Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Wanna Boost Your Wireless Network by… 1.5 Miles?

Wanna Boost Your Wireless Network by… 1.5 Miles?

O, first world problems! Of all your dreadful variants, the Wi-Fi Dead Zone has to be among the worst—how am I going to finish this Netflix stream now? If only my wireless network stretched for milesIt can.
Or at least Amped Wireless says it can, with their new SR600EX Pro Smart Repeater, boasting a 600mW they say pushes your range up by 1.5 miles. That's almost 8,000 feet. So, yeah, you should be able to hit that corner of the kitchen that's usually down to one bar.
But, more importantly, the Amped repeater could turn your entire neighborhood into a wireless hotspot. Think about it: stick the repeater in your apartment. If it works as advertised (and if we haven't been able to check yet, mind you), you'll now have sweet, golden radio spectrum dripping down you chin all over the place. At the park. Outside. On the sidewalk. In your favorite cafes and bars. You can get work done in a whole new slew of places with the same security you'd have at home. Not bad at all for $180.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Logitech’s Harmony Link: Tablets and Smartphones Get Full Control Over Home Theaters

Logitech understands that in the age of the of wi-fi and touchscreens, remote controls are heading the way of the Dodo. TheHarmony Link is their attempt to bridge the gap between traditional IR components and the smart devices in our hands.

The $100 Harmony Link is not unlike thePeel iPhone remote that came out earlier this year. At its core, the Harmony Linki is a hub that works as a middle man between your Android/iOS device and your TV/stereo/Blu-ray player. The Harmony Link takes the wi-fi signal from its control app and turns it into an beam that it blasts at the component you're attempting to control.

When I saw a demo of the Link in action, it worked pretty well. Placed on a shelf below the TV and next to the components, the multi-directional IR blaster built inside the hub could target and control components no problem. Logitech still included jacks for the more traditional single device blaster should there be any control issues.

As for the app, Logitech, like Peel, is moving away from channel surfing using up/down controls or program guides. Instead, they've built an app centered around visuals that emphasizes what's on TV right now. That's not to say you can't find your way to channels using more traditional methods, but it's not the focus here.

There are already some devices (Apple TV, Google TV, Roku) that use smartphones and tablets to communicate directly with a device over wi-fi. The Harmony Link is a glimpse at the future when all devices will function as such. Even if the Harmony Link didn't seem quite as snappy as just pointing an orthodox remote at a device, it definitely proves there are better ways to control your television than what you're doing now. [Logitech]

Logitech's Harmony Link: Tablets and Smartphones Get Full Control Over Home Theaters

Thursday, September 15, 2011

How to dual boot Windows 8 Developer Preview with Windows 7


Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater

ROUTERBY KEVIN PURDY JUN 15, 2010 9:00 AM

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterIf you're upgrading to a faster, stronger wireless router, don't chuck your older Wi-Fi box. With the magic of DD-WRT, you can turn your older wireless router into a range-expanding Wi-Fi repeater to cover everywhere you need a connection.

The advent of wireless home networks grew slowly in the past decade, but reached the point at which nearly every home with a high-speed connection had a wireless router that shared Wi-Fi connections throughout the home. Now Wireless N has become the standard at electronics retailers, promising faster connectivity with your wireless devices, faster transfer and streaming speeds between devices, and better connectivity. So what's to be done with your home's first wireless router?

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterOur suggestion is to install the open-sourceDD-WRT firmware on your router and turn it into a repeater for your main router, expanding your Wi-Fi signal to reach every nook and cranny of your house, and even into your backyard or garage, if needed. You'll be able to use the same password and security scheme, you won't need anything except a power outlet for the repeater when you're done, and most of your devices will automatically switch between the two signals when needed.

We've previously run down how to install DD-WRT on a Linksys router to give it many, many more features, including the repeater function we'll cover here. If you've already installed DD-WRT, then, skip to the section on repeater configuration. One notable difference in this guide, too, is that I'm installing a custom build of DD-WRT, the "micro" flavor, on a Linksys WRT54G ver. 6, or "version 6." Adam wrote his original guide in 2006, with a fully-DD-WRT-compatible Linksys WRT54GL router, and at that point, those who picked up a blue Linksys box without knowing about open-source firmware were pretty much stuck. Now there's a huge array of supported devices, and even my sadly restricted Linksys can run a Micro build, and Micro now includes a repeater function.

