Is It Still Cool to Slam Packard Bell?

28 09 2008

Because I have a serious crush on their version of Gateway’s P-7811FX gaming notebook.

As you probably know, Gateway and Packard Bell were consumed by Acer a few years back. Packard Bell had been languishing under the rudderless NEC Corporation - a company that can not decide what exactly it does from one day to the next. I really expected Packard Bell to go the way of Commodore - a curious footnote in the PC history books like Wang and Olivetti.

But Acer has big plans for Packard Bell - its going to be the hip brand in Europe. Wow. Can this be done? Is it a sign of insanity to even attempt this? You could easily answer yes to either of these questions - but I like how Acer has started.

Delivering gaming products through the Packard Bell iPower line is a good idea. These computers are essentially identical to the well received FX series from Gateway. The FX series really put Gateway back on the map.

This is marketing 101 - get the ‘influencers’ interested in your brand and saying good things about it. That is exactly what has occurred in North America. Gateway’s FX notebooks routinely sell out at Best Buy because they offer terrific performance at a fraction of the competition’s price. Even if you thumb your nose at the brand, you can’t say anything bad about the specifications delivered for the price. The success of the Gateway P-6831fx, P-6860fx and P-7811fx prove this.

Acer’s buying power easily trumps whatever goodwill and gamer cred Alienware and Voodoo have earned for their owners (Dell and HP). Now they will put this to work in Europe.

And boy are the Europeans ever lucky. Look at the specs delivered for 1400 Euros:

  • Intel Core 2 Quad Q9100 processor (as opposed to the 7811fx Core 2 Duo P8400)
  • NVIDIA 9800m GTS 1GB  (double the 7811fx vram)
  • 17″ 1,920 x 1,200 resolution display (the extra ram will help run games at this resolution)
  • Optional Blu-Ray drive (meh - IMO B-R is a waste of money)

I’ll be leaning on my family in Europe to send me one when this notebook launches in October.





HP’s UMPC Rush Job Explained: Here Comes Dell

9 04 2008

Daily Tech is reporting that Dell is going to enter the low cost sub notebook market (duh, of course they are - copying others is what they do).

HP released the disappointing 2133 just a few days ago. The chief complaint was the slow VIA CPU. This issue might be resolved when VIA’s next CPU comes out (it is pin compatible with the 2133’s C-7M).

The decision to release a sub-par and over-priced product probably has much to do with timing. Asus is still not well known, but competing products from Acer and Dell would be a concern for HP. Toshiba is missing the boat and has not announced an entry into this market.

Whatever else happens, expect Acer to blow the market open in a short while when they release a cheaper and faster alternative to the EEE and the 2133.





Centaur Powered HP 2133 - Beauty is Skin Deep

8 04 2008

I still don’t like the EEE, and the HP 2133 looks like it will follow suit. A neat premise, but poor value.

HP sure fit a lot of disappointment in such a svelte case. What focus group decided that $550-800 for a VIA C7 based UMPC running Vista (of all things) on 1 GB of RAM is a fair price? Read the rest of this entry »





Notebook Critic’s Interview with Toshiba Canada’s Todd Smith

12 03 2008

Todd Smith, Director of Product Marketing at Toshiba of Canada Information Systems Group (ISG) took some time recently to answer questions from myself and NBR forum members on Toshiba’s notebook lineup.

Read the rest of this entry »





HP Announces EEE Competitor

20 02 2008

Hmmm… There seems to be a trend emerging here. I guess Asus proved the market for small notebooks exists, and now lots of competitors are rushing to show they can do it better.

HP is the latest to join in on the fracas. 

Read the rest of this entry »





Review: HP dv2404

17 09 2007

Back to school shopping season is here and like every year retails are clobbering each other with hot deals in an effort to win your dollar. Having reviewed some entry level models from Toshiba and Acer in the past, I wanted to try something from HP. Their popular Pavilion line seemed like a good place to start as they offer lots of different configurations, seemingly great value and aesthetically pleasing designs.

I opted for the dv2404 model which currently sells in Canada for $599 ($649 with 12 cell battery).

Read the rest of this entry »