Gateway Completes eMachines Acquisition 152
ryanjensen writes "Gateway just completed its $289.5 million deal to acquire Irvine, CA-based eMachines Thursday according to News.com. From the article: 'Many analysts believe that Gateway ultimately will abandon some or all of its namesake stores in favor of selling products at third-party retailers. However, they expect the company to continue selling Gateway-brand products, including PCs and consumer electronics, directly to its customers.'"
AMD (Score:5, Insightful)
It'll be ready in January my ass...
Re:AMD (Score:2)
Re:AMD (Score:1)
Of course, those who have downloaded the 64-bit Windows demo from MS report that it isn't ready for prime time yet, mainly because of the lack of 3rd party drivers...
And future systems from the merged companies... (Score:5, Funny)
EAT MOR CHIKIN (Score:2, Funny)
Argh Gateway (Score:1, Interesting)
I had to set up a gateway computer for my uncle a few years back, used the restore cd's and Windows kept f*cking itself up.
I could blame Microsoft for this one, but the horrid restore-menu-architecture was the source of all my anguish.
This and not having an internet connection handy really ruined my day.
Has their software improved over the years, anyone??
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:3, Informative)
It came with Win98, which ran fine on the machine. Eventually I "upgraded" to WinME, which ran fine (at least as best as can be expected from WinME) on the machine. Now it runs Win2K, which runs fine on the machine. Everything aside from the OS is still factory. And while I've wiped the drive to upgrade Windows a few times, there's never
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
I don't think it's the computer maker's job to educate their users. The users themselves should be out getting the knowledge that they need to make educated decisions. When I used to sell computers I would take every opportunity to explain to people why it would benefit them to buy something more than the cheapest thing we had, if the
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
Brilliant point sir. We may know that Mhz and real world performance are not always linked. But if WE found that out, it's not impossible for others to.
LK
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never liked Gateway. I bought a used P2-266 for really cheap. The only thing good in it was the motherboard and cpu. Everything else was mostly weird proprietary shit. The case was sick mess, and the cd-rom and floppy drives had curvy plastic on the front which made it completely clash with any other case. The power supply was
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
The early Pentium IIs they released in 1997 were standard ATX systems. As for the CD-ROM, on some models it had a curved front on the loading tray to match the decorative curved front of the case. You do know that you can replace loading trays quite easily, don't you?
The only reason why such asthetic changes were made was because many PC manufacturer
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2, Interesting)
My problem with gateway started in 2000. I had ordered a few computers from them before that in 98-99 for me and my family. I was upgrading my pc and already had a great sound card I wanted to keep. So I asked them to remove the sound card (a practice they never had a problem with before) and I was told that removing the sound card was impossible (it was a non-intergrated card btw, when I received the computer it was a SB128) I was told windows 98 required a sound card and would not run without one!!!
I wo
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:4, Informative)
Pulling crap like that really increases the support costs for a corporate network.
Because of that, now that I'm in charge of determining what brands we buy, Gateway is not on my vendor list.
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2)
The year was 1997 or so, and someone I knew was silly enough to buy one of the gateway premium systems. We're talking the 27inch monitor / TV, Harmon Karmon audio, and video digitizer. In excess of $4000 was spent on this set.
The system core was a pentium II 266 with 72pin simms, that one chipset that was common among among the pentium pro so not even a 440bx nor 440lx... I believe it was the 440fx as seen in the intel portland motherboard. No a
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:2, Funny)
I could blame Microsoft for this one, but the horrid restore-menu-architecture was the source of all my anguish.
I love the packaging with the cow motif
I love the packaging with the cow motif
For some reason I'm not blaming the software for this problem.
Re:Argh Gateway (Score:1)
Irvine, CA? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Irvine, CA? (Score:1, Flamebait)
How do you ruin complete utter crap? I've been stuck with trying to use / repair a few eMachines in my career... I honestly cannot think of a worse piece of junk. Every single design decision between cheap and useable went to cheap.
