Jon Rubinstein, Senior VP and GM of HP's Palm Global Business Unit, has written a letter of encouragement to his employees, likening the HP TouchPad's reviews to early reviews of Mac OS X.
PreCentral was able to obtain a copy of the email which you can read below...
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Team,
Today we bring the HP TouchPad and webOS 3.0 to the world. The HP team has achieved something extraordinary especially when you consider that its been just one year since our work on the TouchPad began in earnest. Today also marks the start of a new era for HP as our vision for connected mobility begins to take form - an ecosystem of services, applications and devices connected seamlessly by webOS.
If youve seen the recent TouchPad reviews you know that the industry understands HPs vision and sees the same potential in webOS as we do. David Pogue from the New York Times says there are signs of greatness here. (Ive included links to Davids review and others below.) Youve also seen that reviewers rightly note things we need to improve about the webOS experience. The good news is that most of the issues they cite are already known to us and will be addressed in short order by over-the-air software and app catalog updates. We still have work to do to make webOS the platform we know it can be, but remember ..its a marathon, not a sprint.
In that spirit, Richard Kerris, head of worldwide developer relations for webOS, reminded me yesterday of the first reviews for a product introduced a little over ten years ago:
"...overall the software is sluggish"
"...there are no quality apps to use, so it wont last"
"...it's just not making sense...."
Its hard to believe these statements described MacOS X - a platform that would go on to change the landscape of Silicon Valley in ways that no one could have imagined.
The similarities to our situation are obvious, but theres also a big difference. Like David Pogue, our audiences get that webOS has the potential for greatness. And like me, they know that your hard work and passion, and the power of HPs commitment to webOS, will turn that potential into the real thing.
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Read More [via Earl]
PreCentral was able to obtain a copy of the email which you can read below...
-----
Team,
Today we bring the HP TouchPad and webOS 3.0 to the world. The HP team has achieved something extraordinary especially when you consider that its been just one year since our work on the TouchPad began in earnest. Today also marks the start of a new era for HP as our vision for connected mobility begins to take form - an ecosystem of services, applications and devices connected seamlessly by webOS.
If youve seen the recent TouchPad reviews you know that the industry understands HPs vision and sees the same potential in webOS as we do. David Pogue from the New York Times says there are signs of greatness here. (Ive included links to Davids review and others below.) Youve also seen that reviewers rightly note things we need to improve about the webOS experience. The good news is that most of the issues they cite are already known to us and will be addressed in short order by over-the-air software and app catalog updates. We still have work to do to make webOS the platform we know it can be, but remember ..its a marathon, not a sprint.
In that spirit, Richard Kerris, head of worldwide developer relations for webOS, reminded me yesterday of the first reviews for a product introduced a little over ten years ago:
"...overall the software is sluggish"
"...there are no quality apps to use, so it wont last"
"...it's just not making sense...."
Its hard to believe these statements described MacOS X - a platform that would go on to change the landscape of Silicon Valley in ways that no one could have imagined.
The similarities to our situation are obvious, but theres also a big difference. Like David Pogue, our audiences get that webOS has the potential for greatness. And like me, they know that your hard work and passion, and the power of HPs commitment to webOS, will turn that potential into the real thing.
-----
Read More [via Earl]