just_another_person, (edited )

This video kind of misses the mark on delivering the points of the title, but these are the simplest boiled down points of the community gripes:

  • ASUS is having quality control issues, or deliberately skimping to pad profits
  • They are rebranding lesser quality components with the higher quality ROG brand, and pricing it as such
  • They are unilaterally voiding warranties when users try to RMA or return said hardware

Gigabyte (remember them?) did this same slow slide of enshittification about 10 years ago. The issue pretty much boils down to a company producing too many different types of things, instead of staying good at the things they do well, and the community has noticed and is calling for boycotts. This will no doubt put them on the defensive for years to come, and affect their overall standing in the larger community until they correct course.

Bipta,

They also reject advance RMAs. How nice to be without a system for weeks.

dual_sport_dork,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

Gigabyte (remember them?)

Sure do! Both my board and the board in my wife’s computer are Gigabyte. So’s my video card. The only issue I’ve ever had with their stuff has been a bad stick of ram a few years ago, which they exchanged without argument.

Brands in this sphere I definitely have had trouble with: MSI, Razer – so many problems with Razer – and ASUS.

gunpachi,

My msi motherboard randomly erases boot entries, I have to keep the computer on for a few minutes and reboot so that my other boot entry appears.

It maybe a problem with the m.2 slot, but it has been the case ever since I bought the motherboard.

Anyways I’m gonna stick to a different manufacturer for my motherboard if I’m building a new PC.

FiniteBanjo,

I’m also running a Gigabyte high-end right now and I’ve got absolutely no complaints. I really enjoy the BIOS/UEFI menu.

QuadratureSurfer,
@QuadratureSurfer@lemmy.world avatar

Tried to RMA a motherboard with Gigabyte and they will find any excuse to void the warranty.

Ledivin,

What are the problems with Razer? I’ve only used their mice, so I honestly don’t even know what else they make

tyler,

I mean their mice are terrible too. I went through three of their mice in two years back in like 2016. Been using a Logitech g2 whatever their most famous one is since then and it’s not had a single problem. So much so that I bought two more for my other computer and my wife.

stufkes,

As someone with small hands, Razer is the only mouse I can use. All the beloved Logitech models are just too big. I’ve been using Razer mice for more than a decade. Only had a problem with one. I’d like some competition and alternatives, but the gaming market (side buttons) is for large hands. Which sucks, because people with large hands can also prefer that claw-grip and want smaller mice as well.

Ledivin,

I’ve been using the same DeathAdder for like 10 years 😅 what are you doing to these poor mice

tyler,

Nothing. It was a work mouse for me, I didn’t even use it for gaming. There’s a reason razer has a terrible reputation.

dual_sport_dork,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

Keyboards, headphones, laptops, a handheld Steam Deck imitator, and various other RGB gamer shit. All of it is trash. Their business model nowadays seems to revolve entirely around upselling Aliexpress quality Chinese garbage at premium prices and then methodically denying every single warranty claim for defective and DOA product using spurious excuses. Oh, and their driver software is crap. And their products are consistently behind even Logitech on the features you get for the price.

Through no particular intentional means, I am now a Logitech convert. For mice and keyboards, their stuff has always been consistently reliable for me, their “G” series driver software is significantly less irritating than Razer Synapse, and most of their stuff is cheaper as well.

I think in my lifetime I’ve trashed four Razer keyboards, at least as many mice, and two pairs of headphones. All of these died early deaths – within weeks, sometimes a couple of months at the outside. Every time I tell myself this time will be different. It never is. I don’t buy their shit anymore, and I don’t recommend anyone else do, either.

catloaf,

I don’t remember Razer ever not being like that. Was it?

dual_sport_dork,
@dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world avatar

I dunno, the Boomslang was pretty rad back in the day. But it was so old it was a ball mouse.

warm,

Can just Onboard Memory Manager too for Logitech mice, don't even need that G hub garbage.