They aren't the right shape for wheel chocks, nor heavy enough for boat anchors, and they certainly aren't anything like computers!
I never had a very high opinion of Gateway (too much "we'll sell you anything, but use whatever componants we can get
eMachine bashing (Score:5, Insightful)
Other than the power supplies going out, there's not much wrong with the eMachines. As a former Best Buy employee, some of my friends and I still have Linux on the first eMachines still chugging away in our dorms/basements.
They only had 2 PCI slots? 5400rpm drives? Integrated sound card?
They were only $299!!
What did you expect?
They basically created the sub-$1000 PC market. Remember what it was like before? PC, monitor, printer, you'd walk out of the store with a $2900 dent in your VISA, and all you'd have to show for it would be an IBM Aptiva or a Packard Bell.
You could buy an eMachines for $299, get a monitor and inkjet and a copy of Deer Hunter, and you still have money to buy the kids christmas presents. We'd have people drive from 80 miles away coming to buy the new cheap computers.
Re:Irvine, CA? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Irvine, CA? (Score:1, Interesting)
Or Amiga. Oh yeah, remember that one?
I didn't even realise Gateway were still solvent, let alone in a position to throw $289.5million at an aquisition.
Re:Irvine, CA? (Score:1, Funny)
Short answer: Yes.
Long answer: Yes.
Re:Irvine, CA? (Score:1)
On the other hand, we'v
Norelco? (Score:4, Funny)
A company I used to work for bought one eMachine to see if we wanted to deploy them throughout the organization. They were horrible. came deliverred with the ram unseated so it wouldn't even boot out of the box.
After using just one eMachine, I have no idea what someone would do with the entire company.
Re:Norelco? (Score:5, Interesting)
In the early fall when I was looking for a laptop, I found the eMachines M5310 (I think it is) to offer the best bang for my buck, XP 2400+, 40 gig hd, 802.11g wifi. It's not the smallest or lightest unit to say the least, however it does it's job wonderfully, hell, I even use it for lan parties from time to time! If only Battlefield would take advantage of the wide screen.
I too back in the day came to despise the name of eMachines, but I gave them a shot. When people first see my laptop they say "I didn't know they made laptops" and walk away quite impressed.
But now Gateway... the definition of crap.
Re:Norelco? (Score:2)
Re:Norelco? (Score:2)
Maybe. But not from what I've seen. About a year ago, a buddy of mine got an eMachines from Best Buy for his kids. Upon taking it out of the box and setting it up, it started having problems. The computer would crash, the modem didn't work, etc.
I tried to help him, but nothing worked. Eventually, he exchanged the unit for another eMachines, thinking it was probably just a bad one. He ended up having the same problems with the 2nd one, and t
I use to service them. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Norelco? (Score:1)
Norelco first built the 3 headed raisors... Remington has the screens.. "The first one cuts incredibly close, the second even closer!"
Re:Norelco? (Score:2)
Norelo (a division of Philips) had their patented "lift and cut" system of rotary blades, the patent of which just ran out recently (you now see no-name brands of razors in discount stores which look just like Norelcos -- with 3 rotary heads).
Personally I never liked Norelcos, since their rotary blades irritate my skin and don't even cut close enough.
Which is why, like Victor Kiam, I prefer Remingtons.
Kiam bought Remington from Sperry before Sperry joined with Burroughs to become Unisys. [remington-products.com]
To [findlaw.com]
Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:4, Interesting)
But there is an obvious difference between the two retail stores. What are the core differences and how could things turn around Gateway or Apple's currernt trends?
Not a rhetorical question - please don't flame!
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:1, Insightful)
And, not to spark a fight, but there's no accounting for what Jobs is thinking.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:5, Insightful)
When Apple wants a good MP3 player - they create one from scratch and THEN create a market for it (iPod + iTunes Music Store)
Gateway wants an MP3 player - they copy the iPod or actually copy a clone already on the market.
