HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion

May 17th, 2008

Updated at 8:30 a.m. PDT with additional analyst comment.

Hewlett-Packard said Tuesday it will acquire computer services firm EDS for $25 per share, or $13.9 billion, in a deal intended to boost HP’s services revenue.

On Monday night, HP had confirmed that the two companies were in talks, following news reports earlier in the day.

The deal will create a computer services giant intended to rival IBM in the market for serving business customers.

HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion
Credit: HP Mark Hurd,
CEO, HP

HP said the deal, which has been unanimously approved by the HP and EDS boards of directors, will close in the second half of the year. HP expects that the addition of EDS will more than double HP’s services revenue of $16.6 billion in fiscal 2007. At the end of 2007, HP and EDS had a collective services revenue of more than $38 billion and 210,000 employees, doing business in more than 80 countries, HP said.

HP said it will establish a new business group, called EDS–an HP company, which will be headquartered at EDS’s existing executive offices in Plano, Texas.

EDS will continue to be led by EDS Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Ronald A. Rittenmeyer, who will join HP’s executive council and report to Mark Hurd, HP’s chairman and chief executive officer, the company said. All of HP’s existing technology services will remain under its TSG (Technology Services Group) wing reporting to its current director Ann Livermore, with the exception of outsourcing, which will now fall under Rittenmeyer’s purview at EDS.

This isn’t the first time HP has taken a crack at acquiring a major consulting firm. In 2000, HP was in talks to acquire PricewaterhouseCoopers. The controversial acquisition was the first big move by then-CEO Carly Fiorina. But a significant earnings shortfall in the fall of 2000, along with significant hand-wringing on Wall Street, prompted HP to drop the idea.

HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion

Hewlett-Packard included this graphic and the one below in a filing Tuesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

(Credit: HP)

IBM acquired PwC for $3.5 billion two years later, while HP took a dramatically different strategy and acquired PC maker Compaq. With EDS, HP now trails only IBM in the lucrative services sector.

“We’re running the playbook we know how to run very well,” Hurd told analysts during the conference call Tuesday morning. “We know how to get significant leverage out of our scale. We spent double-digit thousands of hours on the due diligence and planning. This thing (EDS) is very attractive. We didn’t bake in a lot of revenue synergies, but they are there.”

The two already share some of the same clients, but overlap is “few and far between,” Rittenmeyer said during a call with the media. He also hinted at job cuts on the EDS side. “We are continuing to streamline our workforce, and there are going to be some changes. We’ve already been doing that this year, and have more planned for this year.”

The EDS purchase is inconsistent with previous comments made by Hurd, who has said he planned to grow HP from within, in addition to some smaller acquisitions. HP Chief Technology Officer Shane Robison said in an interview that this doesn’t represent a shift in strategy and that HP will continue to invest organically.

HP to acquire EDS for $13.9 billion(Credit: HP)

The fact that HP’s chief agreed to such a large acquisition means he saw significant potential in improving EDS operationally, said Lindy Hanson, senior analyst with Technology Business Research, said in a research note.

“Hurd has a reputation for focusing on the ‘numbers’ in excessive detail, and TBR believes that the numbers of a combined HP/EDS have been crunched and show strong upside for operational improvement,” she wrote.

The consensus among industry observers is that the deal makes strategic sense for both companies, but particularly for HP.

HP “saw the light,” according to Bob Djurdjevic, an analyst with Annex Research. EDS already has an established business handling outsourcing contracts in the government and manufacturing sectors, areas in which HP could use the help, he said. “The additional revenues in HP’s services businesses is going to help them face serious challenges from IBM.”

But the sheer size of the deal is more than a bit daunting. The deal represents the combination of the largest number of people that the IT services sector has seen, Gartner analyst Ben Pring said, and HP faces serious challenges when it comes to integrating two vastly different companies. The track record of deals like this is “pretty spotty,” Pring said, and IBM’s purchase of PwC demonstrated that the transition can be tough.