EvilLootbox,
@EvilLootbox@lemmy.world avatar

I bought the $120 Razer Wolverine V2 Xbox controller after MS shrunk the official controller for the Series S/X and it was a piece of shit. Replaced it with a $45 gamesir (Chinese brand) with hall effect triggers and sticks that I’ve had for two years now with no issues and no drift, a first for any xbox controller I’ve ever had. Razer sucks.

sugar_in_your_tea,

I’ve had problems with Logitech. They still make good peripherals, but it’s more luck of the draw for me recently, so QC may be getting cut.

metaStatic,

I keep hearing this and wonder if I should buy bulk mice before they come preinstalled with malware or something because they last decades so voting with your wallet doesn't really work.

sugar_in_your_tea,

Maybe. Or just switch to whatever the good mouse brand is at the time. I’m rocking a Microsoft Intellimouse Pro (wired) on my desktop, which I really like. On my work laptop, I have a Logitech MX Master 3 at work (had lots of issues with the thumb button in the past), and a Logitech Triathlon (no issues).

My wife had a couple of the g305s die on her within a year, so I switched her to a Razer Deathaddr Mini, which has been good for over a year now.

metaStatic,

I'm still mourning the loss of the g5 moulds. Why do people feel the need to improve on perfection.

TigrisMorte,

QC??? Hadn't you heard that the end user is the new totally free Beta Tester? But don't worry, they'll solve the resulting support issues with AI.

warm,

People are trained to buy any old trash that is marketed to them without any critical thinking, it's why everything is turning out broken like this.

sugar_in_your_tea,

I hate how true this is…

Evilcoleslaw,

Yeah so the thing with PC parts suppliers is that every brand is going to have people who have experienced problems with their stuff.

Gigabyte I’ve never had a problem with, but yeah during the pandemic their power supplies were fucking exploding so yeah that’s a problem.

Asus I’ve never had a problem with, but yeah their boards on both sides have been setting voltages and power limits very aggressively, killing AM5 CPUs catastrophically, potentially causing instability on higher end Intel chips as well it seems. That’s a problem.

Etc etc etc

brick,

I’ve had good luck recently with Gigabyte. I know it’s circumstantial but my hope is that they are recovering.

just_another_person,

They seem to be, but it’s been for a short time. Let’s see if they keep it going.

NOPper,

Anecdotal like the rest of the posts here, but I recently built a new rig for gaming/lab testing and used a Gigabyte board for the first time in a decade after seeing good reviews and a solid sale price.

About 3 weeks after setting everything up it just crapped out. Would reboot seconds after you pressed power. Checked and verified absolutely every other part, no luck. Tried to contact support, got the runaround for a few days until I was directed to a site to submit an RMA request.

That was a month ago, zero movement still. About 4 days into it I bought an identical part of Amazon and “traded” em. I’m usually pretty ethical about that kind of thing but this was ridiculous and I needed the PC working ASAP.

Who’s decent anymore? I always used to go with MSI.

ArmoredThirteen,

I have a 14 year old gigabyte motherboard in my older computer. When I first got it I didn’t know what I was doing and plugged the wrong thing in somewhere and blew up a component on it. As long as I don’t use that slot it chugs along just fine. I wish companies would just keep making things that last I’d gladly pay a fairly steep premium for that. Instead it seems every company that gets known for making good stuff decides to shit all over themselves

just_another_person,

Honestly, in your case, it could just be more about who makes what components can withstand X amount of punishment and keep the electrons flowing through so other things keep working 😂

Agreed on your point though. Cheap shit needs to stop.

MonkderDritte,
  • They are rebranding lesser quality components with the higher quality ROG brand, and pricing it as such

Meaning you could sue them as fraudulent?

bastion, (edited )

No. The ROG brand is ASUS’s brand in the first place.

Like, anyone could be like “this is my normal quiche, and this one here is my MuMu quiche.”

Then, once everybody’s buying MuMu, start using the normal recipe for MuMu. It’s not illegal, but at first people think they just got an Ok MuMu, then they start realizing it just sucks now. Hard for the company to recover from that.

But voiding and not honoring warranties?

Yeah.

Andrenikous,

That’s when you introduce the PuPu quiche that uses the original MuMu recipe and start the process all over.

bastion,

Yeah. Companies like that are bridges I burn and never look back to.

otp,

But there’s a great sale on the new DuDu series right now! Come back in…

MonkderDritte,

Looks like big companies buying everything has unexpected downsides too (aside the known downsides).

just_another_person,

Who ever saw this ever in history before now, or ever predicted it?

