HP to Offer Custom Compaq Gaming PCs 253
PunkerTFC writes "Announced in the run-up to E3, Hewlett-Packard will offer custom built-to-order gaming machines under the Compaq brand, according to Reuters. The machines will be avalible in June or July and 'offer a range of options with standard, off-the-shelf components.' HP has been selling a Compaq gaming machine on a limited basis through a few select retailers already - apparently, 'Those pilot sales... convinced the company that it could compete in a market where well-known specialty manufacturers like Alienware, Voodoo and Falcon Northwest face increasing competition from mainstream players like Dell Inc'. The X Gaming machines will feature 'a standard chassis from CoolerMaster, known for its work in keeping system noise down while also decreasing heat, and red glowing lights in front and back what will make it stand out in the dark.'"
Heh. (Score:3, Funny)
If I call up asking for a machine to play Marathon they'll build me a Mac? Sweet!
Re:Heh. (Score:2)
Paper airplane action, here I come!
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Re: (Score:2)
Re:Heh. (Score:2, Interesting)
Marathon was the 1st LAN FPS I'd ever played. I worked for Val-Pak DMS (was brought on-board to help with their migration from Mac's to Pc's for business) and we all had Mac's. Someone loaded up Marathon for us and we'd usually stick around after our shift to play for an hour or more (of course, we'd play any chance we'd get during the shift as well :) )
I can only remember one particular map in detail, it had a central circular platform with multi-level open tunnels running around
Re:Well... (Score:3, Informative)
Not to mention Escape Velocity: Nova, which r0x0red.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
Not bad for the platform designed to actually get work done!
Re:Well... (Score:3, Informative)
Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:5, Insightful)
At the moment, those with case mods are the people who know how to mod their machines, and actually know a little. They do it partly for the kudos, but also for the fun.
But I can just imagine your standard 1337 gamer wanting to have a console looking like that, but unable to do so. And some of them, many of them, would pay for the priveledge.
So no, although those currently who have mods, won't buy this thing, there is probably a market who will, who haven't been able to get modded machines before.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:5, Insightful)
While this is all true, it's nice once in a while to have a computer under warranty, with the components rigorously tested and certified to work well together. I'd often get add-on components and realize the power supply wasn't able to support new gaming hardware, or the new component turned out to be excessively noisy. There's a lot of gamers out there who would prefer to spend the time playing games rather than mucking about with worrying about such factors with the hardware.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Insightful)
RE: with the components rigorously tested and certified to work well together
We are talking about HP here..... The consumer PC lines don't test crap before then send them out....
I was one of the lead resource technicians for the HP Pavilion line for 3 years (97-2000)... and I stopped counting how many times they put out a machine that wouldn't work properly with alot of the consumer level scanners and printers out of the box....
HP's compatibility testing for consumer products is NON-EXISTANT
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Insightful)
I haven't bought a completely new computer for my main box since 1999. I've been upgrading this and that here and there, and everything on the machine has as of now been swapped out (450Mhz K6II -> 800Mhz PIII -> 1800+ AMD XP). However, it's starting to get to the point where I really want a machine where all the parts are of the same computing era, and are under warranty. So I've been looking at a new system built by monarch, with a 3 year extended parts/labor warranty. It's honestly appealing. And it's not devoid entirely of nerdishness - I am going to select every part on the list...
By the way... The cause for my want to upgrade w/ warranty is the death of my 1 year old video card. Buyer beware: PNY "Lifetime Warranty" = Shelf Lifetime of product = for computer parts, rarely longer than 8 months. Plus receipt required (why? it's obviously a PNY).
Anyway, Warranties are ranking as the number 1 reason for not building it yourself, at least in my mind.
~Will
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:3, Insightful)
I had a system that was pretty similar to yours, a 750MHz AMD Athlon Thunderbird. It was pretty fast, but didn't multitask well. So all at once, I bought parts to build a new system. With all I'd learned from my previous experiences, I was able to build one that was extremely reliable. I bought an ASUS motherboard (Very Important!) a P4 (though if I bought one now you can bet it would be an AMD64 of some variety), a gig of dual-cha
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:2, Funny)
And you want this from HP/Compaq?