“There was a lot of fallout from that,” he said. “People who liked the independence they had within PwC found that they didn’t care for being part of a huge conglomerate like IBM. Many people won’t care to be part of HP; the two cultures are very, very different.”

HP’s relatively relaxed, entrepreneurial Silicon Valley culture differs vastly from EDS’s constrained, suit-and-tie-wearing corporate environment.

“There’s bound to be a lot of tension and conflict” in attempting to mix the two, Pring said.

HP’s Robison downplayed that notion and affirmed that he thought the two would be a good fit, saying, “They’re both services cultures, and both understand services cultures.”

He also brushed aside any concerns that a much larger services organization would be unable to meet the needs of smaller companies and added that a bigger scale operation is actually necessary to reach those small customers.

“Not every deal has to be a mega-deal,” Robison said. “This is about reaching more of the market.”

HP, which was originally due to report its second-quarter earnings Thursday, announced preliminary results Tuesday. Revenue earned was $28.3 billion, or GAAP diluted earnings per share of 80 cents. That compares with $25.5 billion in the same quarter a year ago, or GAAP diluted earnings per share of 65 cents.

It also slightly raised its outlook for the year, estimating total revenue of $114.2 billion to $114.4 billion, up from previous high estimates of $114 billion.

Shares of HP fell 6 percent in morning trading, while EDS’s stock was up 1.5 percent.

CNET News.com’s Mike Ricciuti contributed to this report.

Source: news.com


Petite panda cell phone charm

May 17th, 2008

Petite panda cell phone charm

Have you ever seen something that was just so darn cute that it brought tears to your eyes? I know it was probably something legitimately touching and precious like a baby consoling a grandparent or a puppy curled up next to a kitten that had you reaching for the tissues, but for me, what pulls at my heart strings are these adorable, adorable, adorablepetite panda cell phone charms.

Yes, you read that right. A photo of a dozen variously posed 1.18? to 1.57? panda bear charms makes my eyes well up. Whether it’s the fact that each one has a ring bolted into the top of its head so that it can dangle oh-so-callously from a cell phone, the powerlessness I feel in not being able to select which panda to save (Strapya World chooses one at random), or that the $3.11 handset accessories are currently sold out is to blame for the waterworks is something only my therapist can discover.

Popularity: 12% [?]

Source: gadgetsnews.info


Vidnik: Video Diaries In A Snap

May 17th, 2008

Vidnik: Video Diaries In A Snap

Google has a new app called Vidnik. It allows you to use your Macs built-in video camera to record videos and upload it to your YouTube account in a snap.

Vidnik is currently at version 0.13.0. I downloaded and tried it and it was fairly easy to use. It still needs a lot of polish. It doesn’t respond as quickly as it should.

This app is great for making quick videos for your blog. Diaries perhaps? Or just simply saying hello to friends. Download it here and give it a go.

Source: gadgetsnews.info


Nokia N95 Smartphone

May 17th, 2008

Nokia N95 Smartphone

The N95 is a phone that’s everything you want it to be. Although , more than anything else, it’s a smartphone that’s smarter than the rest. While operating on a Symbian operating system, this smartphone has exclusive and unique features that defy the mobile world. Swiftly store all types of media on the 160 MB built in memory. The display is a 24-bit Color TFT LCD that outputs 16.7M brilliant colors. The easy to use keyboard lets you send text messages with ease. Bluetooth Wireless Technology lets you send and receive media through a wireless connection to and from friends and family. You can even surf the world wide web with a simple Wi-Fi connection. Special features include GSM, Cellular Phone, MPEG-4 Video Player and EDGE. Expand your memory by inserting a MicroSD card into the expansion slot. The cell phone has virtually universal bands including GSM 850, GSM 900, GSM 1800, GSM 1900, EGSM 900, WCDMA and HSDPA.