Update: A Note on Speed

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterSome intrepid bandwidth watchers, Will Smith among them, have pointed out that their own experiments with repeating signals has left them with slower connections. To be honest, I was using the repeater mostly for Google Reader in bed, and browsing and web working from outside the house, so I hadn't seen a noticeable drop in speed. A few tests atSpeedTest.net tell the tale. Pictured at left here is the result from my main router, a Buffalo model with Wireless N (detailed here), connecting from my upstairs office to the downstairs living room, then Buffalo, NY to Toronto, ON.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterThis result is through the modified Linksys WRT54G ver. 6 router about 10 feet away, connected as a repeater to the Buffalo router downstairs, and then tested again through Toronto. There is, as you can see, a download speed difference, and if I'd been using my Wireless N modem, it might be even more severe. So take a repeater for what it is—a slight trade-off in speed for a greater reach, with your mileage varying based on your hardware and connection. You might also note, though, that using SpeedTest's Android app, I actually received better download speeds from my office through the repeater than through the main router—for a smaller antenna, perhaps, connectivity can sometimes win over latency concerns.

What You'll Need

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater
Compatible router: Grab that old-but-still-works router and flip it over. Get the model number off the label, and write down the MAC address, while you're at it—the locations for both, on a standard Linksys "blue box," are pictured above. Type the first few characters of your model number into DD-WRT's router database, and look for your model to pop up. If you get any kind of green "Yes" listed with your model, you're in the clear—even the most pared-down DD-WRT build, micro, supports the repeater function.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterFirmware files for your router: In that same router database, click on the line that relates to your router model, then grab all the files listed there. You may not end up using all of them, but once you've taken your router offline, even if it's not your main router, you'll want to have all your files available offline.

Print-out of your instructions: There's a good chance, if you've got a fairly popular router, that you'll have access to specific router model instructions on the DD-WRT wiki. You'll usually see a link on the same page as your firmware files; if not, go ahead and search the wiki. If you don't have a printer, or hate wasting paper, use a print-to-PDF tool like doPDF or the Nitro PDF Reader for Windows, or the built-in PDF functions in Mac or Linux. The reason, again, is that you want to be prepared in case you lose internet connectivity on one or more routers during the flash process.

Ethernet cable & computer with Ethernet port: Enough cable to comfortably reach from your computer to the router you're working on, and a computer without any networking problems that you know of.

A pen and paper: The paper for notes, and the pen for both writing and pressing and holding down the reset button on your router.

At least an hour's time, and patience: Instructions for most routers are laid out in step-by-step detail, with very specific instructions. Even so, you do not want to rush things, or load the wrong file at the wrong time. Doing so opens the potential for a "bricked" router, one that doesn't work and can't be accessed or set back to its default, factory-fresh state. That's not going to happen to the patient, cautious firmware flasher, though.

Get Started

As stated above, different routers will take different paths to installing DD-WRT. There are some common procedures, and a general path, to getting it installed, though, so you can read along as I follow the DD-WRT Wiki's instructions for a WRT54G version 6 installation.

Do a hard (30/30/30) reset on your router: A "hard" reset, or a "30/30/30," means locating the reset notch on the back of your router, then inserting a pen and holding it there for a total of 90 seconds—30 seconds at first with the power on, then yank the power cord and wait another 30, then plug the power cord back in and wait 30 seconds, all while still holding the pen. It seems a bit excessive, but trust me—I've had friends with electronic engineering skills explain just how finicky, and sometimes random, physical memory chips like those in routers can be at holding their settings or otherwise not completely blanking out.

Set a static IP address on your computer: Most DD-WRT guides want you to set your computer's IP address, the one it draws from your router, to 192.168.1.7, and set a subnet mask to 255.255.255.0. How do you do this in your computer, without the router being accessible?

