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HP Businesses Printer United States

HP Names Head of Printer Division As New CEO (pplware.sapo.pt) 27

Longtime HP veteran Enrique Lores, who runs the $20 billion printer business, is succeeding Dion Weisler effective November 1. Weisler, who was named CEO in late 2014 after the computing behemoth was split into two companies, is returning to Australia for a "family health matter." He will remain on the company's board. MarketWatch reports: Lores, a native of Spain who started his 30-year career as an intern, vowed to "simplify" and "evolve" the company's business model during a conference call with analysts following the earnings release. The executive change comes amid wrenching changes -- and turmoil -- in the PC market, raising the question of where the market is headed for the rest of the year.
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HP Names Head of Printer Division As New CEO

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  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Thursday August 22, 2019 @08:41PM (#59114590)

    If he's anything like the head of my printer, he'll last 50 pages in full color, then he'll quit working despite being still half full.

  • HP computers will now require a module that contains "computing water." This special innovative water will enable new synergistic computing techniques. The water will last an amazing 24 hours and only cost $20 to refill.
    • low cost equivalent: get some car 'blinker fluid'. its the same thing.

      • The market for that stuff is minimal where I live; people try very hard to conserve it.
      • Yeah, but the water cartridge has a DRM chip, and they'll sue you under the DMCA if you flash it to accept Walmart blinker fluid instead of Genuine HP(r) ComputingWater++(tm).

    • This would require user-replaceable batteries, which would probably be a non-starter; but if you wanted to sell consumable computer modules you could take advantage of the fact that lithium primary cells are substantially more energy dense than their rechargeable counterparts; and build around those as cartridges.

      You'd get to advertise fantastic battery life and no pesky power bricks; and sell expensive consumables. Innovation!
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • In high school we had an HP1000 minicomputer for awhile. It was already obsolete in 1976. The time-sharing system we used ran on an HP.

    • Their laser printers are great, but I made the mistake of buying one of their ink jet printers. If any of the four ink cartridges are low, it won't allow you to print B/W.

  • Who knew. You learn something every day. Next your going to tell me that Xerox used to make photocopiers.
    • Xerox made the Xerox 820 personal computer. It was a single-board system that sported a Z-80 chip. It was based on Ferguson's Bigboard [wikipedia.org]. I still have a Bigboard, but nothing connected to it.

  • How did HP manage to stay in business when Sun couldn't manage it? HP is amazingly incompetent. They must do something right, but I have no idea what.
  • In my mind HP (okay, Hewlett-Packard) was the maker of some of the best lab and test gear there was. Today it's just two letters in common with a company that makes cheap consumer garbage. Other than a label there really isn't any difference between HP products now and whatever you can get at Chairman Mao's Dollarama.
  • After all, the printing division is the only thing making relatively functional products at that company.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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