VoodooPC
Voodoo responds to closure rumors
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by Matt Burns on September 24, 2008

Late last week, a rumor broke that HP might be giving its gamer enthusiast brand, Voodoo, the boot. Turns out, that wasn’t entirely true as it sounds like Voodoo is going to be brought in under the HP umbrella similarly like Compaq. In fact, this was first announced a few months ago, proving that the Internet rumor mill is a crazy, crazy bastard. 

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Hewlett-Packard shutting down VoodooPC?
by Matt Burns on September 22, 2008

Classify this as rumor right now, but from the sounds of it, VoodooPC might not be around much longer. Ironic too, that the boutiques two year purchase anniversary is coming up on Sept 28, that the doors might be shutting soon. Details are still sketchy at best but there are reports that the division is returning products to suppliers and an internal HP email indicating approaching layoffs. It’s a pity too ’cause Voodoo just released the amazing Envy 133 3.4 lb Apple Air-killer and the $7k Omen desktop so this decision is probably coming from the bean counters. If the division’s wares aren’t selling, it’s gotta go.

More to come as we get it.

techgage via TGdaily

VoodooPC Announces Quad-Core Gaming Rig
by Raj Patel on November 3, 2006

If you’re in the market for a new gaming computer, then take a look at the new quad-core Omen from VoodooPC. The Omen features Intel’s new quad-core Core 2 Duo Extreme processors, 2GB DDR2 RAM, 80GB hard drive and a Creative Labs X-Fi Xtreme Music sound card. The Omen is fully upgradeable, but with its $5,500, you may want to add the additional hardware yourself.

VoodooPC uses an intercooler and an “advanced chamber airflow layout” to keep the PC cool and quiet. Though VoodooPC says the Omen is a near-silent system, I’d have to try it out for myself before I believed that. Even though high-end gamings PCs have liquid cooling, they still have normal fans you can hear. As for video cards, you can pick between ATI Radeons and Nvidia GeForces. If you want to go for the gold, you might want to put in two GeForce 7950s making for a quad-core CPU and a quad-SLI setup.

VoodooPC Announces Quad-Core Gaming Rig [slashgear]

Big Brand Vs. Boutique: Does It Really Matter?
by Josh Goldman on October 4, 2006

HP buying VoodooPC last week and Dell purchasing Alienware earlier this year, there’s been more than a few comments around the Web on how these mainstream vendors will impact the quality of the boutiques. The fact is, many companies have high-end, mainstream and value brands, so why should computer vendors be any different? HP and Dell deserve some credit for realizing that just because they know how to build a performance desktop, doesn’t mean they can provide everything gamers want, which includes a brandname that’s not synonymous with the mainstream.

But, to illustrate just what the differences are between a large, mainstream-vendor gaming box and a boutique machine, ExtremeTech did a little head-to-head testing on a $3,745 Gateway FX510XT and a Falcon Northwest Mach V priced at $7,295. The focus was on widescreen gaming using tests of Half-Life 2: Lost Coast, Call of Duty 2, Company of Heroes, Doom 3, F.E.A.R. and Prey.

The results were slightly surprising, with the Gateway running pretty close in performance on most graphics tests, despite the Falcon’s quad-SLI setup to the Gateway’s CrossFire array; processor performance went to the Mach V with a faster, overclocked CPU. While ExtremeTech cited several other reasons the Mach V tops the FX510XT, in the end it said Gateway built a solid mainstream gaming system. Falcon’s desktop, though, comes with bragging rights.

The Falcon and the Bull: A Wide Screen Shootout [ExtremeTech]

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