Take your crazy thoughts and wants for things to be good for consumers SOMEWHERE ELSE!

TheFeatureCreature,
@TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve been largely unaware of a lot of these things going on with Asus but the other day I was reading up on Armoury Crate, which Asus integrates as a hardware-level rootkit on many of their motherboards. That is absolutely goddamn absurd. Bloatware baked right into the hardware itself? I cannot express how scummy and disrespectful to your customers that is.

I’m very glad I picked no Asus parts for my latest build.

cyborganism,

I didn’t even know that. Fuck.

darganon,

I saw this headline and immediately thought “ArmouryCrate is the reason”

I certainly avoid ASUS stuff after discovering that piece of nonsense on my new install.

IHawkMike,

The rootkit is easy enough to turn off in the BIOS but I highly, highly recommend G-Helper instead of Armoury Crate.

Moving to it from AC is like leaving a prison cell full of screaming children and entering a calm beach.

MigratingtoLemmy,

Wtf?

What about MSI? Do they do this shit too?

wreckedcarzz,
@wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world avatar

I had an msi board in my father’s build, and as I was eyeing hardware upgrades I decided to get some more life out of it by adding some memory and updating the bios, as it was quite old. After the bios update, it never booted again. The upgrade tool said it was the correct file, that it was installed successfully, and that I just needed to reboot. Their flashback system? Didn’t work. Researching, it was apparently a KNOWN PROBLEM that msi just shrugged off, and several boards from that era would die after an update. No apology, no resolution, not even an admission of guilt. Because of that fuck up, proprietary software that my father used for business finances, wouldn’t activate on a new machine - the company shutdown the activation servers, and it required hardware checks, and there was no work around. The new program? Unable to read the old file format. We lost access to 20 years of tax/receipt records.

MSI is blacklisted for me, my family, friends, and anyone who I perform IT services for. I don’t give 2 fucks if the hardware is 80% cheaper and 200% better. Fuck you, they fucked perfectly good hardware, my reputation, and if we ever get audited we’re fucked. Eat shit and die, MSI.

starman,
@starman@programming.dev avatar

At least it’s exclusive to Windows

TheKMAP,

My Asus motherboard started bluescreening Windows. After a lot of effort I traced it down to a specific device ID that windows was loading firmware for. No matter what I tried I couldn’t get this auto installation to stop. It was a totally random component that added nothing I could tell.

Asus refused to release new firmware be cause the motherboard was “unsupported” even though the box etc has stickers saying it supports windows 10.

After a ton more effort I figured out how to make some low end api calls that eventually stopped this auto installation. It was mostly reliable. I got to crack a lot of jokes to my friends about my motherboard not supporting windows but it was a really hard period for me particularly because Linux gaming wasn’t as strong as it is today. I was really big into league of legends at the time and this experience forced me to quit, losing touch with many friends in the process.

TonyTonyChopper,
@TonyTonyChopper@mander.xyz avatar

At least it got you to stop playing League

currawong,
@currawong@lemmy.ml avatar

All Asus mobos and graphic cards I owned died.

And as in my IT days we had whole rooms of machines with Asus graphics die too.

I avoid Asus components like the plague

yamanii,
@yamanii@lemmy.world avatar

Dude has 35 subs, is this your own account?

Scrollone,

Here we are, spam has finally arrived on the fediverse

graeghos_714,

For desktop motherboards I’ve usually gone MSI but my gaming laptop is an Asus and is a little over a year old. It’s worked perfect since I got it and I’ve had zero problems with it. The Nvidia GPU and laptop fans sure do sing when I’m playing games though

cyberpunk007,

I got an Asus rog strix AMD board in 2019. Still working fine. Like everything I guess, YMMV.

