Arctic goes cold on Fusion Supporter
Gadget would have provided 'no end-user benefit', firm admits
11th August 2006 11:59 GMT
Swiss cooler maker Arctic Cooling this week said it wouldn't offering its Fusion Supporter voltage peak suppressor after all. The product, hyped at CeBIT in March this year and later at Computex Taipei, actually delivers "no value" to end-users, and had "no market potential", the company admitted today.
Such an admission is bizarre enough, but Arctic also revealed that it had sold the as-yet-unreleased product to an unnamed "Asian customer" back in July. Presumably, said buyer feels there is some end-user benefit in the Fusion Supporter.

According to Arctic, the Fusion Supporter used a bank of 91 capacitors used to absorb load peaks and make "continuous recharging possible". However, testing revealed that while the device operated as expected, the end result made little difference to the stability of computer systems it was connected to, Arctic said.
All of which, we'd have thought, Arctic could have learned before it presented the box at CeBIT and Computex. Ho hum... ®


Intel Core i7 I7-920 Quad Core Processor (2.66GHz, 4x256kB, 4.8GT/s QPI, LGA 1336 Socket B)
Antec Nine Hundred Two Mid Tower (ATX/Micro ATX/Mini-ITX, 9 Bays)
Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 Processor (2.40GHz, 4x2MB, 1066MHz FSB, Socket T)
Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 Dual Core Processor (3GHz, 6MB, 1333MHz FSB, LGA775 Socket T)
Intel Core 2 Q9550 Quad Core Processor (2.83GHz, 4x3MB, 1333MHz FSB, LGA775 Socket T)