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[D691]Drivers For Hewlett Packard
by Daniel Millions, Dan
The Hewlett Packard Rise to Fame

Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard met on a social outing with friends. Both were Stanford University students with a good background in technology. With the moral support of their professor, Hewlett and Packard decided to invest their money into creating their own business. As luck would have it, they met almost instant success with their audio oscillator.

Over the years the two gain employees, enjoy million in revenue, and continue to produce electronics equipment. The company keeps with testing and measuring subjects, and eventually develops the oscilloscope a vital tool in testing electronic circuits. With their vast success in the United States, Hewlett Packard expands overseas into multiple countries.

The 1960's bring the foundation of Hewlett Packard's success in the printing market. They develop personal computers, operating systems, and calculators that change the world of engineering of their day and age. But Hewlett Packard doesn't make their debut in the printing market for another 20 years.

Hewlett Packard Gains Credibility in the Printing Industry

The 1980's marks the decade of when Hewlett Packard finally breaks the printing industry. They manage to release inkjet and laser printers within the decade- which proves to be among their most profitable and popular lines of products in the history of HP.

Printers become mainstream later on in the 1980's with the release of the DeskJet printer. The DeskJet allows for consumers to afford a printing solution that doesn't cost a fortune to maintain ink and paper supplies. HP manages to make the top 50 list in the Fortune 500 listings as a result of their success in the printing industry.

Hewlett Packard Continues to Expand

Hewlett Packard goes on to release the color inkjet printer in the 1990's. This enables consumers to not only afford a printer, but to print items in color. This proves that the labs at HP are working around the clock to get technology out to consumers long before the competition can.

In 1993, HP reports that they have shipped their 10 millionth LaserJet printer to businesses and families. The 1990's continue to bring expansions in other countries, new advances in printing, and large leaps across the Fortune 500 list.

Hewlett Packard in Today's Economy

Hewlett Packard is still running strong today, keeping at the forefront of innovation and technology. Both founders of the company have been since deceased, but their aspirations and beliefs remain within the company's goals.

Hewlett Packard released the fastest printer of 2005, claiming the long-held title of best in the industry. Personal and business users both remain completely faithful in the company's direction- as they have remained to be the leader throughout several decades of competition.

Even today, HP is constantly acquiring new technologies and startups to expand their market to include the world's best personal and business use printers. As of 2007, the company has almost 200,000 employees and over $100 billion in revenues.

As for Hewlett and Packard, their dinky shed was restored and declared a landmark. It remains to be the very site where a Fortune 500 company was imagined, made, and held true to their standards and thirst for technology even almost a century later.

The two men that founded Hewlett-Packard, Bill Hewlett and David Packard must be rolling over in their graves with the announcement that their company founded on a strong ethical structure has voluntarily committed what may be ill-legal acts. These things happen, we understand that. What we don't understand is the actions subsequent to the public being informed of the ill-legal acts.

The company has admitted that they hired outside parties to try to ascertain how information from Board meetings made its way into newspapers. The 3rd parties hired to do the job use Pretexting ? a method where a person pretends, or masquerades as someone else. The purpose is to obtain that person's calling records from the phone company.

Hewlett Packard's Non Executive Chairman, Patricia Dunn has said she authorized the operation without realizing how far the investigators went. You have to be kidding. She has agreed to step down as of January 1 of next year. What an interesting way to reward inappropriate corporate behavior. She must know where the bones are buried, because the resignation should have been immediate, and without hesitation.

If you violate the law, that's one thing. If you get called on it-That's ANOTHER THING. These people got called on it. They got found out. This is a famous corporation with almost infinite legal resources. They literally have the best lawyers money can buy, and this is what they come up with. You know what they say, if the attorney don't give you the opinion you want, find another attorney. In this case, the first attorney Hewlett Packard used was a prominent Silicon Valley lawyer who thought Pretexting sounded like a pretty good idea. He must be smoking the same thing that the Non-Executive Chairman was smoking.

