In An Internal HP Email, Meg Whitman Assures webOS? Best Days Are Still Ahead

In An Internal HP Email, Meg Whitman Assures webOS? Best Days Are Still Ahead

HP just took to the wire and announced to the tech world that webOS will live on as an open source project. Shortly thereafter, Meg Whitman informed HP employees about the decision. The internal email I obtained, which is included in its entirely after the jump, gives a bit more insight than HP?s public press release.
Whitman?s email indicates that the HP leadership team saw webOS could be ?a platform that is both open and has a single integrated stack.? By making webOS open source, HP?s short-lived OS neatly fullfils this desire. However, like the company already stated, talk of new hardware is nearly absent from the email besides stating ?hardware manufacturers? (read: HP is done) will be able to continue to ?contribute? webOS. The TouchPad was likely the last of the HP-branded hardware ? unless of coures the open source community turns webOS into a magnificent creation worthy of new hardware.
From: CEO ? Meg Whitman
Sent: Friday, December 09, 2011 2:03 PM
Subject: webOS to be contributed to the open source community
Meg Whitman
CEO
TO/ All Employees
SUBJECT/ webOS to be contributed to the open source community
Today, we announced that HP will contribute our webOS software to the open source community and support its development going forward. We believe that this is the best way to ensure the benefits of webOS are accessible to the largest possible ecosystem.
Since we announced the discontinuation of our webOS devices last August, the executive team has been working to determine the best path forward for this highly respected software. We looked at all the options in the market today and we see a clear need for a platform that is both open and has a single integrated stack.
webOS is the only platform designed from the ground up to be mobile, cloud-connected, and scalable. By providing webOS to the open source community and other hardware vendors we have the potential to fundamentally change the landscape.
HP engineers, partners, other developers and hardware manufacturers will be able