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Emachines Builds Line With Multimedia, Business PCs

Retail upstart unveils notebooks, enters consumer electronics and small business markets.

Emachines is looking to move beyond its basic beige boxes for consumers by releasing early next year a portable multimedia unit, two business-oriented desktops, and three new notebooks.

The new selection, especially the snazzy audio-video device, are part of the company's mission to "push the envelope in the crossover between computers and consumer electronics," says Stephen Dukker, president and chief executive officer.

The new E3 series is the company's first crossover product and will merge features of a PC, television, personal video recorder, boom box, and more, he says. The E3 is a new design, not a kludge, Dukker says. It's not simply a PC with audio and video features added. "This is not a crappy television and boom box. It going to be good at everything," he says.

The device is completely integrated--even the speakers and a subwoofer. It is 17 inches tall, 14 inches wide, 4 inches thick, and weighs about 12 pounds. It will include a 12.1-inch active-matrix display, he says.

Detailed hardware specifications aren't yet available, but it will probably include an 800-MHz to 1-GHz processor, a 20GB hard drive, integrated graphics, and 64MB of memory. It's expected to cost about $1000, Dukker says. The unit will also include an Ethernet card and modem, a PC Card slot, and a Firewire port. Emachines expects to ship the E3 near the end of the first quarter of 2001, selling it through the company's current retailers and directly, including online.

Emachines is clearly thinking outside of the beige box, notes Stephen Baker, vice president of technology products research at PC Data. "The company is definitely thinking about different ways of doing things," he says.

Emachines already markets an Internet appliance. It recently introduced the $349 MSN Companion, designed primarily for consumer e-mail and Web browsing.

Targeting Small Business

Introducing several desktops geared specifically to small and medium-size businesses is also smart, Baker says. Emachines plans to ship two Windows 2000-based systems in January: the ETower 700net and the EMonster 800net, both priced under $1000.

Emachines hasn't had much success selling more expensive consumer systems, so targeting business buyers with less expensive PCs makes sense, Baker says.

"The company has built a strong brand as an entry-level PC maker," he says. If it takes that tack in the business market, it could be a good opportunity, he adds.

In fact, about 15 percent of Emachines' desktop sales are already business sales, says CEO Dukker. Because the company can offer lower price tags, it expects to fill a gap in the business market.

"Big corporations buy from companies like Dell, Compaq, HP, and IBM," Dukker says. Because large companies buy in quantity, each PC carries a low price. Small businesses don't have that luxury, but Emachines aims to offer them PCs that are configured and priced similarly to what other vendors provide to big buyers, he says.

Emachines will market its new desktop business systems through retailers, direct sales, and value-added resellers, Dukker says. The ETower 700net will sell for less than $600 and will include a 700-MHz Celeron, 64MB of memory, a 48X CD-ROM drive, a 10GB hard drive, a V.90 modem, and an Ethernet card. The EMonster 800net has an 800-MHz Pentium III, 64MB of memory, a 48X CD-ROM drive, a 30GB hard drive, a V.90 modem, and an Ethernet card for less than $900. Neither system price includes a monitor.

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