Gateway wants a camera, they rebrand a Canon, Gateway wants a printer, same thing - rebrand.
When Apple was rebranding, they were in dire straits - HP inkjets - 630c rebranded as Stylewriter 4500 - Canon Inkjets - rebranded as Stylewriter 2500 Quicktake Camera (developed by Apple and exclusive to them for 6 months) but really just a rebranded Fuji DS7 camera. Apple chooses to cater to the base and to innovate. Gateway - what base do they have to cater to - a PC is a PC is a PC - if someone offered the same box $5 cheaper 2 miles closer than the Gateway Store, they'd buy it. Apple has a brand and they market and please it's customers (mostly)
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:5, Interesting)
Like it or not, most of the people who buy from a company like Gateway are not going to drive down the street to see if the same camera costs a few bucks less, they'll buy it from Gateway or even along with their desktop or laptop and have support from the same company.
A couple of years ago while getting a tour of the Gateway tech support center in Sioux Falls, SD, I was surprised when many of the end calls would end with the tech asking if there was anything else the customer needed like an scanner or digital camera, I was even more surprised that there were quite a few who would want to be transferred to a salesmen to be sold on such a device.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:5, Insightful)
True, however you've got to admit, from the marketing prospective, there is a great advantage to rebranding... the final product has your name on it! Another major advantage, this time for the customer is tech support from a single house.
Neither is an plus. For the first, you're giving your name to a product you don't control. If a company makes great products, they're going to want to keep their name on it. The only way you'll get to rebrand something is if you drop a lot of money for something good (not up Gateway's alley) or get something inferior (more common by far). So, bully, you've just attached your name to a bad product. Now, your second "advantage", you have to support it. This crappy thing you have no control over is now taking customer service away from supporting your primary product. Disaster all around.
Like it or not, most of the people who buy from a company like Gateway are not going to drive down the street to see if the same camera costs a few bucks less, they'll buy it from Gateway or even along with their desktop or laptop and have support from the same company.
Ever been to an Apple Store? They have cameras and other stuff all over the place, they're just smart enough not to label them as Apple products.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
Not sure I agree with this. If a company wants to stay in business (particularly a publicly traded company) they will want to sell their product through as many channels as they possibly can. Deals with PC manufacturers provide income that might not be earned otherwise.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
If a company wants to stay in business (particularly a publicly traded company) they will want to sell their product through as many channels as they possibly can. Deals with PC manufacturers provide income that might not be earned otherwise.
That's true, but it doesn't change my statement. Yes, they'll take what they couldn't otherwise get, but they'd still want to keep their name on a good product. It's a tight spot for all companies involved, because brand X might take the chance to go on its own
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
Don't be...at the local Sprint PCS call center the techs are now forced to sell over the phone like that. The gateway tech support people where probably forced to sell AND do tech support.
I've only worked in a single call center, but it was an inside-only center for a huge corp. I shudder when I hear the horror stories of people in other real "outs
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
Also, during an observe-and-coach session, where a manager or a senior monitor's the agent's call, if the agent doesn't try to generate a lead during the call then he/she would be marked down.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2, Insightful)
It may not be a rhetorical question, but it's not really a valid one either IMO, as it compares Apples to Orang^WGateways.
Apple's stores are always going to do bett
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2)
"What are the core differences and how could things turn around Gateway or Apple's currernt trends?" - It may not be a rhetorical question, but it's not really a valid one either IMO, as it compares Apples to Orang^WGateways.
What makes the above question invalid? "Compare two computer manufacturers' company owned retail stores." You say they are "Apples and Oranges" GREAT, it is invalid to compare and Apple and an orange? I don't think so. You can say what is similar and what is differen
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:2, Funny)
The answer, my friend, lies with today's Penny Arcade comic [penny-arcade.com]...
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:4, Insightful)
You buy from Gateway Country, and you have to wait to have it shipped. If you want instant gratification, you can go to Best Buy.
