GOVERNMENT
HP Sharpens HP Labs to Drive High-impact Research

- Information explosion: Acquiring, analyzing and delivering the right information to individuals and businesses so they can act on it.
- Dynamic cloud services: Developing web platforms and cloud services that are dynamically personalized based on an individual’s location, preferences, calendar and communities.
- Content transformation: Enabling the fluid transformation of content from analog to digital, from device to device, and from digital content to physical products.
- Intelligent infrastructure: Designing smarter, more secure devices, networks and scalable architectures that work together to connect individuals and businesses to rich, dynamic content and services.
- Sustainability: Creating technologies, IT infrastructure and new business models for the lower carbon economy that save money and leave a lighter footprint on the environment.
HP Labs will help drive the company’s strategy for addressing a major shift taking place in the IT industry, which it calls ”Everything as a Service.” This view asserts that the IT industry is moving toward a model in which a new category of dynamic cloud services are personalized and aware of the user’s context, including location, preferences, calendar and communities. HP is making investments across its businesses to help lead this industry shift. “The next wave of services will anticipate the needs of people based on a real-time understanding of an individual’s location and preferences,” said Shane Robison, HP executive vice president and chief strategy and technology officer. “To deliver these new, rich experiences, the technology industry must address significant challenges in every area of IT – from devices to networks to content distribution. HP Labs is now aligned to sharpen its focus on solving these complex problems so HP and its customers can capitalize on this shift.” New initiatives foster collaborative research and faster pace of technology transfer HP additionally unveiled three initiatives to encourage a model of open innovation and technology transfer. First, the company introduced HP IdeaLab, a web-based service that offers a peek into certain early-stage innovations emerging from HP Labs. Designed to encourage open feedback from consumers and the developer community, HP IdeaLab provides a rich web forum that actively involves and immerses users in HP Labs’ technology development. The site – www.hp.com/idealab – will initially feature six projects and be updated with new initiatives as they become available. Second, HP Labs has established an Open Innovation Office responsible for deepening HP Labs’ strategic collaborations with those in academia, government and the commercial sector. The office is designed to ensure joint research endeavors result in high-impact research that meets the scientific and business objectives of HP and its partners. As part of this initiative, an Entrepreneur in Residence Program is being established to give venture capital investors and their portfolio companies early access to HP Labs research. In return, HP will receive insight into emerging market trends and potential business development opportunities. Third, HP Labs has established a Technology Transfer Office charged with speeding the transfer of research into products and services through multiple routes. The office will focus on three primary channels: product development within HP’s business groups, intellectual property licensing agreements with third parties, and the venture capital community. Banerjee, senior vice president of research at HP and director of HP Labs, said: “Our new approach to open innovation and technology transfer will ensure HP researchers are engaging the world’s best research talent and business minds inside, as well as outside, of HP. This is an innovative new blueprint for corporate research. It will enable HP Labs to lead the academic community and the industry into the next wave of information technology.” Underscoring the company’s renewed focus on HP Labs, an identity has been developed to unite the 23 new labs under one brand and convey the new direction for the research group. Employing a visual play on scientific equations, the logo put the bracketed framework of the company’s main logo around the word “LABShp”. In addition to its headquarters in Palo Alto, HP Labs operates research labs in Bangalore, India; Beijing; Bristol, England; Haifa, Israel; St. Petersburg, Russia; and Tokyo. Images and more information about the new HP Labs is available online at www.hp.com/go/NewHPLabs.