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September 29, 2006, 4:34 AM PDT
HP and Voodoo pull a Dell and Alienware
Posted by: Rich Brown

As you may have heard, HP and Voodoo appeared together on stage last tonight to announce their new partnership. Voodoo CEO Ravi Sood and his brother Rahul, the chief technology officer, will now report to HP's Phil McKinney, the CTO of HP's personal systems group. In short, once the deal has finalized, HP will have acquired a boutique PC maker to give it leverage in the profitable high-end gaming PC market, similar to the way in which Dell subsumed Alienware earlier this year.

According to Rahul's blog, Voodoo's operations will remain in Calgary, and you can continue to purchase Voodoo PCs. As for the future, "our strategy for the HP gaming portfolio is yet to be revealed--but expect the unexpected." And here we thought we were at the Manhattan Center last night for a simple fourth quarter HP product refresh.

With no new Voodoo products at the time of the announcement, it's hard to say whether this deal is any different from Dell's acquisition of Alienware. That marriage seems so far to be a hands-off kind of situation, for better or for worse. You don't see Alienware PCs among the Dells in your Sunday circular, but Dell's XPS desktops technically compete with Alienware's products for high-end gaming dollars. According to Rahul, the HP-Voodoo deal is different. Both in his blog and at last night's event, Rahul said that he had been given the keys to HP's R&D lab and that that would give Voodoo access to innovative muscle it didn't have before.

If Voodoo and HP really do pool resources and mindsets, I would expect that we'll see some very exciting products coming out of the partnership. Despite its rep as a pusher of printer ink, HP has impressed us with its creativity on the PC side over the past few years. Its Personal Media Drives and the z555 Digital Entertainment Center have both demonstrated HP's willingness to take risks. And Voodoo most definitely knows how to make a performance PC. What we also hope is that HP's mass-market background rubs off on the Voodoo team. We've always admired Voodoo's attention to detail and the level of craftsmanship behind its PCs, but we've also often found Voodoo systems overpriced, even for high-end gaming desktops.

TalkBack
4 messages

What next?!

Us purists have already lost Alienware to the Dell Demon. Now Voodoo PC? Who's next?! Are we going to hear in six months that Lenovo has bought Falcon Northwest? Where will the enthusiasts who could build their own PC's but choose not to go for a high end American supported and built machine go?

So much for Voodoo calling Alienware a bunch of sellouts, they just joined the club!
by TrackStar1682 (See profile) - October 2, 2006 9:26 AM PDT

That was a cheap shot Rich

I realize HP has been in the news lately with their issues of executive mistakes but I thought your paragraph in the email newsletter was a cheap shot


"An HP story that doesn't involve the words "pretexting" or "spying"? In this case, yes "

Since you choose your profession to be a journalist perhaps you should carefully evaluate your use of the english language

"As you may have heard, HP and Voodoo appeared together on stage last tonight to announce their new partnership"

So what does the term last tonight mean ?

Where you trying to say last night ?

Perhaps before you start casting stones you should evaluate your own professional issues !

by TomRaz (See profile) - October 2, 2006 7:52 AM PDT

Gateway : Different direction

Gateway does not need to chase the "Gaming PC" rabbit. They already have what they need! They can transform the eMachines buyout into that animal if they like, just put some Quality Control and Engineering behind it.

As a Gateway fan, I would like to see them make entries back into the world of the data center! Transform the COW into a Buffalo and make some rackmount units with storage, blades and such. They could even come up with "Home" rackmount units that also serve as media centers for small home networks.

Gaming PC are cool but we have been riding the price/performance plateau for quite some time. (How much performance do we really need?) I, for one still build my own gaming PC so that I can tinker with it.

Gateway would be better served by re-entering the Small Business / Corporate /Data Center environment but building some sturdy server based solutions with high availability and virtual technology and kicking up technical customer service a few notches.

In the consumer PC market, I feel that if they could come with some slick home based storage solutions that were high speed, secure, and highly networkable ( wired and wireless built in) that was affordable, then they would have a real winner! Two (2) Terrabytes will soon be standard to keep all of those HD movies, and mp3 record collections. Not to mention home movies and photos.

They should partner with slingbox and Cisco (Scientific Atlanta) for a new integrated set top box that accesses a 2.5TB NAS storage unit for media!

G
by gdparks (See profile) - October 2, 2006 5:56 AM PDT

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