Executives are supposed to execute, that's why they call them executives. It wasn't so with the folks at Hewlett. They were asleep at the switch wondering which bank to deposit their latest LAVISH stock options bonus into.

It has now become apparent that the scheme went deeper than anyone previously realized. Apparently Hewlett Packard was thinking about planting spies in news bureaus at two major media outlets. They included CNET, and the Wall Street Journal. The plan called for Hewlett Packard's investigators to place clerical employees and/or cleaning crews in the offices of these entities looking for the source of the leaks.

It's just amazing when you think of it. Only in Hollywood movies do things go off without a hitch. It's really BRAZEN of these highly paid individuals to believe that they could pull this off, and in the process not wind up embarrassing the corporate entity.

What about Institutional memory?

It is becoming increasingly apparent that corporations are suffering the same fate as governments which is that nobody is around long enough to remember history, and therefore INFLUENCE poorly thought out plans. I could do a book on this one and probably should, but here it goes.

In the late 1960's, a famous multinational corporation called International Telephone and Telegraph (ITT) was being beat up by the Justice Department over mergers that the government didn't like. What did ITT do? Attempting to get out of the investigation, there was a meeting of individuals that included the Chairman Harold Geneen, director Felix Rohatyn (later Ambassador to France under Clinton), and Nixon assistants Enrichment, Colson, Peterson, and Krogh, and Cabinet members Connally, Stans, Mitchell, Kleindienst, and McLaren.

The objective was to offer the Republicans $400,000 in cash towards financing the Republican national convention in San Diego. The whole thing became known through the Dita Beard memo. Beard was a lobbyist for ITT. They all thought they could keep it quiet, until it blew up in their faces. I guess nobody at Hewlett Packard took a political history course in college.

Folks when you are thinking about violating laws of the United States or any country for that matter, you have to be the proverbial ?village idiot? to put it in WRITING. That's what ITT did, and it cost them dearly. Here we are 35 years later and Hewlett Packard has memos flying all through their computers in the form of e-mails, and the government will use those memos to hang the corporate officers. What were they thinking?

What Hewlett Packard should have done?

This is easy, COME CLEAN. You call a meeting with reporters as quickly as you can, and you become 100% OPEN and TRANSPARENT. You are apologetic, and you attempt to lay it all out on the table, even if you don't have the whole story. This is what I call Crisis 101 management. Instead, HP decided to put information out little by little, and when the press found something new out, they killed HP for it. Pretexting and stealing to me is the same thing. You are taking a person's records, even his identity and it doesn't belong to you.

The textbook case of crisis management remains Johnson & Johnson, and the Tylenol scandal of 1982. Some crazed individual in the Chicago area had laced Tylenol capsules with cyanide, and killed several innocent people. JNJ did not sweep it under the rug. They confronted the problem head on, and came completely clean. They accepted responsibility.

JNJ alerted consumers in every state. They used the media and told the public, don't consume Tylenol, and also not to resume using the product until they knew it was safe. They then recalled at a cost of a $100 million every bottle of Tylenol on the market. Today that would be the equivalent of billions of dollars. They put public safety first, corporate concerns second. They were compassionate and honest, something Hewlett Packard knows nothing about. JNJ wrote the book on crisis 101. Hewlett Packard should try reading the book.

Copyright 2006 Richard Stoyeck
Article Source : Getting A Personal Loan

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Both Daniel Millions & Richard Stoyeck are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Daniel Millions has sinced written about articles on various topics from Lose Weight, Cars and Writing. Competitively priced and. Daniel Millions's top article generates over 301000 views. to your Favourites.

Richard Stoyeck has sinced written about articles on various topics from Politics, Finances and Foreclosure Help. Richard Stoyeck's background includes being a limited partner at Bear Stearns, Senior VP at Lehman Brothers, Kuhn Loeb, Arthur Andersen, and KPMG. Educated at Pace University, NYU, and Harvard University, today he runs Rockefeller Capital Partners and Sto. Richard Stoyeck's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.
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