Also, people who work at Gateway Country, at least the ones I've encountered, are doing it like they'd do another retail job. Apple's stores are better because the people there care about the product they're selling. Most of them are Mac users. Also, Apple trains them to be the best.
In other words, Apple did what it does best; being the best it can, while Gateway simply rebranded.
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:1)
Re:Country Store vs. Apple Store? (Score:1)
Gateway taking a dagger? (Score:3, Informative)
My experiences with eMachines have generally been negative. I hope Gateway will fix what's broken there, or they will really screw the pooch and end up hurting themselves more than helping.
Re:Gateway taking a dagger? (Score:3, Informative)
-L
Re:Gateway taking a dagger? (Score:4, Interesting)
Straight out of the box, we removed windows ME and dropped linux on it.
Other than an HD in it, its been running as a little mail server/firewall since day one.
Re:Gateway taking a dagger? (Score:5, Insightful)
Over the last few years, I've been awfully disappointed with Gateway. Dell and HP have their problems too, but Gateway puts together overpriced crappy machines filled with cheap parts. You're paying for the 1-800...
At least with e-Machines, you get what you pay for. Gateway produces the same level of machine, but charges you a lot more for them.
Re:Gateway taking a dagger? (Score:2)
Take a look at this [resellerratings.com]. Scroll down and read the customer comments on that page. Scary. I agree Dell and HP are not too good either but they are surely better than the junk Gateway is offering. Unless they improve quality or drastically reduce pricing, they will be looking at exiting the market in 2-3 years or getting bought out.
A-bloody-men! (Score:2)
And then there was that one E-Machine we bought as a PC-based FAX center. What a disaster that was!
Can anyone confirm this Intel rumor? (Score:4, Interesting)
Let's hope these rumors are just that - rumors.
-L
Re:Can anyone confirm this Intel rumor? (Score:1, Insightful)
IANAL...
Re:Can anyone confirm this Intel rumor? (Score:1)
Re:Aha! (Score:2)
name (Score:1)
Didn't they go bankrupt? (Score:5, Interesting)
i thought gateway was on the verge of bankruptcy maybe 6 months ago. i was actually happy when i heard they were tanking . . . and now they've dropped nearly 300 million on eMachines? what?
did their plasma screens really sell THAT well?
i must have missed something here.
Re:Didn't they go bankrupt? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nice thing about such a piggy bank is you can use it to buy things you want... however it can mean that your safty net gets a bit smaller.
Re:Didn't they go bankrupt? (Score:2)
Major difference (Score:2, Funny)
I also rememebr some of the "pizza box" models where it was impractically difficult just to get the case open. Some of those things would have cut you fingertips off trying to slide the top off too fast.
I was almost expecting a hole for you to
Re:Major difference (Score:1)
Which? The cows, or the boxes?
Re:Major difference (Score:1)
Re:Major difference (Score:1)
Cost (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, it was $189.5 million with the mail-in rebate...
Re:Cost (Score:2)
birds of a feather... (Score:3, Interesting)
I actually thought gateway was trying to move OUT of the PC business, with all the consumer electronics they introduced recently. Guess not.
Re:birds of a feather... (Score:2)
There electronics business is based on mis-information. There cameras are low end retagged Cannon's and there printers are ink chugging HP's, if i'm not mistaken (print 5 test/set-up pages to really get those inks down). However, what makes me really mad is the Plasma screens that they sell. They should have to make it completely clear that those "digital flat panels" are not full Hi Def. but are EDTV. Not that EDTV isn't great, my room mate has one in our apartment and a DVD looks just as good on our E
Re:birds of a feather... (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm not sure how it's going to work out, but the CEO of eMachines is taking over both comapnies post-merger. Maybe he'll have more business sense than the founder and actually play off the company's strengths instead of jumping off in an ever-shifting list of random direct
eMachines - a good thing. (Score:5, Informative)
Aside from the last one, each is essentially used for word processing, email, and web. And they do that well. Each has been in use for at least 2 years, and I've only had to perform one hardware related task on any one of them. (To be fair, my father jammed a screwdriver in the floppy drive to help get the disk out. Argh.)