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterHead to Windows' Network and Sharing Center, usually by right-clicking on your network connection icon in the system tray, or heading there through the Control Panel. In the left-hand panel, click "Change adapter settings," then right-click on your "Local Area Connection" offering and select Properties. Under the Network tab, select the "Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4)" and hit the Properties button. Now in the General tab, change the first radio switch button to "Use the following IP address:", then enter 192.168.1.7 in the IP Address field, and 255.255.255.0 should fill itself in under "Subnet mask." Make sure you've got the IP entered correctly—Windows can skip the "7" part if there's only a single digit in the third section—and hit OK when you're done.

Firmware Installation

Now we're gonna get serious. Connect the Ethernet cable between your computer and the router—be sure to insert the cable into one of the numbered ports, not the port labeled "Internet" that's slightly distanced from the others. Turn off any wireless connection to your main router, unplug any broadband cellular modems, and so forth.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterIn the case of my WRT54G ver. 6, I had to create a customized flashing image for my router, with a designated MAC address written in. The MAC address is a supposedly unique identifier given to all computer hardware that can access the internet, one that allows networks to allow and block hardware based on this address. Your internet provider and the the cable modem they provided also tracks the MAC address of your router, and can deny service if a different router than the one the modem is used to servicing suddenly appears. So I followed the instructions for downloading GV5Flash.zip, unpacking its contents, then running the vximgtoolgui application and filling in the MAC address I wrote down from underneath my router, and pointing the app at a place to drop the resulting .bin file.

Now you're going to pull off one of those "hard," or 30/30/30 power cycles—hold down reset for 30 seconds plugged in, 30 unplugged, then 30 seconds again plugged in. When you're done, wait a few seconds, open your browser (making sure your computer's still connected by cable), point it to http://192.168.1.1, and you should get a prompt for a username and password. The default for my router in this mode is "root/admin"—yours can likely be found atRouterPasswords.com, or in your own DD-WRT instructions. After entering that combo, you should see the default router screen. A Linksys default usually looks like this:

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater

In most cases, you're next going to head to the Administration section (circled in the pic), then click the Firmware Upgrade sub-section. It's usually a simple affair: a Browse button to find the file you want to upload, and an OK/Apply button to set it in motion. From here on out, unless you have my same exact router, you'll possibly have a different set of one or two files to upload, in a very particular order—follow your own DD-WRT customized instructions. In general, though, you'll be doing a procedure along these lines:

  • Uploading a "prep" file that gets your router ready for a new firmware.
  • Waiting a solid five minutes—no cheating.
  • "Power cycle" the router (a simple unplug, 30-second wait, then re-plug).
  • Re-connect to 192.168.1.1, see the "Management Mode" window, then upload your (possibly customized) specific DD-WRT image and hit Apply.
  • Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterAfter seeing this nice little "Upgrade Success" message, wait another full, honest five minutes.

  • Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater
  • Open a TFTP program, usually provided among your DD-WRT files, and point it at 192.168.1.1 (your router). Select your specific DD-WRT firmware (a micro build, in my case), then set the retries to 99—But! Before hitting "Upgrade," power cycle your router, wait a few seconds after re-powering, then go for it. When your TFTP app has a green light and success message, wait another fullfive minutes, then come on back.
  • Undo the static IP setup you put in place on your computer from the Network and Sharing settings. Unplug and re-plug your cable, then open a browser. If you can connect to 192.168.1.1 on your computer browser and see a setup page for DD-WRT, do a (final) 30/30/30 "hard" reset on your router, then check that you still see the DD-WRT setup. If so, you're all set up!
Setting Up the Repeater

Now that you've got your oldie-but-goodie router set up with DD-WRT, you can set it up to pick up the signal from your primary router and re-broadcast it within its own radius. Here's how to do that.

