QVC refunding $110.00 for early HP Touchpad buyers

The largest electronics retailer, QVC, is taking care of customers who purchased a HP Touchpad from them before HP cut the price by $100.00 last week.

In the below email to customers, the company is refunding $110.00 plus matching the price for the Touchpad:

Dear Valued Customer:

I’m writing with good news about your order for the HP TouchPad 32GB Wi-Fi Touchstone Dock & Case, item E167734 / E167900, which you purchased for $659.00.  The price is being reduced to $549.00, and we’re passing the savings on to you! 

A refund in the amount of $110.00 has been issued to your original method of payment for every HP TouchPad you purchased. 

For your convenience, you can always view the status of all your orders and returns by visiting QVC.com.  We’re also available to assist you in Customer Service at800.367.9444 between 7 am – 1am Eastern Time, seven days a week.

We look forward to serving you again soon! 

Best regards, 

Dan McDermott, Senior Vice President 
Customer Services


Sidestepping Apple: Companies rethink app strategies

(WIRED– We all knew that once Apple starting enforcing new rules for in-app purchases, it would change how media companies do business on the iPhone and iPad.

Now, we’re beginning to see just what that looks like for companies trying to avoid giving a 30% cut to Cupertino. Amazon, Kobo and Barnes & Noble all removed the stores from their iOS applications on Monday, as well as any hyperlinks to or mentions of their online stores.

Google Books — recently announced distribution and retail partner for the new multiplatform Harry Potter e-books – is simply gone from the App Store, without explanation from either Apple or Google, although possibly a revised app may be forthcoming.

Continue reading

HP announces Touchpad 4G

Have you been holding out on that new HP TouchPad, with the feeling that something new might be just around the bend? Well, here’s what you’ve been holding for: the TouchPad4G on AT&T’s HSPA+ network.

Officially branded as the HP TouchPad 4G this morning, the new TouchPad will be available at an undisclosed price at an undisclosed date sometime in the future on AT&T’s network. The webOS tablet will come with 32GB of storage (no mention of 16GB or 64GB) and a faster 1.5GHz processor (presumably an uprated version of the 1.2GHz Qualcomm APQ8060 currently found in the TouchPad).

As mentioned, pricing and release date aren’t yet available, but we expect (with no evidence, just intuition) that the price to fall right in line with the iPad 2, so right at or around $729.00. Availability was announced back in early June as “later this summer” and the latest leaked roadmap was looking at next month for a release.

Via: PreCentral.Net

Cross Posted From: Tablet Scoop Today.com

By Dan Uff Posted in HP

HP Fiddles while Apple Innovates

The paradox of Hewlett-Packard only gets more pronounced with each high-profile product announcement: its TouchPad tablet is the latest head-scratcher. Meanwhile, Apple continues to spit out one stunning product after another.

In practice, HP has kept the garage door locked all of these years.
(Credit: Hewlett-Packard)

HP’s paradox is that it sits in the cradle of innovation–Silicon Valley–but fails to innovate. And HP is the original Valley start-up, founded in a garage more than 70 years ago, long before Apple’s legendary start.

Fast forward to the reign of former CEO Carly Fiorina. She talked a lot about going back to the garage but never actually went back. And nothing in device-design innovation changed with her successor, Mark Hurd.

I’m hoping, as always, for change with the current CEO Leo Apotheker. But his focus is still the on the enterprise–which demands design stability–the antithesis of innovation. A profitable segment, yes, but not one that can create an iPod or even a MacBook Air.

And a recent statement by Apotheker doesn’t offer much hope. “If you use a state-of-the-art laptop it is as sleek, as slim as [an iPad],” he said at the D9 conference last month. Really? I have yet to see an HP laptop that comes near the iPad in thinness (0.34 inch) and portability (1.33 pounds). In fact, the only thing that gets close is another Apple product: the 11.6-inch MacBook Air.

He then added as a parenthetical: “There’s a whole new product refresh coming out.” Yeah, I’ve heard that one before. He’s either so disconnected from product design that he believes HP actually has a laptop that rivals the iPad, or he knows about some truly groundbreaking newfangled product in the pipeline. Should we give him the benefit of the doubt?

That brings us to the TouchPad. Probably the first high-profile product to emerge with his imprimatur. In a word, disappointment. I listened to HP’s Jon Rubinstein talk for most of an hour about the virtues of the TouchPad (before it was announced as a shipping product) at a Qualcomm conference in San Diego last month. And I stood with an HP product manager later in the day as he demonstrated the TouchPad (and got some hands-on time, albeit brief, with it, too).

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-13924_3-20078052-64/hp-fiddles-while-apple-innovates/#ixzz1RiiANQCi

 

By Dan Uff Posted in HP