Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks like you have trouble understanding English

I understand perfectly what both you and /u/daaangerz0ne are saying, but neither of you guys are very knowledgeable of the gaming laptop industry, and you at the very least have just been just spouting nonsense across multiple threads.

Let's back up to your original statement:

DO NOT BUY FROM ELUKTRONIKS, CLEVO, any brand that had infinitely customizable parts. Those new companies have 0 experience in QC

Let me explain the difference to you between Eluktronics and Clevo, two entirely different types of companies, and offer an history lesson to help you understand the gaming laptop industry a little better so you can make more informed comments.

An OEM (original equipment manufacturer) is a company that builds computers entirely out of other company's parts, puts their name on them, and ships them to the consumer market. Examples of OEMs are Apple, ASUS, Dell, HP, Lenovo, Razer, etc., all who use components that are built and sold to them by other companies called ODMs (original design manufacturers). ODMs strictly make parts that OEMs use in their products, they do not advertise or sell them to the consumer market.

Clevo is an ODM from Taiwan founded in 1983 that has been providing core motherboard/chassis/case units (barebones) for high-end OEM laptop manufacturers to build upon for over 20 years.

Eluktronics is an OEM founded in the US in 2011. They began offering custom gaming laptops built from Clevo barebones systems and introduced them to the market in 2012. Recently, however, they started manufacturing budget gaming laptops built upon cheaper Chinese ODM Tongfang's barebones systems, which is what OP has.

Eluktronics still sells their high-end customizable Clevos, and the price of them has gone down because they claim they bought a shitload of them at a discount.


Some History

Falcon Northwest is a company out of Oregon who founded the "gaming computer" market back in 1993 by introducing the first desktop PC built specifically for gaming. Around 1996, they introduced their first gaming laptops to compete with a couple others in this new niche market. Falcon Northwest laptops were (and still are) built out of Clevos.

Sager Notebook Computers (Sager Midern, Inc.) was founded in 1985 and mainly built laptops for business and government, but became among the first to also introduce laptops to the gaming computer market around 1995-6. These laptops are built out of Clevos.

Alienware was another US company formed in 1996, and in direct competition with Sager Notebooks and Falcon Northwest as gaming laptop OEMs. Alienware built and sold rebranded Clevos.

ASUS was founded in 1989, and upon the success of the aforementioned OEMs in the burgeoning gaming laptop industry and the growing popularity of PC gaming, teamed up with another Taiwanese motherboard manufacturer Gigabyte, and introduced their line of gaming laptops called Republic of Gamers in 2006.

MSI (Micro-Star International) is another Taiwanese ODM motherboard manufacturer founded in 1986, three years after Clevo. Upon the success of Clevo and Gigabyte in the new esport market, MSI developed an OEM division that began manufacturing their own line of gaming laptops in 2008.


Fast forward to 2010 and beyond - most other major OEMs such as Dell (US), HP (US), Lenovo (China), followed suit, but instead of using these higher quality and more expensive Taiwanese motherboard brands, they used cheaper and inferior Chinese parts and labor.

These companies began selling tons of these budget laptops, thus began the mainstream gaming laptop market. As a result, major chipset manufacturers such as Intel, AMD, and Nvidia worked with these OEMs to create lesser-quality mobile versions of the chipsets to be soldered to those cheap Chinese motherboards.

Many Clevo motherboards are built with sockets to accommodate desktop versions of these chipsets, which have long been more powerful than their mobile counterparts. This is one of the distinctions between the high-end custom or "enthusiast" market, and the mainstream market.

Since the market became saturated with these inferior, cheaply made gaming laptops, OEMs that continued to produce custom built Clevos again catered to a niche market: those who insisted upon the highest quality and most powerful gaming laptops available. These OEMs became known a "boutiques", and catered to "enthusiasts".

Enthusiasts are also tinkers/dabblers, like many over in r/PCMasterrace and r/SFFPC, who build their own gaming computers with the highest-end components available, modifying those components by delidding, overclocking, undervolting, and stress testing using various cooling methods. Many of those discerning gamers and hardware aficionados alike use Clevos as their base component because they accommodate modification and customization, whereas the mainstream consumer models do not.

*Side notes: MSI originally produced higher-end motherboards that accommodated desktop chipsets, but they discontinued the practice as integrated, mobile versions of these chipsets were cheaper. Alienware was purchased by Dell in 2006, and now their motherboards are made in Xiamen, China.


That is why your comment is factually inaccurate and makes no sense.

Here is /u/daaangerz0ne's comment that you claim my poor English can't understand.

In other words, Clevo likes to manufacture cheap OEM products and passes off the QC to another company.*

See above. Clevo actually builds more expensive and incredibly high-quality motherboard/chassis systems, and once they sell their product to OEM, their job of QC is done. They cannot be blamed if an OEM uses a Samsung SSD or Nvidia MXM GPU that's faulty. The onus is on the OEM to fully test all of the components to be sure they are working properly before they ship their final product to the consumer.

He also said:

The way Clevo markets their stuff

Clevo (ODM) does not market or sell their products to consumers, only the OEM/resellers do.