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:2)
You won't be wanting a Compaq then. My last PC at work was a Compaq, and the whole batch were shite. The onboard audio was noisy, the GeForce was stuck permanently in PCI mode and the CD and floppy drives were suspect.
Personally, I'd never buy another Compaq, but then excepting my first PC and the one I bought my gf, I've built all mine anyway.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Insightful)
My current rig is a HP xw8000. Same joy. The #2 HDD - a Seagate 10k 70GB cuda - died. Hardly HPs fault. Called support. Part arrived next day with return ship label.
Yes - there are plenty of crap machines with the HP or Compaq moniker. They do make good high end workstations, though, and a gamer PC is much more like a workstation than a celeron secretary special.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Interesting)
After-all, mod = modify. If it was just the windows, lights and custom fans that made case mods cool, then we'd call them case accessories, or some-other innane term.
However, there are plenty of die-hard gamers who have no clue as to what to do inside their computers. These folks buy 'gaming PCs'. Of course, the popular ones don't include pre-fab 'case mods', just seats for where case-mods could go.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, I could be wrong, but a few years ago I said: "I don't think anybody will buy a Chrysler PT Cruiser. The kind of person who wants something like that will make one ( e.g., like a hot-rod ) from an old panel truck."
Boy, was I wrong.
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:3, Interesting)
All they are going todo is take business away from the small shops.
Your right its all wannabes! There are atleast 10 w
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is this going to be a popular serivce? (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think it's a coincidence that they were a dying company before HP (incredibly foolishly) spent a bucket of money to buy them out, apparently in the theory that lashing two sinking ships together will make both float.
The Compaq brand is a terrible choice here. Even if they actually DO manage to shake off their slimy marketing habits, how many gamers are going to be convinced? They should have come up with a new label. A brand is supposed to help, or at least do no harm, but "Compaq" is an active hurdle to acceptance by the target market.
Red lights! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Red lights! (Score:2)
Re:Red lights! (Score:5, Funny)
Red lights = + 5 FPS
Blue Lights = + 7 FPS
LED Fans = +12 FPS
Case Window = +6 FPS
Window Etching = +2 FPS
Anti RIAA sticker = +27 FPS
Anti MPAA sticker = +14 FPS
Wife / girlfriend / parental oversight on your mod spending habits = -2200 FPS
Re:Red lights! (Score:2, Funny)
Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:5, Interesting)
So it's odd to see them choose their cheaper brand to be their game box, since game boxes are by definition amped up versions of regular machines.
Maybe they just think Compaq sounds a lot cooler than Hewlett-Packard.
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:5, Informative)
I suppose some market survey showed that Compaq owners did this more often than HP owners, or that people who were a bit more into hardware specs looked more favorably on the compaq name.
Toward the end of Compaq's stand-alone life, they were actually using some nice, deskpro-derived towers and were one of the first big-name companies to embrace the Athlon processor in their higher-range consumer equipment. They were also a big supporter of the Athlon/DDR combo during the P4A days when the only non-RDRAM chipset from intel supported PC133 SDRAM. Both of those things would indicate that, at least from a strategy standpoint, Compaq might have counted on their customers being slightly more informed on the hardware side of things than otherwise. Or it might just have been a gamble, who knows?
Again, I swear the first point about the enthusiast brand was from one of their official statements post-merger, where they started talking about what lines from each company would be dropped. Given those sorts of examples, though, I don't think it's too terribly far fetched.
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:3, Informative)
Compaqs on the other hand (especially the ones with the blue swirly fronts) were great. The side popped of, the power supply was to the north of the motherboard instead of in the way, it was eas
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:2)
x86 platform = All Compaq gear, HP would continue selling HP brand workstations to stores for contract obligations
unix platform = HPUX is the only one, Dec VMS dead
printers = HP is the only one, Compaq lexmark deal would not be
Compaq always had a superior x86 line than HP. True HP would sell higher-end products, but only in the enterprise space. No matter how smoking fast & high-end this end user product is, it is still an end user product.
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:2)
Re:Odd Choice of Brands, Maybe (Score:4, Informative)
Fine for the kids (Score:4, Insightful)
X, X, X!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
This country sucks!