The only issue I’ve had with it, even after a couple bios updates, is post takes forever. Like 20 seconds.

graeghos_714,

I actually do have an MSI laptop. I forgot I had read so many negative reviews of the Asus that I went the other direction. After posting that I got on my laptop and realized my mistake and remembered the negative reviews about them

masterspace,

Shit video OP

elleybirdy,
@elleybirdy@lemmy.zip avatar

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • PhAzE,

    I didn’t open the video. Was it one of those videos that talk in circles about what they’re “going” to talk about in the video, then they keep saying it in different ways?

    bcron,

    I never open a video where 3 or less paragraphs of text would suffice. I feel like we’re heading back to drawing things on the walls of caves

    Manzas,

    I have a Asus motherbaord and no updates since 2021 time to get hacked by logoFAIL…

    108,

    I ordered a board from Asus last year. FedEx delivered it to the wrong place. Delivery picture was at some apartment somewhere. They gave me so much shit. I had to go to my bank to help me get my money back. Took over a month.

    TIMMAY,

    Why people are writing statements as questions?

    iquanyin,
    @iquanyin@lemmy.world avatar

    why don’t you tell me?

    Poem_for_your_sprog,

    No, why don’t you tell me?

    andallthat,

    we are doing this, now?

    woelkchen,
    @woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

    Yes?

    rob_t_firefly,
    @rob_t_firefly@lemmy.world avatar

    Statement! One-love.

    Cerothen,

    LLM AIs think any sentence that starts with who what where when, why or how is a question.

    drathvedro,

    This is a terrible video. 20 minutes just to say “bad customer support”. But then, who does nowadays?

    On a sidenote, the pearl, the jewel I got from their CS is “WeLL I gUeSs tHiS LaPtOP oNlY sUpPoRtS ThReE ScReEnS iN tOtAl”. Bitch! This laptop has 3 separate video outputs! And 2 screens built-in! The fuck is 3 total? Besides, it totally worked until some botched update on their side…

    areyouevenreal,

    You can have more video outputs than your machine can actually use simultaneously, that’s a fairly normal characteristic. It allows you to have a greater variety of output port types without needing more framebuffers inside the GPU. If an update bricked it then it’s not that specific characteristic obviously. Probably it’s the fault of the GPU manufacturer issuing a bad update that they then repackaged.

    drathvedro,

    Maybe you’re right, but I haven’t seen a GPU that doesn’t have at least 4 distinct outputs in a while, not that I’d expect one in a machine of this class either. The problem, if I were to guess, is that this machine has AMD iGPU with Nvidia dGPU and a switchable MUX on top of that so it could boot with(or without) either as primary. That’s like three points of failure already. On top of that, I had the main panel cracked and badly malfunctioning, so I’ve removed it, just in case, for about a month while I waited for replacement. I guess some firmware update did not expect the main panel to be missing(or to have different s/n) during update and did something stupid to the mux setting that made it so that two outputs can’t be active simultaneously. I’ve tried to reach someone half-competent at ASUS for like a couple months, then just said “fuck it” and installed linux. Now living happily with 6 displays up and running, theoretically up to 9 if I do some output splitting shenanigans. Someday I’ll actually build that setup just to dunk on that rep who told me it could only handle 3.

    areyouevenreal,

    It’s fairly common for iGPUs to have less outputs. Apple M1 was especially bad as it only had 2, and the internal screen on the laptops couldn’t even be disabled if I remember correctly. I think many Intel (or maybe AMD) iGPUs only have three outputs.

    Yeah it definitely sounds like a driver issue. I have had issues with dual GPU systems like that on Linux, not had any on Windows yet. It would be interesting to see to be honest. I’ve had laptops before where the video ports would only connect to the dGPU, and the internal screen used Optimus (display output from the iGPU with graphics acceleration from the dGPU on demand). Lots of dual GPU laptops are MUXless like that in fact.

    drathvedro,

    It would be interesting to see to be honest

    I still have the video I’ve sent to them at some point, it describes it in all detail, if you can bear my accent..

    I’ve had laptops before where the video ports would only connect to the dGPU, and the internal screen used Optimus (display output from the iGPU with graphics acceleration from the dGPU on demand). Lots of dual GPU laptops are MUXless like that in fact.

    Yeah, I’ve had some of those. Actually owned one of the first generation optimus laptops and it was horrible, most of the time it did not pick up the heavy load and stayed on iGPU even when playing games. Seems to be much improved a lot in win10-11, but I still prefer the kill-switch.

