SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : ATI Technologies in 1997 (T.ATY) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: North44 who wrote (2932)3/24/1999 8:47:00 AM
From: Stocker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5927
 
From TheStreet.com:

For 3Dfx, Winning PC Makers' Loyalty Is No Easy Game
By Marcy Burstiner
Staff Reporter
3/23/99 11:26 AM ET

SAN FRANCISCO -- Graphics chips, a longtime must for video gamers and a few others, are suddenly
in demand among PC makers. So 3Dfx Interactive (TDFX:Nasdaq) should be poised for some solid
revenue growth, right?

Maybe not. 3Dfx is finding that unless it builds the kind of cozy relationships with PC makers that it has
with the gamers, the company could be all but shut out of the graphics market as it enters a period of
explosive growth.

Since its founding in 1994, 3Dfx has thrived on hard-core video gamers, who buy 3Dfx Voodoo add-in
cards in stores like CompUSA (CPU:NYSE) and Wal-Mart (WMT:NYSE) and install them in their own
computers. This following has driven up revenue to $202 million in 1998 from just $6.3 million in 1996.

These days, the loyalty of gamers isn't enough. Now that the Internet is making graphics capability
essential for computers, manufacturers like Dell (DELL:Nasdaq) and Compaq (CPQ:NYSE) are selling
boxes with the cards preinstalled. And for the most part, these machines use chips from 3Dfx rivals
ATI Technologies (ATYT:Nasdaq), Nvidia (NVDA:Nasdaq) and S3 (SIII:Nasdaq).

Graphics chips have moved from being a high-end frill to a standard feature on low-end computers.
Compaq spokeswoman Hedy Baker says that, until recently, 3D graphics capability used to be limited
to computers selling for at least $1,700. But now, even the Presario 5240, which sells for $999,
includes ATI's 3D Rage LT ProGraphics card. "It looks like [the 3D Rage card] is becoming more the
norm," she says.

Nowadays, average consumers want to design home pages and edit photos on their machines, says
Dell spokesman Bill Robbins. "Customers are demanding PCs with significant graphics capabilities to
handle tasks like Web creation and DVD movies," he says.

While 3Dfx has a 73% share of the retail sector, it holds just a 5% share of the much larger OEM
market. But the more the boxmakers preinstall the chips, the less incentive people will have to buy
add-in cards, says Peter Glaskowsky, a senior analyst for MicroDesign Resources.

For its part, 3Dfx isn't sitting still. Late last year, Gateway (GTW:NYSE) and Micron Electronics
(MUEI:Nasdaq) started to use 3Dfx chips in their machines. The company is close to similar
arrangements with three other boxmakers, says 3Dfx CEO Greg Ballard. And its December purchase
of controller-board maker STB Systems (STBI:Nasdaq) will give it a more direct sales channel into
OEMs.

3Dfx is also forcing boxmakers to take notice by strengthening even further its standing with
consumers. The company is launching a $20 million marketing campaign centered on glitzy TV ads by
the "Got milk?" ad firm Goodby Silverstein & Partners. That's nearly 10 times more than the
company spent last year to market its Voodoo II card. But it's a small price, Ballard says, if the
message works. "The promise we make is that we will be the technology leader and consumers will
never have to buy a 3Dfx chip and worry that it's second-rate," Ballard says. "That's the same thing
that Intel (INTC:Nasdaq) has done."

Ballard says that his model isn't just Intel, but Nike (NKE:NYSE) and Coca-Cola (KO:NYSE),
companies that have drummed up huge consumer demand for ordinary products through clever ads.

If the boxmakers don't take to 3Dfx chips, the company may find that the most fitting historical model is
neither Intel nor Nike, but Apple (AAPL:Nasdaq), a company that inspires strong devotion, but even
with clever advertising, has trouble moving beyond the periphery of the computer world.



To: North44 who wrote (2932)3/24/1999 10:20:00 PM
From: Frank Walker  Respond to of 5927
 
The new 128 bit ATI cards are getting excellent reviews in the latest PC and PC games magazines - which will no doubt help continue the revenue and EPS uptrend this year.

- ILG