You won't be buying any more Belinea monitors.

You won't be buying any more Belinea monitors.

Maxdata, maker of Belinea TFT and CRT monitors, as well as servers, desktops and notebooks, has filed for insolvency in Essen, Germany.

Company management claim that "the high pressure of the competition and the immense fall in prices in the IT industry," have been eroding Maxdata's market position for sometime, and have chosen to file for insolvency due to the the threat of pending illiquidity.

This news comes after an unsuccessful restructuring program for the company which was attempted in 2006, which seems to have been a case of too little too late for Maxdata, as the turnaround couldn't be achieved in 2007, or so far in 2008.

Maxdata has also applied for insolvency proceedings to be opened for subsidiaries in Germany and abroad, including sales offices in the UK, Spain, Italy, France and Austria.

The question now is how many other smaller hardware manufacturers and sellers will we see go under due to the global credit crunch, and increased competition from the far east? With the significant downsizing of Komplett earlier this week, and now this, it seems doubtful that Maxdata will be the last victim.

Have you ever owned a Maxdata product? What other companies can you see being next on the credit crunch chopping block? Let us know in the forums.
Quote Timmy_the_tortoise 26th June 2008, 14:13
Just got rid of my old Belinea CRT...

Shame, really.. It was a really good monitor. Served me well for years.
Quote p3n 26th June 2008, 14:20
There goes keeping the TFT's the same at work!
Quote _DTM2000_ 26th June 2008, 16:12
We had an old Maxdata PC at work. It broke. We also had some old Belinea CRT monitors. They broke.

I never really liked any of their products that much. They always seemed to look out-dated and boring. Don't get me wrong, I love things to be minimal and understated. But their products just seemed drab. In my opinion anyway.

It is a shame to see another company go under though. Less companies = less competition = higher prices, and that's never good for us consumers.
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