HP is
doing (other than the 3000 world) is their handheld calculators.

Long ago I was a TI calculator user until I was shown the error of my ways
(and could afford to buy HP calculators :-) and have owned a number of HP
handheld devices over the years.

HP's calculators were always true "inventions", each pushing the state of
the art in to new territory.  You picked up an HP calculator and you knew
you had a quality piece of equipment in your hand.

About a year ago, HP introduced their first new calculator (from the
recently reformed calculator division now ACO, the Australian Calculator
Operation), the HP-49G.

The design and keyboard layout of this new calculator seemed a bit odd until
someone showed me a TI-89 calculator from Texas Instruments.  The HP's
keyboard was a direct copy of the TI.  Not just "inspired by" or "similar
to" but a direct copy of almost every key, shifted operation, and even the
graphical icons used.

Someone in marketing must have literally handed a TI-89 to an engineer and
said "Make us one of these".

In the first publicly available versions of the software for the HP-49G,
several of the new "TI" keys had yet to be assigned any function (I guess
they weren't yet able to think of uses for all the keys they took from TI).

To me this says that HP had decided that they were incapable of INVENTing
anything better than what the competition had, and that the only way they
could sell their product was by making it indistinguishable from the
competition's product.

A little bit more of Bill and Dave's Hewlett-Packard died the day the HP-49G
was released.

To steal a line from another industry's advertising:

   This is not your father's Hewlett-Packard.

And I think that's very sad indeed.

Of those reading this who work for HP I would ask that you go and re-read
Carly's speeches referenced above, and think more about "INVENTing" new
things, things that Bill and Dave would be proud to have their company
produce.  And if your management says "No, we don't have the time or money
to do that" then show them what Carly has written and ask them if indeed
there is any beef.

G.

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