    This one kind of works like that too, though. The MUX only controls which GPU the main panel is connected to (and with it, the framebuffer). The modes basically are:

    • “Eco” where only iGPU is enabled
    • "Hybrid" where iGPU is main and maintains framebuffer while offloading work to dGPU when needed just as you’ve described
    • "Ultimate" with Nvidia as main, which apparently gives much better framerate and latency because it does not require overhead of workload offloading and framebuffer shuffling, but the dGPU is by far the most power hungry device at 150W TDP which drains the battery in mere minutes, even on idle

    I have had issues with dual GPU systems like that on Linux

    I feel you. My previous setup was a desktop with both AMD and Nvidia cards, which I juggled between the host and VM. It was pain, mostly because Nvidia did not want to play nicely. Also because most utilities assumed I had Intel APU — I didn’t, but it was fair assumption at a time. Nowadays, it seems like everything’s sorted out, even VFIO was a breeze to set up (though what for, most games now play on linux nowadays thanks to steamdeck)

    Potatos_are_not_friends,

    I miss the activeness of the r/saveAClick community.

    The closest lemme alternative is lemmy.nrd.li/c/savedyouaclick

    We need that here for these click bait posts

    fawanen,

    Asus has always just seemed like a glossier Acer with higher prices and worse quality.

    I personally hate their ROG gamer aesthetic and think whoever came up with that should’ve been fired and blacklisted from the industry.

    Pyr_Pressure,

    Personally I’ve never had an issue with Asus products but have had numerous quality issues with Acer. Bought a number of small Acer laptops and the hinges kept breaking because they only put one screw in the hold the hinge instead of two in many of them.

    FabledAepitaph,

    I’ve had two ASUS gaming laptops, and both of them began having issues within a year, and the second didnt last more than a couple years total.

    The first laptop was one of their enormous ROG 17 inch gaming laptops that looked like it had jet engine exhaust. The hard drive died and the power port broke within the first year, and I had to send it in under warranty. The power brick also died, and I ended up having to replace it myself around the 3 year mark.

    Thinking it was a fluke, I ended up buying a smaller, more portable ASUS gaming laptop next which had more of a standard form factor. Maybe six or eight months later, that one suffered some issue that required being sent in for service as well. It began experiencing the same issue about four months later, I’d sent it in for repair a second time for the same issue, and they apparently fixed it.

    I got to use that laptop for maybe 1.5 years total before it was completely unusable, in spite of two RMAs.

    My current gaming laptop is an HP Omen 17 from 2017, and has been completely stable and reliable up to this day. I love to hate on HP because of their dumb printers, but I’m pretty impressed. I’ll probably end up buying another one, because I will literally never own another ASUS product ever in my life, and there are only so many manufacturers out there who I’d consider for a laptop purchase.

    Custodian1623,

    I’d personally look into Dell and Lenovo enterprise workstation laptops; same tech, but designed to be used instead of just looking flashy on a shelf.

    Kit,

    Dell and Lenovo enterprise models are excellent for enterprise use, but struggle with gaming in my experience. It’s just not what they’re built to do.

    Custodian1623,

    How is it functionally different from running video editing or CAD software?

    Kit,

    Enterprise laptops for CAD, etc. still prioritize battery life over performance. Switchable graphics are a pain to setup and troubleshoot for gaming, the screens are not optimized for gaming (almost always 60Hz), thermals can be questionable, and they’re loud. Gaming laptops are built for that purpose, and they do it better than trying to shoehorn in a laptop built for an entirely different purpose.

    Custodian1623,

    Thank you for your input - I think a lot of that depends on the specific model and price point as well. Imo at the end of the day it’s good to go for a laptop thick enough to accommodate a heatsink and look up any firmware restrictions on performance beforehand. Plenty of workstation laptops hit point one but I haven’t gamed on them enough to speak for point two

    Crowd,

    The video linked is not the original.

    This is the original - youtu.be/oHH9_CDHz94

    yamanii,
    @yamanii@lemmy.world avatar

    So OP is a thief even!

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