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Razer Inc. | |
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Nome nativo | Razer USA Ltd. |
Empresa privada | |
Fundação | 27 de junho de 2005 (19 anos) |
Fundador(es) |
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Sede | San Francisco, California, U.S. |
Área(s) servida(s) | Mundo |
Pessoas-chave | |
Subsidiárias | |
Website oficial | razerzone |
Razer USA Ltd.,[1] doing business as Razer Inc. (stylized as RΛZΞR), is a Singaporean-founded[2] American company founded by Min-Liang Tan and Robert Krakoff, and headquartered in San Francisco, California, which specializes in computer hardware marketed specifically to gamers. Razer is dedicated to the creation and development of products mainly focused on PC gaming such as laptops, tablet computer, various PC peripherals, wearables, and accessories. The Razer brand is currently being marketed under Razer USA Ltd.
History
editarRazer began as a subsidiary of kärna LLC in 1998, created to develop and market a high-end computer gaming mouse, the Boomslang, targeted to computer gamers. Kärna ceased operations in 2000 due to financial issues. The current iteration of Razer was founded in 2005 by Min-Liang Tan and Robert Krakoff after they procured the rights to the Razer brand. [3]
At Consumer Electronics Show 2011, Razer unveiled the Razer Switchblade, a handheld gaming device prototype.[4]
At CES 2013, Razer unveiled its Razer Edge gaming tablet computer, which was previously known as Project Fiona. The tablet uses the Windows 8 operating system and is designed with gaming in mind.[5]
In May 2013, Razer unveiled the 14-inch Razer Blade and 17-inch Razer Blade Pro gaming laptops with fourth-generation Intel Haswell processors. The Razer Blade 14-inch portable gaming laptop was dubbed the "world's thinnest gaming laptop" which weighed just 4.1 lbs., while the 17-inch screen Razer Blade Pro featured the built-in 'Switchblade' LCD display.[6]
At CES 2014, Razer unveiled Project Christine, a modular gaming PC. Each of the branches on the PC is a discrete component—a CPU, a GPU, a hard drive, memory—that simply plug into the central backbone. Once slotted in, Project Christine automatically syncs the newly added modules through PCI-Express (the same serial bus that discrete graphics cards and other components currently use).
In July 2015, Razer announced it was purchasing the software division of video-game company Ouya.[7]
At Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2016, Razer has been selected for People's Choice Winner for Razer Blade Stealth Ultrabook. The company won the year before for the Razer Forge TV, and this year, it took home the prize for the Razer Blade Stealth Ultrabook, a super-slim gaming laptop.[8]
In October 2016, Razer purchased THX according to THX CEO Ty Ahmad-Taylor.[9]
At CES 2017, Razer revealed Project Valerie,[10] a triple display laptop, and Project Ariana,[11] a projector that is designed to project onto a room with automatic room scanning.
In January 2017, Razer bought manufacturer Nextbit, the startup behind the Robin smartphone.[12]
Products
editarRazer's products are generally targeted at gamers, and include gaming laptops, gaming tablets, and PC peripherals such as mice, audio devices, keyboards, mouse mats, and game pads. Razer has also released a VOIP software called Razer Comms. The Razer DeathAdder gaming mouse is the company's most popular product by sales numbers. Most Razer products are named after predatory or venomous animals, ranging from snakes (mice), insects (mouse mats), arachnids (keyboards) over marine creatures (audio) to felines (console peripherals), with the Razer Blade laptops and Razer Edge instead named after bladed objects.
Gaming equipment
editar- The Razer Blade series is a series of gaming laptops developed by Razer and include the 12.5-inch Razer Blade Stealth, the 14-inch Razer Blade, and the 17.3-inch Razer Blade Pro.
- The base Razer Blade Stealth model has a 2,560x1,440 pixel resolution touchscreen display, a Core i7 processor, 8GB of memory and 128GB of M.2 solid-state storage, this is upgradable to 3840 by 2160 with 512GB of M.2 solid-state storage.[13] The Blade stealth was announced alongside the Razer Core.[14] On June 14, 2017 Razer announced an updated version of the Blade Stealth, with a 13.3 inch QHD+ (3200x1800) screen. It also made the 7th generation Core i7 and 16gb of RAM standard on every 13.3 inch Blade Stealth. [15]
- At DreamHack 2015, Razer and Lenovo announced a partnership to make a co-branded gaming desktop called the Lenovo Y900 Razer Edition gaming desktop.
- The Razer Edge is a gaming tablet PC developed by Razer specifically for games which run on Windows OS.
- In late 2014, Razer released their Chroma series of products.[16] All Chroma series products have customizable RGB lighting. The first item in the series was the Blackwidow Chroma. The Blackwidow Chroma is a keyboard that has some new features added onto the original Blackwidow keyboard. After the first Chroma product was released, Razer has continued to add products to the series, such as the Razer DeathAdder Chroma. They have also added their RGB lighting onto another mouse they recently released called the Razer Mamba Chroma, which has RGB on the sides of the mouse with 14 different zones. A new version of the Razer Diamondback gaming mouse was also released and also features customizable RGB lighting.