They've been great machines for the non-computationally-intensive tasks that these people use them for.
I'm 6 for 6 and will continue recommend these machines for the casual user.
Re:eMachines - a good thing. (Score:2, Informative)
They've been great machines for the non-computationally-intensive tasks that these people use them for.
But don't think that there not suitable for computationally-intensive tasks. I've just had my two Athlon XP 2600+ eMachines mini towers ($550 a piece) running hydrodynamical simulations of pulsating stars for a month. As part of the run, I also had a SunFire V480 4-cpu machine (~ $35,000) crunching along side, and the two eMachines whipped its but!
Re:eMachines - a good thing. (Score:2)
If you need machines for computationally-intensive tasks, wouldn't you want ECC memory?
I don't think that ECC memory help with computationally-intensive tasks; basically, numerical modelling requires high computational throughput but not high availability. If one of the machines crashes, then I reboot it and restart the job (note: this has never actually occurred).
In my case, jobs only take 10 minutes, so I wouldn't lose much during a crash. However, for longer jobs, checkpointing can be used to avoid
Other retailers (Score:2)
Many analysts believe that Gateway ultimately will abandon some or all of its namesake stores in favor of selling products at third-party retailers
I recently bought a gateway M505X [gateway.com] laptop at Office Depot. I chose it over eMachines, Toshiba, Sony, Dell and Compaq. It is a great machine and I could just buy it without waiting for it to ship...
I have never seen a gateway computer at a besybuy or compusa though...
Re:Other retailers (Score:2)
Thought this was obvious but (Score:1, Redundant)
Bleh (Score:5, Interesting)
Company exec decides he doesn't like the IBM thinkpads we've speced and goes out on his own and buys a Gateway laptop (this is roughly 2000).
We say fine, but we aren't responsible for hardware support as it breaks the standard...right...like that works... For some reason exec can't get his Palm to sync up over the serial connection.
Enter me: 4 long frustrating days spent trying everything under the sun to get this beast syncing. Palm syncs on three other desktops and two other laptops with no problem, install it on gateway and nothing.
Tech call #1 to gateway...OS is corrupt reload from rescue disk. Tech call #2, palm is bad...explain that it works everywhere but on gateway.
Tech call #3...CSR almost gets the balls to tell me gateway doesn't support palm, I inform him that I aint yo mammys foo.
Tech call #4 after talking with 2 differnt people I am finally transferred to "level three" support. Guy comes on the phone, reads case notes and says simply "That model's serial port is defectivly impemented, it will not work, you'll need to get later revision..blah blah blah..."
Laptop goes back the next day for full refund, exec gets a fsking thinkpad and has to explain why the seinor IT guy spent 4 days fsking around with his crappy out of standard laptop. He was gone a month later.
I could swear I... (Score:2, Funny)
(Shrug) Gateway stores won them ONE customer... (Score:4, Interesting)
She bought a Gateway specifically because of retail stores where she could look at the stuff, try it, and talk to real, helpful retail salespeople. Plus she liked the idea of her computer coming in a box that looks like a cow.
I don't know what the answer is, but the computer industry is still in a state of self-denial about how difficult and intimidating computer purchases are for the average person. PCs are actually harder to buy, install, and use then they were five years ago. Mail-order is not the answer for everyone, nor are "warehouse" clubs or computer superstores.
I don't know why retail hand-holding isn't working out for Gateway. But I know without it, they would have had one less sale.
Re:(Shrug) Gateway stores won them ONE customer... (Score:1)
Re:(Shrug) Gateway stores won them ONE customer... (Score:2)
She bought a Gateway specifically because of retail stores where she could look at the stuff, try it, and talk to real, helpful retail salespeople. Plus she liked the idea of her computer coming in a box that looks like a cow.
