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The American computer manufacturer Hewlett-Packard (HP) today unveiled a new convertible tablet. With the EliteBook Revolve, the company wants to address business customers who are primarily looking for a thin and light notebook, but while offering a practical tablet features like. The display of the new HP pavilion dv6000 battery device is mounted on a single hinge to the housing and can be rotated by 180 degrees and folded. Thus the Revolve be transformed with a handle in one tablet. The operating system is Windows 8 Pro for use with HP to continue to offer and wish Windows 7 Professional.

The display on the EliteBook Revolve and HP pavilion dv6 battery is 11.6 inches tall and has a resolution of 1,366 x 768 pixels. From bumps and scratches, the screen is protected by Gorilla Glass second The Revolve housing consists mostly of magnesium and contains an Intel processor of the 3rd Generation of type Core i3, i5 or i7, 4GB of RAM (up to 12 gigabytes) and an SSD with up to 256 gigabytes. An external I / O ports, two USB 3.0 ports, a display port and an Ethernet connection.

HP mini 311 battery equipped the new business Convertible also an illuminated keyboard, a 720p webcam and NFC, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity. As an option, the printer touch screen with a digital pen use, which must be purchased separately.

The EliteBook Revolve is according to the manufacturer in the United States will be available from March 2013. Prices, further technical details and dates for the launch in other regions, HP and Compaq presario cq62 battery will announce at a later date.

In the U.S., the EliteBook Revolve and Compaq nc6400 battery will be offered with an LTE option, in Europe it will probably remain in HSPA +. In terms of wireless communication, there will also be options regarding Bluetooth and NFC (Near Field Communication). The operating system is Windows 8 for use, the BIOS is also optimized for this purpose. Nevertheless, professional customer will probably also offered the possibility of a Windows 7 installation.

The availability of the EliteBook Revolve and HP mini 1000 battery the manufacturer currently dated to March 2013, there will be also information on price. With the Revolve extends HP's touch-enabled Windows 8 series for business users, the beginning of 2013 we had in October announced the Tablet ElitePad 900 with Windows 8.

 
Despite headwinds in its core business, Dell is trying hard to move into the new world of corporate computing.

On Tuesday, the company said that Marius Haas, a well-regarded executive with a noted history at Hewlett-Packard, would take over Dell’s Enterprise Solutions business, which sells the servers, network, and storage equipment for big corporate data centers and cloud computing systems.

It is a future that can’t come fast enough: Mr. Haas’s position was announced along with Dell’s second-fiscal-quarter earnings. Dell had net income of $732 million, or 42 cents a share, on revenue of $14.5 billion.

Net income was 18 percent below year-earlier levels, owing largely to a collapse in demand for personal computers and laptops. The data center and cloud equipment businesses looked relatively strong.

On a nonstandard accounting basis, Dell had per-share earnings of 50 cents a share. While this was higher than the 45 cents a share projected by analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters, Dell’s stock traded lower after the markets closed because Dell had also projected that third-quarter revenue would be 2 percent to 5 percent below second-quarter levels.

The revenue drop seems mostly limited to what the company called “challenging” demand for PCs, laptops and peripheral devices, particularly by consumers. The Enterprise Solutions business Mr. Haas is heading grew 6 percent over the quarter, Dell said,  looks strong in the current quarter as well and is expected to bring more revenue in the future.

Michael Dell, the founder,  has already said he wants to move Dell into providing comprehensive solutions for big data centers. Mr. Haas will be an important part of making this work, in a world seemingly dominated by Google, Apple, and Microsoft.

In July, Dell said it would buy Quest Software, which makes software for things like data backup and data center management, for $2.4 billion. Deals like that take Dell further into enterprise software and data center management, an important way for Mr. Haas to also sell servers.

At H.P.,Mr. Haas, a Dutch national, led the fast-growing networking division, and before that he played an important role under Mark V. Hurd, then the chief executive, as the head of strategy and corporate development.

“He was one of Hurd’s golden boys,” said a former H.P. executive, who asked not to be named in order to maintain relations with many of the tech companies. “He was well liked by the board, and people thought he’d play a role in top management.” Mr. Haas left H.P. in 2011, after Mr. Hurd was replaced by Leo Apotheker. Before coming to Dell, he was at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, looking for investments in technology for that company.

As the head of strategy at H.P., Mr. Haas learned about the company’s many enterprise computing businesses, and he probably developed relationships with senior corporate executives at a lot of big companies. He was also closely involved in some of H.P.’s biggest acquisitions, including the purchase of Electronic Data Systems for $13.9 billion in 2008.

That may not be something Mr. Haas wants to talk about. Last month, H.P. announced that it would take a charge of $8 billion against the E.D.S. acquisition, which never yielded the high-value growth H.P. had hoped for.

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