Re:X, X, X!!! (Score:5, Funny)
They should just sell case badges... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:They should just sell case badges... (Score:2)
Re:They should just sell case badges... (Score:2)
Red lights (Score:5, Funny)
Can't... resist... red glowing lights...
Re:Red lights (Score:2)
Open the pod bay doors, Hal.
commercials... (Score:4, Insightful)
But will they [HP] top AlienWare's commercial that airs on TechTV?
All HP has to do is throw in an AMD Athlon64 into the machine and they'll top *Dull* (err, Dell) since Dell is an Intel-only screwdriver operation, for now.
Speaking of Dell, has anyone seen the commericals to the NetFlix competitor starring the former *Dell Dude*?
Umm... (Score:2, Funny)
..red glowing lights in front and back.. (Score:4, Insightful)
For those truly l33t gamer/night joggers. You really aren't an extreme gamer until you've hit the wall at the 30th mile at 3:00 am while fragging.
I've Seen These Pilots... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, gamers who buy these gaming systems rather than building their own rigs go a lot for cool factor, name-brand recognition, and bragging rights. I think the fact that it's a Compaq may hurt this.
"Yeah, I have an Alienware Area-51"
"Sweet, I just got a Dell XPS laptop."
"Yeah, well, I got a Compaq gaming tower!"
See what I mean?
ahhh Nostalgia (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:ahhh Nostalgia (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Hopeless. (Score:5, Interesting)
Enthusiasts won't pay these prices for a machine from HP. They should at least do like Sony, and pretend to be a different company for their better products.
Re:Hopeless. (Score:3, Interesting)
At work my whole team's been given Compaq desktops, and we're now upgraded to these 'low-profile' machines that are making the rounds.
Both models have had serious issues. Out of four, we've had one die with a motherboard failure and a second with a dead hard drive. The graphics chip (Intel) in it is crap (or perhaps the drivers are), for it hard locks the machine sometimes while the screensaver is on.
As for the servers (Compaq DL360) and the racks they sit in,
Re:whatever troll. (Score:2)
You have owned one machine made by this company. I'm glad it's worked out for you. Anecdotes are statistically meaningless, especially when drawn from such a small sample.
Did HP charge you c. $10 US to ship you a restore CD? That's what our customers got charged. It also took (on average) two weeks to get the CD. HP started this little stunt when they began shipping boxes loaded with XP, on the stated premise that it would be easier for end-users to r
Re:whatever troll. (Score:2)
Glad to hear eMachines have got real power supplies these days.
Frankly, sir, you sound like a consumer whose pride was wounded when someone else criticized the manufacturer you bought your machine from and then had the temerity to back it up!
Its not so much that my pride is/was wounded; its more like people bitching about comcast cable modem service. What it comes down to is YMMV, plain and simple. Speaking of which: We had a crazy thunderstorm last night- power was off and on
Build yer own (Score:5, Informative)
A hot gaming system nowadays mostly consists of a $300 video card and whatever hardware will support it. Get the a AMD 64bit chip, a good mobo (Abit, Asus, etc.), some fast RAM (Corsair, etc) and your looking at a system under $1500 that will kick the snot out of their proposed $3K system.
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
The only way to ensure great performance and longevity of your PC investment is to build your own. Even if you spend the same amount of money, you will get quality components that will run circles around the OEM machine.
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
Yeah, it was no hot box, but it works well and was very cheap to build, while I know people who've paid twice
Re:Build yer own (Score:4, Insightful)
Er... show me a $400 Dell that's worth upgrading only the RAM, video, and optical drive. At that price you're looking at low-end Celeron units w/ 128MB of memory and built-in video. It's probably cheaper than what I could put together from parts, but my parts will be of considerably higher quality.
As per you, to get that Dell up to speed you'll need to buy a new video card ($130), burner ($80), and memory ($250). Total cost at this point is $910.
Or you can, for $115 more, have an Athlon64 3000+, quiet HSF (Zalman), top end motherboard, an 8-in-1 reader, vastly improved sound quality, faster memory, firewire, more USB ports, no issues with integrated video, a better motherboard, and probably some other stuff I forgot.