I don't know if it was the particular Gateway store she went to but I find Gateway Country Store employees to be aggrivating and useless. I knew a person that worked for a Gateway store. He was your typical "I play games on my computer and I installed my own
Re:(Shrug) Gateway stores won them ONE customer... (Score:2)
A quality match. (Score:3, Interesting)
What Gateway needs more than anything else is a QA dept, and not another low-bid business. Over a 4-5 year period from 92-97, their computers went from predictable usable machines to absolute and utterly complete crap. I call it the low-bid phenomenom. Initially, they started low-bidding parts, so that if you palced an order for 20, or even 5 PCs, you had about 90% chance of getting at least 3 different configurations even if you ordered the exact same PC. (namely - different motherboard and memory manufacturers, other peripherals as well though). This lost them lots of business. Then they "dropped" the continuous low-bid philosphy, going for long-term low-bid contracts. yeah. Then we got the infamous 1 in 2 Viewsonic monitors and power supplies dying.
After going through about 2000 monitors, we stopped buying Gateway, forever, as the quality never has been rated anywhere equal to Dell. (Why'd we buy 4000 systems, very large organization, with large upgrade needs at the time, and they were an approved vendor with the best price. For some mysterious reason, after all the problems, everyone seemed to favor Dell for their next upgrade purchase. out of 500 machines ordered in the next year, we had 2 bad hard drives, and 1 bad keyboard.)
Having excellent customer service just doesn't compete with not needing customer service at all.
Re:A quality match. (Score:2)
Re:A quality match. (Score:2)
So, will the m6807 come back? (Score:4, Interesting)
So, Gateway, eMachines had a great laptop there, don't fuck it up.
Check out the new HP zv5000z Athlon 64 notebook (Score:2)
Re:Check out the new HP zv5000z Athlon 64 notebook (Score:2)
Re:So, will the m6807 come back? (Score:2)
Whos on top (Score:1)
Love Gateway Computers (Score:4, Interesting)
The past two years have been excellent with them. If you order a hundred systems, they'll be identical so you can image and deploy them easily. They have inexpensive long-term warranties and tech-support that will help you out when you have a complex problem. I've had them send me a better monitor when one of theirs burned out. It was there the next day, even before I'd packed up the old one to ship back.
Their cases are nice to work in now. Completely toolless to install cards and drives. The edges are rounded so no more coming out of an upgrade missing a finger tip.
We even have a few Gateway servers now and we've been very happy with them. Absolutely no problems.
I've always liked their laptops better than Dell, Compaq, HP, or Toshiba.
Yes, the first three years they weren't very fun to work with. You'd order a hundred and you'd get three different video cards, four different network cards, different motherboards, in any given machine. That's a huge pain in the ass when you are trying to image and deploy those in a corporate environment.
Don't even get me started on their "if you open the case or install any software you've voided the warranty" bullshit during those few years.
But that's turned around. They are a good computer company, and an antidote to the Dell hegemony in the PC world.
Wahooo! (Score:1, Funny)
No complaints about Gareway from me (Score:4, Informative)
And they'd also send us a real live sales rep who'd come to visit us a few times a year and show us the actual roadmap, so we could forecast our ordering appropriately. Dell and Compaq wouldn't bother doing that for us because we weren't big enough to justify actual face time (we had about 150+ users).
Nowadays, though, as I mentioned above what's left of my old company is living La Vida HP, reliability problems and all. And I've got my own place now, and I used Dell systems to set up my training lab (even though I can't stand 'em), because I just couldn't pass up the $150/box I was saving over the equivalent Gateway. Bummer. But that's the market position Gateway's been in. The big companies don't take them seriously versus Dell, HP, and IBM, and the little price-conscious companies can't afford them. At least eMachines helps them in the price-fixated marketplace.
Re:abandoning stores? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:E-machines rock! (Score:2, Funny)