HPQ
Poor corporate governance and questionable accounting practices.
That's what these 10 big companies have in common, according to a list compiled for us by GovernanceMetric's International, an independent research firm that analyzes business risk... Read the rest of this entry »
Hewlett-Packard has given up trying to make any money from the WebOS software it gained in its 2009 acquisition of Palm, and instead will release the source code under an open source license, in hopes that a broader community of developers will find ... Read the rest of this entry »
Hewlett-Packard has given up trying to make any money from the WebOS software it gained in its 2009 acquisition of Palm, and instead will release the source code under an open source license, in hopes that a broader community of developers will find ... Read the rest of this entry »
It’s that time of year again, when proxies are released and many business publications run lists of the highest paid CEOs at America’s large public companies. The compensation figures are extraordinarily high, sometimes ranging into the t... Read the rest of this entry »
HP has made it official: Former eBay CEO Meg Whitman is now the new CEO of HP.
Below is the press release, but you're better off reading our coverage:
5 Things Meg Whitman Wants You To Forget
Silicon Valley Howls With Laughter At Thought Of Meg Wh... Read the rest of this entry »
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Although I think pretty much anyone who could have qualified for a Countrywide no document, no income loan in 2005 could do a better job running HP(HPQ) than Leo Apotheker, there are five important things HP should remember ab... Read the rest of this entry »
HP is killing its tablet business, it just announced in a press release (below).
However, HP will keep the WebOS business. It's just shutting down WebOS hardware.
That means no more TouchPad and no more Pre phones.
However, HP says it's open to optio... Read the rest of this entry »
We all remember when Cisco (CSCO), which reports its fourth-quarter results Wednesday at the bell, was once the biggest hitter in Silicon Valley.
In March 2000, at the peak of the dot-com boom, Cisco's market cap reached a whopping $555.4 billion, wh... Read the rest of this entry »