With your computer still hooked up to the now-secondary router, head into the DD-WRT setup screen. It will ask you to set a better password and username at first, so go ahead and do that—you'll probably want to set up the same admin/password as your primary router to avoid confusion. Once you're in, your setup screen will look something like this, as my Micro setup on my Linksys appears:

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterFirst up, click on the Wireless tab, then choose Basic Settings. Switch "Wireless Mode" to "Repeater," and the "Wireless Network Name" to the same as the main router you're going to be re-broadcasting. Don't worry about the bridged/unbridged radio buttons—they'll set themselves later. Hit the "Save" button at the very bottom, but do not hit "Apply Settings" just yet.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterIn the "Virtual Interfaces" section, below that main "Wireless Physical Interfaces" section you just modified, hit the "Add" button, then enter a new name for your repeater—don't use the same as your router, or else suffer the wrath of confused devices. Adding "Repeater" or "2" to the end of your main router's name is pretty sensible in most cases. If you prefer an access point that doesn't broadcast its name, save that for switching off later—while we're testing our repeater, we'll be using basic settings to make sure the connection goes through. Hit the "Save" button at the bottom again.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi Repeater
With the main Wireless tab still selected, head to the "Wireless Security" sub-tab to the right. You'll see two interfaces again—a "Physical Interface" and a "Virtual Interface." In the "Physical Interface" section at the top, fill in the same exact security settings as your primary router—the security mode, the algorithm (TKIP or AES, generally), and the password any device would use to connect. You might need to jump back into your primary router settings to confirm these—that's fine, but do so from another device. Under the "Virtual Interface" section, set up the same exact security settings as your primary router, again. Hit the "Save" key at very bottom again and, again, avoid "Apply Settings" for the moment.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterJump over to the Setup tab at the very top, then scroll down to the Network Setup section under Basic Setup. The main thing to do here is slightly alter the "Local IP Address" from what your primary router is. If you connect to your main router at 192.168.1.1, for example, set this repeater router to something like 192.168.2.1, or another number that you can remember in the second-to-last position. Hit (you guessed it!) Save.

Turn Your Old Router into a Range-Boosting Wi-Fi RepeaterFinally, head to the Security tab up top, and in the Firewall section, disable the "SPI Firewall," and un-check everything under the "Block WAN Requests," except "Filter Multicast." Hit "Save" at the bottom one last time. Finally, head over to Administration, double-check that you've got your administrator password written down or remembered, and hit "Apply Settings" at the very bottom. Your router will reset itself now, so give it time to do so.

Unplug your computer's Ethernet cable, turn on a wireless device, and see if you can find your new repeater bridge. Connect to it, use the same password you'd use for the main router, and you should have success. If not, run through the steps and double-check your settings. DD-WRT's wiki page for WLAN Repeaters has a good deal of troubleshooting advice, so check there too.

You've now got a second Wi-Fi station in your house that picks up signal from the main router and offers it out to devices that are farther out. It's likely not as fast a connection between devices—it's wireless G, in most cases, as opposed to N. Then again, at this point, there are very, very few services or streaming applications that make full use of Wireless N's crazy bandwidth potential, so your Hulu streaming, web browsing, and other usual internet life will likely be unaffected.

In my own case, my wife and I don't have to use modern-day divining tricks in our very non-linear Victorian home to keep a spotty Wi-Fi signal to an iPod touch or Android phone, and a side patio has just become a preferred secondary home office for the summer. As a bonus, my closest neighbors now know that I'm a serious, serious nerd when they fire up their laptops. Here's hoping you find similarly fun and free uses for a Wi-Fi repeater.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Samsung targets rural folks with solar charged laptop

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South Korean electronics maker Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market with the capacity to run for 15 hours, nearly double the seven to eight hours lasting power of rivals . 
By Okuttah Mark  (email the author)

