HP has reversed the unpopular, hastily considered, board of directors-blessed decision to dump its $40 billion PC unit that its now purged CEO Leo Apotheker announced in August.

The company said Thursday afternoon right after Wall Street closed that it would keep the business, expecting it to “deliver greater customer and shareholder value.”

The new decision has the “full support of the board,” a statement that only gives HP’s much vilified board another black eye.

Ostensibly HP did an “objective” evaluation of strategic alternatives for its Personal Systems Group (PSG), an exercise that reportedly involved about 100 “subject matter experts across the businesses and functions,” 18 teams that supposedly looked at all the angles of spinning the unit off.

Under the circumstances one might suspect that the findings were pre-ordained but the investigation reportedly calculated that a spin-out would run about $1.5 billion in start-up costs.

In a statement Apotheker’s replacement Meg Whitman – who, remember, signed off on the August plan – said, “It’s clear after our analysis that keeping PSG within HP is right for customers and partners, right for shareholders, and right for employees. HP is committed to PSG, and together we are stronger.” A schoolgirl could have figured that out.

Sources have whispered that the only reason HP ever thought about dumping PSG was to cover the $10+ billion it cost to buy the equally unpopular and expensive British ISV Autonomy. There was no one to buy PSG for more than $10 billion and that led HP to fall back on the cover story that it was thinking of spinning the unit out as a standalone company despite the sacrifice of the synergies it gets from the thing.

It is now reckoned that the loss of purchasing power and joint brand opportunities would have cost another billion dollars.

The Wall Street Journal said the total cost of a spin-out was originally only supposed to be $300 million-$400 million. Where that figure dropped from is unclear.

In a press release ahead of a conference call HP said, “The data-driven evaluation revealed the depth of the integration that has occurred across key operations such as supply chain, IT and procurement. It also detailed the significant extent to which PSG contributes to HP’s solutions portfolio and overall brand value. Finally, it also showed that the cost to recreate these in a standalone company outweighed any benefits of separation.

“The outcome of this exercise reaffirms HP’s model and the value for its customers and shareholders. PSG is a key component of HP’s strategy to deliver higher value, lasting relationships with consumers, small and medium-sized businesses and enterprise customers. The HP board of directors is confident that PSG can drive profitable growth as part of the larger entity and accelerate solutions from other parts of HP’s business.”

Todd Bradley, who was on the conference call, will apparently continue to run PSG. Although PSG miraculously lost no market share in Q3, he still has to deal with the August 18 hangover. In answer to a question, Meg said she was confident HP would get its “fair share or more” of disk drives out of poor waterlogged Thailand because of its size and long-term relationships.

Whitman is giving the company another couple of months to figure out what to do with webOS. Apparently it’s seen as some cross-organization something or another but unlikely to return inside a tablet. HP wants Windows 8 for tablets.

HP made back a pittance of its squandered wealth Thursday. Its stock rose to $26.99, up $1.24 or 4.82%, on a day when the market surged. Before the August 18 announcement HP was at $31, down more than a third from its glory days under Mark Hurd.

Meanwhile, Meg – or her people – are trying to reduce the “what is HP” question to a bumper sticker. She said it had to be right because the company will have to execute against it. Before that she’s got to make Q4 guidance. The numbers are due out next month. By then she needs guidance for 2012. She said, “HP tries to do a lot of things.” She, on the other hand, is “a big believer in doing a small set of things really, really well.”

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Dell and EMC have finally split after a profitable 10-year run.

Dell’s not going to resell anymore EMC products like its Clariion SAN arrays, Celerra NAS servers, Data Domain deduplication appliances and VNX NAS/SAN combo arrays. Instead it will sell its own widgetry in competition with EMC.

The Dell-EMC relationship started coming apart in 2007 when Dell bought EqualLogic. Dell’s foiled attempt to buy 3PAR last year strained it some more and it’s buying Compellent Technologies a few months later for its Clariion-competitive mid-range storage really tore it. There’s been expectations of a divorce ever since.

The end has now come two years before their latest contract was supposed to expire.

In the past EMC product (mostly Clariion) represented 50% of Dell’s storage revenue and Dell contributed 8%-9% of EMC annual revenues.

Dell has spent upwards of $2 billion the last three-four years on iSCSI SAN merchant EqualLogic, Fibre Channel storage company Compellent, scale-out NAS house Exanet and data compression vendor Ocarina. It’s also got partnerships with Symantec, CommVault and Caringo. It’s now supposed to get close to 80% of its storage revenues from its own IP and most of its profits.

Dell means to support EMC products past 2013 through EMC’s end-of-life dates. Most of the Clariion and Celerra lines were supposed to be discontinued anyway at the end of the year and replaced by VNX and VNXe.

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HP is poised to backtrack on the notion of spinning off its $40 billion PC business according to the Wall Street Journal.

The paper heard that “recent analyses by Hewlett-Packard and its top advisers indicate that the costs of spinning off HP’s personal-computer business might outweigh the benefits,” if for no other reason than “separating the PC division would significantly diminish HP’s buying power with component makers, complicate its supply chain and reduce product margins on some products.”