Wearables
editar- The Razer Nabu is a smart band developed by Razer with features such as mobile app notifications, fitness tracking, and more which was first released in December, 2014.[17][18] In 2015, Razer released a new version of the Razer Nabu called the Razer Nabu X.
- At the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show, Razer released the Nabu Watch, a dual-screen smartwatch: it integrates an always-on illuminated backlit display, that takes care of some pretty standard features as date and time, and a second OLED screen, which is activated by raising your wrist and is where you can explore its smart features.[19] It requires Android 4.3 (or higher) device with Bluetooth Low Energy (Bluetooth 4.0 or higher) capability [20]
Other
editar- Razer is part of the Open Source Virtual Reality (OSVR) ecosystem with the OSVR Hacker Dev Kit, a virtual reality device and open-source software that enables programming for any variety of VR technology.[21]
- The first gaming controller Razer released was the Razer Onza. It was released in late 2010, followed by the Razer Sabertooth which was released in 2013. In 2015, the Razer Wildcat gaming controller was announced, available for pre-order and was in stores by October 2015.
- The Razer Core was announced at CES 2016 alongside the Razer Blade Stealth. It was intended as a way to extend the functionality of the Blade Stealth by adding 4 additional USB-3 Type A ports, as well as a gigabit ethernet port, and the ability to connect a discrete graphics card to the blade. This was done using a Thunderbolt 3/USB 3.1 Type-C charging cable connecting the Core to the Blade Stealth. The 2016 Razer Blade also has support for the Razer Core.
- Razer has a partnerships with NZXT and Lenovo to add Razer branding to NZXT computer cases, and Lenovo Pre-built desktops.
- Razer has bought the THX sound brand
- Razer has bought the Nextbit robin phone
Based on information on Engadget, Razer's products have always been aimed towards gamers.[22] The mice line of products is used by over 16% of professional gamers.[23]
See also
editar- Agilent Technologies — manufacturer of some of Razer's mouse sensors until its spinoff of Avago
- Avago Technologies — manufacturer of some of Razer's mouse sensors until it left the mouse sensor business and licensed its mouse sensor technology to PixArt Imaging
- Keyboard technology
- Open Source Virtual Reality (OSVR)
References
editar- ↑ «Business Search - Results». California Secretary of State
- ↑ «Singapore gaming startup Razer buys George Lucas-founded THX». AsiaOne
- ↑ «About Razer: History». Consultado em 2 de maio de 2017
- ↑ «CES People's Voice Award». CNET. January 8, 2011. Consultado em 20 de janeiro de 2011. Arquivado do original em January 19, 2011 Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ McWhertor, Michael. «Razer Edge gaming tablet is Windows 8 laptop, console and 'Steam Box' in one». Polygon. Consultado em 8 de janeiro de 2013
- ↑ Portnoy, Sean. «Razer launches 14-inch Blade, 17-inch Blade Pro gaming notebooks with Intel Haswell processors». zdnet. Consultado em 29 March 2017 Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ Razer Purchases Ouya's Software Business - Geek Inspector, 27 July 2015
- ↑ Lee, Nicole (8 January 2016). «Presenting the Best of CES 2016 winners!». Engadget Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ A New Beginning for THX: Why I Sold My Company in My First Year - Medium, 17 October 2016
- ↑ Razer. «Razer Project Valerie - Triple Display Laptop». www.razerzone.com. Consultado em 5 de janeiro de 2017
- ↑ Razer. «Razer Ariana - Video Projection System». www.razerzone.com. Consultado em 5 de janeiro de 2017
- ↑ Lunden, Ingrid (31 de janeiro de 2017). «Razer acquires Nextbit, the startup behind the Robin smartphone». TechCrunch.com. TechCrunch. Consultado em 31 de janeiro de 2017
- ↑ «Razer Stealth Blade and Nabu - CES 2016». GameCrate. 7 January 2016 Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ Smith, Ryan. «Razer Core Thunderbolt 3 eGFX Chassis: $499/$399, AMD & NVIDIA, Shipping In April». Consultado em 12 de julho de 2016
- ↑ Fingas, Jon. «Razer's Blade Stealth packs a larger display into a familiar frame». Oath Inc. Engadget. Consultado em 4 July 2017 Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ «Razer - For Gamers. By Gamers. - Razer United States». Razer. Consultado em 6 de setembro de 2015
- ↑ «IGN Asia». IGN Asia. Consultado em 6 de setembro de 2015
- ↑ «Razer Nabu X Smartband»
- ↑ Sawh, Michael (6 January 2016). «Razer Nabu Watch is a dual screen smartwatch with year-long battery life». Wareable Verifique data em:
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(ajuda) - ↑ «Razer Nabut Watch Master Online Guide.» (PDF)
- ↑ «OSVR». Razer
- ↑ «Engadget | Technology News, Advice and Features». Engadget. Consultado em 6 de setembro de 2015
- ↑ «Most Used Monitors by Professional Gamers». ProSettings.net. Consultado em 25 de dezembro de 2016