We talk to Rahul Sood and Mark Solomon from HP about the company's new water-cooled gaming PC
Is there anything else you want to add?
Rahul: We really believe that this is the most innovative desktop PC on the market right now, and it’s not innovation for the sake of innovation. It’s actually a customer-centric innovation, and we’re excited about it. The feedback that we’re getting is that HP has brought innovation back to the desktop space, and I also believe that it validates the fact that the Voodoo acquisition actually worked.
Agree on the last comment. WTF? Voodoo is simply a small company that had great marketing people behind it (definitely not Rahul) allowing the sale of the company to the big boys. The real movers and shakers behind Voodoo and HP Gaming are the guys you don't hear about. This punk needs to stop promoting himself and prove his abilities, if he has any at all.
Whats all this talk about Voodoo DNA inside the box? What revolutionary technology or design did Voodoo actually bring to the party? The reality distortion generator is in full gear here. Voodoo was a small company from Calgary that built high end custom machines aimed at the gaming market. They were/are successful at creating a brand in that market space as a niche player with a strong and loyal customer base. Kind of like a microbrewery with its crafted beer and loyal drinkers. We all know what happens when the big boys buy them out. Something changes .. its not the same any more. Not saying this is the situation here however Voodoo DNA? - give me a break - your customers are smarter than this spin.
cant see any major enthusiasts buying these as you cant beat the feeling of building a monster box but for off the shelf hi end gaming pc's i could see hp doing very well.
You can go in and do whatever you can on the Asus Striker motherboard. My god! how revolutionary just another pre built company trying to justify why you should buy a machine that is worse, than you could build for less money
There are plenty of people who are prepared to pay for these types of machines, I know cos I've sold a few of them! Watercooling especially creates the kind of mental block that totally puts people off building their own PC's, as does sifting through all the hardware etc to make sure the thing works. Must be a nightmare for those who know as much about PC's as I do about cars. They won't sell many but companies like Alienware, Vadim and HP have clearly shown there is a market.
I think it is a good idea, but won't the people who want a wicked gaming pc (and care about all that stuff) buy the components themselves? it'll be cheaper and mroe satisfying; the way i see it is pepole who buy things like Dell XPS are mostly people who want to play computer games and have the dollar to just buy a mega PC without making it themselves. There's a gap between enthusiasts, want to probably totally customise and buy their own components, and average slightly interested but wealthy people who want a gaming PC, and this gap isn't a gap to be filled...
Looks awesome and very well thought-out from the sounds of things. I might have opted for one of the Asus Blitz boards to get rid of the heatpipe fan and add to the look good factor (which I'm glad to see they're using with watercooling) as the chipsets+ mosfets are watercooled too, but then having SLI and Crossfire compatibility is a major boon.
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