Posted  Monday, August 29  2011 at  20:12
IN SUMMARY
South Korean electronics maker Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market with the capacity to run for 15 hours, nearly double the seven to eight hours lasting power of rivals .
Kenya was among the key markets that Samsung picked for the global launch that also targets consumers in the Middle East, Europe and Asia
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Korean electronics giant Samsung has launched a solar powered laptop in the Kenyan market targeting thousands of potential consumers currently locked out of the computer revolution by lack of electricity.
Kenya, with a large rural population that is not connected to the national power grid, is among the few countries Samsung picked for the global launch that began last week.
The Samsung Netbook NC215S lap top is priced at Sh35,000 and is also targeting consumers who are connected to the national electricity grid but suffer erratic power supply.
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The solar-charged laptop is loaded with a front cover panel that captures energy from the sun and automatically recharges the battery. When fully charged, the lap top can run for up 15 hours – nearly double the capacity of its closest competitors that have seven or eight hours stand-by capability.
“With Netbook NC 215S Samsung is demonstrating its capacity to bring to the consumers technology that satisfies their needs and takes care of the environment,” said Samsung Electronics East Africa Business Leader Robert Ngeru.
The Korean firm is building consumer electronics and mobile technology for sub-Sahara Africa where it set a $10 billion revenue target by 2015. Samsung’s sub-Saharan Africa market is currently worth $1.23 billion.
Launch of the Netbook NC 215S comes as Kenya’s four mobile telecoms firms, Safaricom, Airtel, Telkom’s Kenya Orange and Essar’s Yu have intensified their activities in the data market and are looking for affordable internet enabled devices such as laptops and mobile phone handsets to expand the number of data users.
Growth of the data market is particularly critical to the long term survival of the telecom operators who have had to contend with steep decline in voice revenue in the past couple of years.
Samsung is among the hardware vendors who have partnered with Safaricom in the laptops market.
Available only in black, the netbook’s solar panel can also be used to charge a smartphone, MP3 player and other devices via its USB port, even when the PC is switched off or in power-saving mode.
The Netbook NC 215S also features an ultra-portable and stylish design, weigh–ing just 1.3kg and featuring a slim display rim that is as thin as a finger.
The new solar powered Netbook will be launched in Russia, the U.S, Europe, and South Korea this month.

Saturday, August 27, 2011

ASUS MARS II gets reviewed, deemed the fastest single graphics card on the market

By   posted Aug 27th 2011 10:33AM
ASUS MARS II
Well, that insane ASUS MARS II card we got to feast our eyes on back in June has finally started rolling off the assembly line. That means it's time for the hardware fanatics and gaming freaks to start putting them through their paces. HotHardware said the dual GTX 580-packing card was "quite simply the fastest single graphics card we have ever tested, bar none." And everyone else seemed to agree. Now, obviously there are drawbacks -- the 3GB card is an absolute power hog (requiring 600-watts all by itself) and insanely pricey at $1,499. You could even buy three separate GTX 580 cards for slightly less, use the same number of slots and get better performance, but the MARS II has one other thing going for it -- status. Only 999 of these beasts will be made. After they're all snatched up you'll have to head to eBay, and pay a hefty premium over it's already absurd price. But, if you absolutely have to have the best performance you can out of a single card solution, this is the clear choice. If you need more detail about just how badly this spanks the competition check out the reviews below.

