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A few days later, a black notebook of otherwise similar appearance called the "HP Mini 1000" was informally revealed by a banner on the company's store, and officially announced on 29 October 2008. Unlike the 2133, this device is meant for the home market. An upgrade to the 2133, the HP Mini 2140, was announced by HP in January 2009.
The HP Mini 1000 is a netbook by HP, adapting that company's HP 2133 Mini-Note PC education/business netbook for the consumer market. [7] A similar but cheaper model named the HP Compaq Mini 700 will also be available in some regions with different cosmetics. [ 8 ]
Following HP's acquisition of Compaq in 2002, this series of notebooks was discontinued, replaced with the HP Pavilion, HP Compaq, and Compaq Presario notebooks. The OmniBook name would later be repurposed for a line of consumer-oriented notebooks in 2024, made to complement (and supersede) the Pavilion and Spectre series of notebooks.
1/15 sec (0.066666666666667) F-number: f/2.8: Date and time of data generation: 11:16, 28 April 2008: Lens focal length: 6.1 mm: Orientation: Normal: Horizontal resolution: 180 dpi: Vertical resolution: 180 dpi: File change date and time: 11:16, 28 April 2008: Y and C positioning: Centered: Exif version: 2.2: Date and time of digitizing: 11:16 ...
HP 2133 Mini-Note PC; F. HP F1030A; HP F1031A; HP F1032A; HP F1033A; HP F1034A; HP F1035A; HP F1036A; HP F1037A; ... HP OmniBook XE2; HP OmniBook XE3 This page was ...
[1] The company was founded by Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard in a small garage on January 1, 1939, initially producing a line of electronic test and measurement equipment. [2] As of 2012, Hewlett-Packard had made a total of 129 acquisitions since 1986; [3] The majority of companies acquired by HP were based in the United States.
The SEC's order found that HP's subsidiary in Russia paid more than $2 million through agents and various shell companies to a Russian government official to retain a multimillion-dollar contract with the federal prosecutor's office; in Poland, HP's subsidiary provided gifts and cash bribes worth more than $600,000 to a Polish government ...
NonStop is a series of server computers introduced to market in 1976 by Tandem Computers Inc., [1] beginning with the NonStop product line. [2] It was followed by the Tandem Integrity NonStop line of lock-step fault-tolerant computers, now defunct (not to be confused with the later and much different Hewlett-Packard Integrity product line extension).