Two weeks ago I bought, for $750 shipped, a case w/ 420W PSU, Athlon64 3000+, Zalman HSF, Chaintech ZNF3-150 MB, 1 GB DDR-400 memory, and a DVD+/-RW 8x burner. Toss in another $270 for a HD, video, monitor, keyboard, and mouse and you have a respectible gaming machine. You can quibble with the video card, but it's the same price for either machine to improve it. Except that a higher end video card will rapidly outstrip the Celeron 2400 CPU in the Dell... not so with the Ath64 3000+.
To get a roughly equivalent system from Dell, BTW, is around $2000. If you strip it down and buy the parts you suggest OEM then it still around $1500. Oh, and my case is quite a bit nicer than the one from Dell.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
Seriously...unless you really need to save money (e.g., you're in school), you probably want to buy your PC. These days, you don't save ALL that much money, and most of these systems come with 3 to 5 year warranties. If you don't care about brushed aluminum and red LEDs, you can plunk a $300 video card
Own Support (Score:3, Insightful)
I build systems for myself and often for family and friends. When my parents needed a new computer and I was at college I suggested getting a Dell. Big mistake.
According to my parents the computer worked fine for a few days but then they heard a clicking noise when the computer was turned on. Of cou
Re:Own Support (Score:2)
The key is the term "on site." That means somebody will come to your house when it breaks. This person is NOT an Indian. They are a trained technician. You pay extra for this service, but it is worth it. "Free phone support" is an anagram for "Compelte waste of time."
No, really: Build yer own (Score:2)
Personally, I'll never purchase a prebuilt desktop again. I put together my own last year, and it's worked awesome. I've never had a hardware problem (I did do a ton of research though - it certainly payed off), and the worst of my software issues was a M$ "security update" that made windows refuse to boot (Safe Mode and System Restore saved my ass on that one). Otherwise it was pretty simple. Putting together the hardware was a snap (almost literally)
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
Antec "Piano Quiet" case
2 x Enermax 120mm adjustable speed fans
MSI Motherboard NForce2 Audio/Lan/SATA/Dual Chan DDR400
AMD XP 3200+ Barton 640K 400Mhz FSB
ThermalTake Heatsink/fan
2 x 512MB Corsair Mid-grade DDR400 RAM (1GB Total)
ATI (ati brand) Radeon 9800 XT 256MB 8xAGP
SoundBlaster Audigy OEM
w/ 3 year warranty parts/labor
w/ assembly cost included
Comes to about $1500. Less than their machine, I'm sure, and probably able to
Re:Build yer own (Score:2)
SATA Hard Drive 200GB Maxtor 8MB cache
This might be good... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmmm... Methinks there's no news here. (Score:5, Insightful)
OK, OK, a lot of assumptions, but what I'm trying to say is that I can't imagine that this'll be popular with real gamers.
So, if this service is not going to be used by real gamers, who will order a specialist games PC? Probably the kind of numpty who would order a PC from the likes of HP/Dell/Whatever anyway. If this is the case, then we're not talking about news of earth-shattering importance. It's just a manufacturer introducing a new range to try to grab new market share. Just like soap powder manufacturers introducing a new powder to try to grab more market share.
So...
Move along, there's nothing to see....
Nick.
Re:Hmmmm... Methinks there's no news here. (Score:2)
What you're missing is that this a mainstream manufacturer seeing gaming as a big business opportunity. Obviously they're not the first, but it's another example of how gaming has become a part of mainstream cultrue.
Real gamers build their computers.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Then, there's the gamer dork. Gamer dork spends $2000 extra for an Alienware. He brags to his friends about how awesome it is. Then, he screws it up with spyware and it runs slow. Then, he pays Gamer Nerd $50 and a 12-pack to fix it.
Perhaps if Compaq offered a real savings over building the computer yourself, Gamer Nerd will be interested in it. However, Gamer Nerd quickly sees that $2000 of the price of the computer is for unneeded software, brand name, and unneeded support.
Re:Real gamers build their computers.. (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't know a lot of "gamer nerds" or overclockers, do you?