The cell phones also has cool features including MMS, SMS, Hands Free Options and Speed Dial Buttons. The camera has a built in music player to play all your MP3 and WMA files. The build in digital camera has amazing quality. It has a resolution of 5 Megapixels, which is awesome for a camera phone, and an unbelievable 10x Digital Zoom. Video Capture Capability allows you to take cool videos while on the go. Wireless capabilities include WLAN 802.11b, WLAN 802.11g and Bluetooth. The Proprietary Li-Ion battery lasts for 4 Hours when fully charged. This phone has a height of 4 inches and a weight of 4.23 oz. From a Gadget Addicts perspective, this new phone has outstanding capabilities, that any multitasking person could ask for. Experience a gadget with a massive amount of features including Carl Zeiss optics and multimedia computing.

Source: gadgetaddict.com


Yahoo acquisition to aid Apple searches

May 17th, 2008

Yahoo acquisition to aid Apple searchesInquisitor augments Safari by autocompleting search queries and showing results.

(Credit: Yahoo)

Yahoo has acquired Inquisitor in a move to improve how search results appear on Apple computers.

The Safari browser plug-in offers autocompletion of search queries and shows a pane with search results as users type queries. The plug-in, now in version 3, is a free download.

Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, but Inquisitor founder and developer David Watanabe will continue to work with Yahoo on the software.

“I look forward to assisting Yahoo in refining and extending the Inquisitor user experience beyond where it is today.,” Watanabe said on his blog.

“David and our team of Macphiles will continue to innovate on both form and function for Inquisitor,” Ariel Seidman, director of search product management for Yahoo, wrote in Yahoo’s blog posting.

Source: news.com


Musician sees irony in industry ‘takedown’ letter

May 11th, 2008

Musician sees irony in industry 'takedown' letter

Former Gang of Four bassist Dave Allen at the MusicTech Summit

(Credit: Greg Sandoval)

SAN FRANCISCO–Apparently nobody–not even an artist–gets a pass from the music industry when it comes to copyright laws.

After unwittingly posting an unauthorized music file on his blog, Dave Allen, former bassist for Gang of Four, said he had received a cease-and-desist letter from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), the group that represents the music industry worldwide.

“Talk about your irony of ironies,” Allen said after participating in a panel discussion at the MusicTech Summit held here on Thursday. “But I understood completely. I was wrong. I removed the music.”

Allen, a founding member of the post-punk British band, best known for the hit song I Love a Man in Uniform, said he believed that whomever sent him an unreleased copy of a song from the group Portishead had permission to do so. He said plenty of music acts send him their songs to post on his blog, Pampelmoose.com.

But not long after posting the song on his blog, Allen received a very long but “polite letter” from the IFPI telling him he was in violation of copyright law.

“I sent a message back apologizing,” Allen said. “What I learned from this is that I have to double my efforts to find out where files come from.”

Allen also said that while he never meant to pirate Portishead’s music, he was still alarmed when he received the letter. “I was chilled…they are much bigger than me and could shut me down,” he told the crowd.

Years ago, Allen used to say that he thought music should be given away. He has altered his stance since then.

“I don’t want to take money away from artists,” Allen said. “They deserve to get paid. We need some laws to protect musicians. Some copyright law is useful as long as it’s not heavy-handed law. We have to find cool ways to allow fans to take their music where they want, make it available to them and at the same time protect the artist.”

Source: news.com


SIM Recovery Pro helps restore lost SIM data

May 8th, 2008

SIM Recovery Pro helps restore lost SIM data

To erase data is human. And to want it restored is even more human. The SIM Recovery Pro apparently understands this “more human” need and helps you get back all those phone numbers or text messages that you deleted.

This SIM card reader can retrieve lost SMSes and phonebook entries in “minutes”. It can also be used to program your SIM to allow fixed calls, to backup/edit the phonebook, and to print out SIM card information. All this without any effort being needed on that common headache called installation procedure, or so the product specs claim. Pretty useful if you habitually delete cellphone data. Only, look forward to possible surprises with this device as the specifications are vague and mention no specific figures in terms of performance. And to part with $110 if you must.

Via The Red Ferret Journal.

Source: gadgetsnews.info


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