Read - HotHardware
Read - PC Perspective
Read - techPowerUp
Read - TweakTown

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

By Exiting, Slow-Moving HP Will Help Reshape the PC Market


August 23, 2011 10:59 AM
Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #140290
When IBM announced its intention to abandon the PC market in 2004, it was big news on a number of levels, not the least of which was that IBM had created this very market. Not on purpose, of course. But by using off-the-shelf hardware for its PCs and licensing third-party software, IBM inadvertently opened the doors to clones—clones that appeared in a flood after the IBM PC BIOS was copied.
This past week, Hewlett-Packard dropped its own similar bombshell. It, too, will exit the PC market, by selling or spinning off its own PC business. But there's a big difference between the HP announcement and IBM's earlier decision. Unlike IBM, which had long before ceded PC leadership to smaller, faster-moving companies, HP is, as I write this, the most dominant PC maker on earth. So the market it’s leaving is one over which it reigns supreme.
Of course, that all depends on how you measure things.
According to data I've averaged from market researchers at IDC andGartner (because these firms measure market share slightly differently), HP sold over 15 million PCs in the second quarter of 2011, a 3-percent gain over the same quarter a year earlier, and strong enough for a first-place finish, with 17.75-percent market share. (PC makers, overall, sold 84.8 million units in the quarter.) This places HP in a considerable lead, from a unit sales perspective, over the second-biggest PC maker, Dell. This company sold 10.75 million PCs in the same time period, also a 3-percent gain year over year, and good for 12.7-percent worldwide market share.
(Third-place finisher Lenovo is nipping at Dell's heels with 10.25 million PCs sold in the quarter, a stunning 21+ percent gain year over year. Meanwhile, industry darling Apple sold 3.95 million Macs in the same time period, and it doesn't even crack the top five PC makers. The Mac's market share for Q2 2011 was just 4.65 percent.)
So why would HP abandon this market?
Unit sales don't always equate to success. According to HP, the margins on its PC business are tiny, and like IBM before it, the company wants to focus on higher-margin, services-oriented businesses for corporations moving forward. The PC business requires shipping huge volumes of machines, many to finicky consumers, for comparatively low margins.
As proof of this statement, HP offered up some figures. Its commercial businesses experienced 5-percent revenue growth year over year, but its consumer businesses nose-dived 15 percent. Overall, its PC business generated almost $10 billion in revenues last year and, ironically, was the company's biggest revenue contributor. (Its tech services division delivered $9.1 billion in revenues.) But profits in the division were much smaller, about $2 billion.
Although many smaller companies--Samsung, Acer, ASUS, but also possibly Lenovo--would probably happily accept $2 billion in additional profits per year on HP's PC business, for HP, it’s only part of the story. The company had already paid $1.2 billion last year for struggling mobile OS maker Palm, and the Palm-based products HP was already selling--smartphones and the recently released TouchPad tablet--were summarily executed this week as well; HP will take another $1 billion charge related to winding down that business, though it's possible the company will offset some costs by finding a buyer. The wider issue here is that being competitive in the ever-shifting consumer market would require even higher outlays of cash, and HP simply isn't interested in this market and the resources and effort it would require.
Left unsaid is that HP simply cannot compete with the Apples and Googles of the world. Not that it didn't try: In addition to its Palm efforts, HP built clones of Apple's MacBook Pro laptops, purchased the high-end boutique PC maker Voodoo, briefly licensed the iPod from Apple, and launched Microsoft-based products such as the Tablet PC and Media Center PC. None of these efforts ever amounted to anything positive.
More important than consumer lust for Apple and Google mobile products, perhaps, is the fact that these companies also generate dramatically better margins than does HP. (Google's margins could cool a bit, however, thanks to its mammoth $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola.) And while the death of the traditional PC is grossly exaggerated--PC makers should sell roughly 400 million PCs this year, and the market is still growing by 4 to 5 percent, rather than contracting as many imagine--it's absolutely true that consumers are turning in ever-greater numbers to more mobile devices. And this includes both tablets and smartphones, neither of which HP has ever made successfully.
But Apple has. Last quarter, the company sold an astonishing 20 million iPhone 4 handsets and a reasonable 9.25 million iPad tablets. And while Apple has fallen behind Google's more diverse Android OS in the smartphone market, it has the tablet market all to itself for the time being. Remember that Mac sales figure I mentioned earlier? If you were to add Apple's Mac and iPad unit sales together--they are both, after all, general-purpose computing devices at heart--Apple suddenly vaults into second place in the worldwide PC market, behind HP but ahead of Dell: Combined Mac/iPad sales in Q2 2011 were 13.2 million units, good for about 15-percent worldwide market share. Still behind HP, yes, but well ahead of HP when it comes to margins and profits.
That's not a bad little turnaround for a company that was within 3 months of bankruptcy in 1996. But it's bad for HP, which despite heady unit sales, simply can't leverage its PC business well enough to be successful in the growth consumer markets of the future.
So HP will almost certainly exit the PC market—there’s a small possibility it could continue selling PCs only to businesses--and I think the model it will follow is IBM's. Certainly, Lenovo has done a wonderful job of shepherding and improving IBM's ThinkPad brand, and its products today are still the wonder of the corporate world, with superior keyboards, pointing devices, and construction when compared with the competition. Yes, including Apple.
My guess is that HP's PC business, whatever it's called, will also be very successful moving forward, and that whatever smaller company does end up with it--either a standalone spinoff or a former competitor like Samsung--will be quite happy with the results. And while HP's decision was unexpected and initially shocking, let's face it: All that's really happening here is that a slow-moving behemoth is moving on, leaving the market to scrappier upstarts, any one of which is better equipped to compete with Apple or Google. Once the dust settles, this will likely be the better course for everyone involved: HP, its PC business, and its customers.