Where is gateway made




















We intend to test and review at least one of them here soon—but in the meantime, we'd advise some caution with the new "Gateway" brand. You must login or create an account to comment. Jim Salter. Jim Salter Jim is an author, podcaster , mercenary sysadmin, coder , and father of three—not necessarily in that order.

Email jim. The only thing I liked about it was the novel teal color and the goofy-looking cow on the default wallpaper. It runs a surprisingly long time, given all that: 8 hours. But using this for 8 hours would be something of a gauntlet of constant frustration. If you absolutely have to have a small Windows laptop with a touchscreen, look around for a used one instead of buying this Gateway. That would be a mistake, assuming that your budget can stretch.

With a little extra dough, this Gateway laptop comes with some serious upgrades: a quite new 10th-gen Core i5 processor, GB of SSD storage, and a fingerprint reader built into the touchpad. It lasted for about 8 hours on a charge in my testing. Between the new processor and plenty of memory, it runs Windows 10 like a champ, even with a few bloatware programs thrown on top.

But what really surprised me was on the bottom: an old-fashioned expansion slot! I grabbed a screwdriver, removed the cover, and found something extremely surprising. It appears to have only two settings: off and blender, loud enough to be heard on the other end of a conference call. There are much worse ways to spend six hundred bucks on a laptop.

You could buy two of those Between the three Gateway models I checked out, one was a complete dud the small laptop , the other was a little below the level of competitive the Android tablet , and one was a surprising value.

Even if your budget is so constrained that your options for new laptops are limited to Walmart shelves, you might want to consider used laptops first—odds are pretty good that you can find an older mid-range model that will suit your purposes better than any Celeron-powered laptop sold today. The above article may contain affiliate links, which help support Review Geek.

By , it was the the top company on the Inc. It all revolves around the way we do things. Gateway was notable in that, like Dell, it leaned hard on the ability to customize computers.

The company did not have a place in stores at the time, so much of its sales took place via mail order. And by using mail-order, the company could give users specific say in what they wanted for their laptop or desktop.

However, the way it did things would quickly run into challenges. The mail-to-order business started to face challenges with shipping its computers on time, and despite having more than 1, employees at the time according to Bloomberg , there would be delays of weeks and major quality control issues. You know a great way to solve challenges with delays and quality control issues?

It faced challenges in finding enough employees in South Dakota, but it kept those workers on the job. Later, it built other regional factories in other relatively low-cost-of-living cites such as Hampton, Virginia. At its height, Gateway had an effective business model: highly custom PC clones sold through the mail and promoted in magazines, with an audience that attracted enthusiasts and small businesses. But this model had weaknesses. For one thing, it gave Gateway no real way to expand into international markets; for another, it meant that the company had no retail presence to speak of; and for a third, it meant that any competitor could come in and disrupt it by finding a way to lower prices.

The firm conducted a number of experiments, two of which it was well-known for. The TV screen was a inch monitor —an absolutely massive size for , because it was a giant CRT. The mail-order showrooms were interesting to observers but ultimately proved a dead-end for the company, as the stores struggled to have an impact on the bottom line. Eventually, the company started stocking computers directly in the store. But the truth was that the move was a defensive one, made not because Gateway was particularly interested in Amiga, but because Gateway, which started off by building PCs from off-the-shelf parts, had little in the way of patents.

In the end, Gateway owned Amiga for just a few years, and sold it off—while keeping the patents that made it valuable in the first place. It creates an interesting what-if: What if Gateway embraced the Amiga as an Apple-style niche? Would Gateway be around today? Hell, would Amiga be around today? All of these things, in retrospect, come across as rearranging deck chairs.

By the late s, cultural shifts with both Gateway and the computer industry in general made its original pitch feel a bit less compelling.

One issue was that the company moved its headquarters to California, which permanently shifted the corporate values of the firm. Around this time, Gateway dropped the Waitt eventually admitted the move away from South Dakota was a big mistake. Waitt retired from the company in , only to have to return after Weitzen and others screwed things up.



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