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eMachines M5405 laptop. eMachines was founded in September 1998 by Lap Shun Hui as a joint venture of South Korean companies Korea Data Systems and TriGem. [1] The company sold PCs at prices ranging at $399 or $499, not including a monitor. [2] By March 1999, the company was ranked fourth in U.S. computer sales, with a 9.9% market share. [1]
The eOne was an all-in-one desktop computer that was produced by eMachines in 1999. It resembles Apple's "Bondi Blue" iMac. Apple sued eMachines for allegedly infringing upon the distinctive trade dress of the iMac with the eOne. Apple and eMachines settled the case in 2000, which required the model to be discontinued.
Articles related to the eMachines brand, whether from the original company, Gateway, Inc., or Acer. Pages in category "eMachines"
Lap Shun Hui (Chinese: 許立信; Cantonese Yale: Héui Laahp-seun; [1] born 1955), also known as John Hui, is a Chinese American tech entrepreneur.He is the co-founder of PC manufacturing companies Everex and eMachines.
Gateway, Inc., previously Gateway 2000, Inc., was an American computer company originally based in Iowa and South Dakota.Founded by Ted Waitt and Mike Hammond in 1985, the company developed, manufactured, supported, and marketed a wide range of personal computers, computer monitors, servers, and computer accessories.
TriGem Computer was founded in 1980 by Lee Yong-tae with ₩10,000,000 in start-up capital. [3] TriGem was the first Korean company dedicated to manufacturing computer systems, [1] bucking from the trend of established chaebol conglomerates such as Hyundai, Lucky-Goldstar (LG), and Daewoo, who had opened divisions to manufacture electronic components that go into computers (namely DRAM) but ...
The LT31 was released in mid-2009. Employing an AMD Athlon L110 processor and having a Radeon X1270 GPU (M690T chipset) powering its 11.6" display (1,366x768), the system was praised by reviewers as a faster and more "grown-up" alternative to a standard netbook (which typically contain slower Intel Atom processors and reduced specifications throughout).
Solo 2150. Gateway unveiled the Solo line of laptops on August 15, 1995, shortly before Microsoft's Windows 95 operating system became generally available for sale on August 24, 1995. [1]