webOS' potential: A headache for iOS, Android?

By | December 9, 2011, 11:19am PST

Summary: HP is to release webOS to the open source community. What potentially does the release of another free mobile operating system have on the market?

Perhaps bowing under pressure from the smartphone and tablet community, HP is to make its mobile operating system webOS open source.

Those that have been wary about working with the operating system while HP owned it can now jump at the chance to develop and improve the software; with a likely positive reception from the open-source community.

This release potentially means that there will be more competition for Android-based models in the smartphone and tablet market.


(Source: Flickr)

If you have become frustrated with Android and are no Apple fan, then the webOS platform may end up becoming a major competitor in the smartphone and tablet market.

The debate over webOS and its hindered release to open source communities has been in contention for some time, with the TouchPad’s fate still fresh in the minds of both HP and its competition.

By fully controlling the webOS platform, the fate of the TouchPad cannot be blamed on anyone but HP. Any software issues that resulted in slow processing speed or software that hindered the TouchPad’s maximum performance levels was always going to result in hacks, or simply boycott of the product altogether by end-user consumers.

With the opening up of webOS, consumers won’t necessarily have to resort to hacking to improve their product’s performance. It is no longer one secretive contracted group of developers who are responsible for product flaws. Instead, community developers will now be able to improve the software and ensure that it can grow.

It doesn’t make sense from a business perspective to keep omnipotent control over such a platform. By hindering the means of improvement by eager developers, you cause consumers to shy away from adopting the platform entirely — leaving TouchPads on the shelves to gather dust, where they could have been growing into a heavyweight competitor of Apple and Android models.

If a product does not work in the manner it’s been advertised as on the box, then fix the problem. In time, it may become a popular alternative to other options in the marketplace.

Perhaps the TouchPad could have enjoyed a more positive better fate.

This is the best move possible to keep webOS alive. Rather than licensing it off to yet another company, or selling it off for patent profits, HP is now going to allow developers the chance to extend and grow the platform to its full potential.

This is likely to gain a huge amount of support from the open-source community. More than that, it will keep the platform alive, with the HP brand remembered by it.

However, without some serious hardware sponsor backing, we have to consider that it may not in fact become a major competitive force in the market.

Perhaps HP has moved a little too late.

Nevertheless, well done, HP. License and market it correctly. Maybe then, consumers that are fed up with iProducts or their Android models may forgive you for earlier transgressions and adopt the webOS for themselves.

Related:

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

London-based medical anthropologist Charlie Osborne is a journalist, graphic designer and former teacher.

Disclosure

Charlie Osborne

I have no current affiliations or relationships that are worth noting.

Biography

Charlie Osborne

Charlie Osborne, Medical Anthropologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, graphic designer and former teacher.

After studying Anthropology at university, she spent several years travelling and working across Europe and the Middle East, living for periods of time in Italy and Spain. She has been involved in the running of several businesses ranging from University media and events to b2b sales, and works currently as a freelance website designer and mobile development specialist.

She has particular interests in social media, intellectual property law, data protection and online hacker organisations.

7
Comments

Join the conversation!

Just In

RE: webOS' potential: A headache for iOS, Android?
Peter Perry 10th Dec
WebOS, to me, is a lot like BeOS in that, it is a very cool product but opening up now is probably too little too late as it will likely waste a way in relative obscurity with HP finally ditching the idea 2 years from now.

Lets face it, the Only OS that has a shot against Android is iOS but they've shown, meaning Apple, a propensity to Panic when they fall behind and the likely will not recover. iOS will remain where they are at 28% for another year and will likely start to decline after that as Android moves towards 80% Market Share in 2013.
Hardware support is going to be an essential part of the equation; for any new tablet or mobile device there has to be somebody behind the scenes making WebOS work on the platform. If it is too costly or has too many quality issues, it will not take off. There is already a knowledge base for Android across many different components, so WebOS needs to take off fast to catch up.
@terry flores If OEMs were using vanilla versions of Android, that annoying sluggishness would be very visible to the fandroids with slow brains. Also, if you think that Android's unrecoverable crashes is bad today ..... with generic "hacked" drivers it would be worst.

An example, Linux before the video card companies (ie: nVidia and AMD/ATI) began releasing Linux drivers .... and for many models, it still sucks.
@wackoae Man you're full of it! Android has nothing to do with the Drivers! Google's Android is Vanilla and the damn phones that run it are fast and smooth! It's only ignorant people who make such a statement!

Here's more to shoot your theory down! Cyanogen Mod is compiled from Source and every device it runs on is smooth and fast! It has actually added a few features (Apps not changing the OS itself) which should make it slower by your thinking and yet it doesn't! So, go Troll somewhere else!
0 Votes
+ -
This might actually motivate Android vendors to get updates and bug fixes out faster.
0 Votes
+ -
Update
Mr_Tech 9th Dec
http://www.theverge.com/2011/12/9/2624209/meg-whitman-marc-andreessen-web-os-open-source-interview "Meg Whitman and Marc Andreessen on webOS: 'We will use webOS in new hardware... in tablets'"
WebOS, to me, is a lot like BeOS in that, it is a very cool product but opening up now is probably too little too late as it will likely waste a way in relative obscurity with HP finally ditching the idea 2 years from now.

Lets face it, the Only OS that has a shot against Android is iOS but they've shown, meaning Apple, a propensity to Panic when they fall behind and the likely will not recover. iOS will remain where they are at 28% for another year and will likely start to decline after that as Android moves towards 80% Market Share in 2013.
WebOS, to me, is a lot like BeOS in that, it is a very cool product but opening up now is probably too little too late as it will likely waste a way in relative obscurity with HP finally ditching the idea 2 years from now.

Lets face it, the Only OS that has a shot against Android is iOS but they've shown, meaning Apple, a propensity to Panic when they fall behind and the likely will not recover. iOS will remain where they are at 28% for another year and will likely start to decline after that as Android moves towards 80% Market Share in 2013.

Join the conversation!

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix