TorTorden wrote:I have come to the conclusion that brand loyalty is utterly pointless.
Regardless of brand. Sometimes you will hit upon a faulty piece.
That's why most of us point out the differences between an "ODM" and and "OEM." The former is actually who fabricates something. The latter is who puts their name on the box, services it, maybe has a few changes, assuming they know what they are doing. Having a good ODM as an OEM makes a huge difference, as ODMs have more engineering knowledge as they fabricate the units.
E.g., Asus' original M.2 slots on mainboards were totally faulty, because they were using cheap ODMs who just fabbed to spec, and didn't check it.
Asus has gone south ever since they told their ODM (Pegatron) to ASRock around '10, which explains why ASRock quality is now a lot better. ASRock, coincidentally, was who Asus spun off to be their low-cost brand, fabricated by ECS, FIC, Foxconn, etc... while Asus products were fabbed by it's own ODM (Pegatron). Asus then figured they'd survive on brand name alone, which hasn't been the case lately.
E.g., even Google won't use Asus as an OEM any more, because of all of the issues with the Nexus 7.
TorTorden wrote:IJust get something with the features and chipset you want with a decent warranty and you'll be OK.
The OEM only really matters when it comes to warranty now.
Off Topic
I moved the CIFS/SMB (and Samba) discussion, and the off-topic/unrelated Linux commentary, to a new thread on NAS ...
-
viewtopic.php?f=9&t=5442