We heard – well, everybody’s got leaky HP sources – that HP was “surprised at the synergies,” like nobody’s been watching the store.

The company is doubtless spending a boatload coming to a conclusion that people who can’t balance their checkbooks could do intuitively.

HP’s new CEO Meg Whitman reportedly hasn’t come to a decision yet. We distinctly remember saying weeks ago that HP would pull in the decision – Whitman then said she wants it made by the end of the month – and would decide to keep the thing.

It’s suspected the decision has already been made and the delay is meant to give the HP board some measure of deniability for sanctioning the idea however implausible. The reason HP backed off its first impulse, which was to sell the thing, was the realization it couldn’t get more than $10 billion for it.

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Ahead of a conference in Boston, Rackspace said Wednesday that it will be turning control of the OpenStack cloud project that it started last year with NASA over to an independent OpenStack Foundation that will be set up next year.

The foundation will be responsible for the open source project’s governance and ownership of the OpenStack trademark. Rackspace, which currently controls the OpenStack copyrights as well as the trademark, will turn the IP over to the foundation.

The company is supposed to gather feedback on the best structure and processes to adopt for the foundation.

Rackspace and OpenStack were looking a wee bit too cozy there for a while after Rackspace bought Anso Labs and acquired most of OpenStack’s board seats. It’s supposed to be a community endeavor and Rackspace ultimately had to rearrange governance and voting rights to accommodate folks like Cisco, Dell, Intel and Citrix.

The foundation is meant to resolve lingering control issues lest somebody like Oracle buy Rackspace.

OpenStack is now up to Diablo, its fourth release, and has seen 50,000 downloads. It’s collected 100-odd organizations in the year and change it’s been functioning.

See foundation@openstack.org to put your two cents in.

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Amazon unveiled its ballyhooed Android tablet at a press conference in New York Wednesday morning and priced it at $199, a highly aggressive and potentially disruptive price point that is likely to prove less than it costs to make.

It’s certainly not going to fatten up Amazon’s profit margin any unless, of course, it’s less of an iPad rival than a buttress for the Amazon ecosphere, a device for consuming the 18 million movies, TV shows, songs, books, magazines, apps, games and other things Amazon sells. Somebody compared it to a vending machine and that apparently is the way Amazon thinks of it.

Apple’s cheapest iPad goes for $499 and HP proved the allure of cut-rate price when it staged a $99 fire sale on its disowned app-lacking Touchpad.

In the aftermath of the announcement, CNBC toyed with the idea of Amazon wresting control of Android from Google. And it could play havoc with the pricing of other Android tablets.

Amazon’s gismo is 33% smaller than the iPad. It’s Wi-Fi only and there’s no camera or microphone although it will stream music while one browses and downloading videos while one reads a book. It’s said to be good only for two-finger touch.

The 14.6 ounce seven-inch widget, called the Kindle Fire, comes with a cloud-accelerated web browser called Silk that lives partially on Fire and partially on EC2 where it leverages the cloud’s raw computational horsepower, persistent connections and time-tested heuristics as well as Amazon’s peering relationships with major Internet service providers.

This dynamically determined labor-dividing “split browser” architecture is supposed to speed page requests relative to network conditions, page complexity and cached content and provide an overall faster browsing experience considering a typical web page requires 80 files served from 13 different domains and latency on wireless connections is typically high.

Amazon calls Silk “revolutionary” and a boon to battery life.

The Android operating system Amazon is using is supposed to be highly customized so Fire’s UI is distinct. Amazon integrated its own Android app store, not Google’s.

Amazon’s so-called Whispersync technology now synchronizes movies and TV shows as well as libraries, last page read, bookmarks, notes and highlights across a range of devices and platforms. Amazon says, “When you get home, switch to your big screen TV. Your movie will be right where you left it.”

The package offers free Amazon Cloud storage and backup for Amazon digital content. It’s unclear if it extends to somebody else’s content. Doesn’t sound like it.

The full color LCD touchscreen displays 169 pixels an inch and employs IPS (in-plane switching) technology, similar to the widgetry as used on the iPad, for an extra-wide viewing angle. It’s Gorilla Glass-coated.

The dingus is based on a 1GHz dual-core TI OMAP processor with 512MB of RAM and 8GB of internal storage.

Made by Quanta, the same people who make RIM’s poorly selling Playbook, there’s a family resemblance.

The device is supposed to start shipping November 15 but pre-orders can be placed now, at least in the US. It comes with a free one-month subscription to Amazon’s $79-a-year Prime service with its streaming video and free two-day shipping.

Amazon also added three black and white e-reader Kindles priced from $79 to $149. The $99 Kindle Touch has a touch screen. The high-end Kindle Touch 3G comes with free 3G. They are 30% lighter, 18% smaller and turn pages 10% faster.

Amazon’s stock closed at $229.71 Wednesday and slipped to $222.44 Thursday. Apple, which had been over $400 early in the week, went from $397 Wednesday to $390.57 Thursday. Part of Apple’s problem this week was talk – unsubstantiated, contradicted and never definitively run to ground – that it was cutting back on Q4 iPad production by 25%.

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