Re:Real gamers build their computers.. (Score:2)
Re:Real gamers build their computers.. (Score:2)
Most gamer nerds I know usually clock their systems back down a few notches during actual LAN play, so that they can actually finish the game. Real people into the game will take a minor quality hit for stabili
Re:Real gamers build their computers.. (Score:2)
I think there needs to be something said for the one-stop shop on actually get a hope of getting the damn thing fixed rather than getting the run-around on whose fault it was.
The Compaq brand is the 100% wrong move (Score:5, Informative)
Obligatory SImpsons reference (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Obligatory SImpsons reference (Score:2)
For those who have strong opinions... (Score:2)
So... does someone have a guide to picking components for a game machine? What are the dangers?
Would it make sense to plop down t
Re:For those who have strong opinions... (Score:2)
Another good source for suggestions on best hardware for your price range is the buyer's guides [sharkyextreme.com] at Sharky Extreme. Monthly (approximately) they put together the best gamer box they can for $1,000 [sharkyextreme.com], $2,500 [sharkyextreme.com], and $4,000 [sharkyextreme.com].
Re:For those who have strong opinions... (Score:2)
m-
Re:For those who have strong opinions... (Score:2)
Are there any compatibility problems with using an Athlon64 as versus a P4?
Thanks!
m-
Markworth is wrong. (Score:5, Interesting)
Nope. You also can lose it over time, which HP and Compaq are notorious for. At this point, I trust the HP mid-to-high-end laser printers... and nothing else they make. I used to swear by HP scanners and calculators, but almost everything they make is going downhill in ergonomics and durability, even when the performance isn't crap to begin with.
Credibility? (Score:2)
"Credibility is something you only earn over time," he said. "HP with its Compaq brand has a huge advantage in stepping in as a newer player."
No, it doesn't.
Re:Credibility? (Score:2)
For the relatively technically uninitiated, though, I think it might be a different story. They don't necessarily know about the reliability issues I'm seeing people post about here. What they do know is that HP/Compaq are brands that they've heard of and recognize. These are brands that they expect will be around
Re:Credibility? (Score:2)
DVD+R in HP machines (Score:2, Informative)
Re:DVD+R in HP machines (Score:3, Insightful)
Call me crazy... (Score:3, Informative)
Looks are fine, and I got nothing against case modding. Hell, I painted my Pentium 100 PC's case neon orange back in 1995 or 1996, before weird cases became popular. That's beside the point. A gaming rig is meant for high powered, speed processing for lightning fast 3d gaming. Anything else is just extraneous.
And a pre-bought modded case, stamped out on a line, kinda strikes me as lame as hell. The point of case modding is to make something impressive. Seeing 100 copies of the same thing is no longer impressive. Okay, I might buy parts and mod it, or I might buy a modded case and put it together with some of my own addons, or I might even have somebody else do a custom paint job for me because I lack that kind of expertise or artistic ability... but these are more timesavers than anything else. Buying a whole pre-modded system out of a catalog is just silly and not l33t.
I realize that HP bought compaq (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I realize that HP bought compaq (Score:2)
Re:I realize that HP bought compaq (Score:2)
Got one (Score:2, Interesting)
l33t gamers...not the market! (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a ton of once-l33t gamers now growing into adults (gasp!) with much less time to solve component-conflicts and video driver problems. We're looking for the silver bullet solution, and willing to pay extra for it. And our numbers grow with each birth.
-Laetor
Re:l33t gamers...not the market! (Score:3, Informative)
I've seen the machines at Best Buy, and I really don't see much to object to. They are pretty nic
Modding no longer cool? (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't it the whole "I did it myself and it's different than a `normal' PC" the point?
You know its fast when its name has X in it. (Score:2, Funny)
custom-built Compaqs? RUN AWAY!!! (Score:2)
$1599? (Score:3, Insightful)
A pretty darn fantastic gaming machine can be built for aroung $800. Why can't HP use a little bit of that leverage of theirs and assemble a machine for us at this price?
Torx screws (Score:2)
Chip H.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sounds like British grammar: "It's people like you what cause unrest. [jumpstation.ca]"