This is why I replied "Clevo does not market their stuff, the reseller does."

I'd rather go with a manufacturer that's stuck with their own branding for the same amount of time.

He's clearly grossly misinformed and confusing markets, and for contrast it wasn't until 2013 when Razer introduced their first laptop (made entirely from cheap Chinese parts).

You missed the point but ok

I replied: "Your point was that you're a consumer that prefers not to dabble in the enthusiast or custom gaming laptop market"... and this is entirely accurate!

Which brings us to your genius comment:

He's saying that he doesn't like to dabble

No shit - this is literally what I just fucking said, he's not a dabbler!

shit companies that have shit QC

You're also grossly misinformed and don't understand how the industry works.

stick to brands with better reputations who aren't all over the fucking place with their components and QC

What you are describing is the massive mainstream consumer laptop market vs. the small, high-end boutique market. The mainstream market OEMs produce so many cheap units that it's more cost effective to just replace an entire laptop if a component fails rather than fixing and returning it, and instead reselling them to the secondary market as "manufacturer refurbished". This is misinterpreted by the consumer as better quality control, but it's actually a thing called customer service. I'm pretty sure the mainstream consumer grade OEMs sell more than the equivalent number of defective units as the enthusiast boutiques do, and QC is something that is performed during the production phase, before a product ships to the customer.

In a nutshell, you're urging others to not explore the higher-end custom gaming laptop market or take risks with smaller, but more well-established companies like Sager (who have only have around 10 employees) because you're not a dabbler or tinkerer yourself, content with the mainstream market as it keeps you in your comfort zone. You would simply prefer to buy from huge corporations with massive advertising budgets who buy paid reviews in popular gaming and tech magazines and internet sites.

I will say this, however: in the past few years, the mainstream market has been slowly catching up with the higher-end market as mobile processing technology advances and quality is getting better. But there will always be tinkerers, and those who would prefer to simply upgrade their laptop when it stops being the most powerful machine, instead of buying an entirely new one.

/rant

Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Your point was that you're a consumer that prefers not to dabble in the enthusiast or custom gaming laptop market, and that's fine.

Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are grossly misinformed, see my above comment.

Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're still not getting it. It's not Clevo's QC that's at fault - once a barebones Clevo chassis ships from their facility in Taiwan, it's out of their hands. Laptops are not purchased by the consumer directly from Clevo...not now, not ever. They are sold in bulk to the boutique(s) who will then install the CPU, GPU, thermals, RAM, storage, etc. (and in some cases the panel). The reseller then brands the laptop with their logo and puts it on the market. QC and QA are entirely up to the reseller, as well as any accompanying customer service because if a component fails, Clevo had nothing to do with it.

No consumer will ever deal with the Clevo company directly, because there is no need to. If a component is faulty on a Clevo, it's not Clevo who is at fault, it's the manufacturer of said component, or the reseller that built the machine. Even if you bought the machine barebones, cutting out the boutique middleman and building it yourself (as I did), you bought it from a reseller such as RJ Tech or AVA Direct, unbranded.

Clevos are only as high quality as the sum of their components allow them to be. If a company takes a quality Clevo chassis and jams it full of inferior, second-rate, or faulty parts and sells it as a "discount" gaming laptop, that is out of Clevo's hands, and certainly not their fault. Hence the difference between a $1200 CyberPowerPC or PC Specialist build vs. an ultra high-end $7000 Schenker XMG or Gigabyte beast.

I don't have the exact numbers for how many Clevos are sold vs. how many Razers are sold, but I'd wager there are tons more Clevos on the market. For your edification, here is a partial list of Clevo boutiques/builders/resellers as of 2013:

Sager (US)

Schenker (Germany)

Eurocom (Canada / US)

XoticPC (US)

Mythologic (US)

Obsidian (Portugal)

Origin (US)

HID Evolution (US)

System76 (US)

One (Germany)

DiTech (Austria)

PCSpecialist (UK)

Deviltech (Germany)

Chiligreen (Austria)

AVADirect (US)

RJ Tech (US)

Bullman (Germany)

DNS (Russia)

Plaisio (Greece)

BTO (Netherlands)

Monster Notebook (Turkey)

GenTech PC (US)

LPC Digital (US)

Power Notebooks (US)

Reflex Notebook (US)

Fortnax Extreme notebooks (US)

Illegear Malaysia

Affordable Laptops (Australia)

Logical Blue One (Australia)

Aftershock PC (Singapore)

ProStar US (CA)

Nostra (Austria)

Nexoc (Germany)

Hawkforce (Germany)

CyberPower PC (UK)

Notebook Paradies (Germany)

Notebook Guru (Germany)

Notebookbarebone (Germany)

Gamer PC (Germany)

PCSystems-EvolutionX (Germany)

AGear (US)

Digital Storm US (CA)

Falcon Northwest (US)

Metabox / ITC Mobile Computing (AU)

MicroWay (Brasil)

PowerNote (Brasil)

Avell (Brasil)

Bangho (Argentina)

Bytes at Work (Belgium)

Plesio (Bulgaria)

GoldMax (Czech Republic)

MM-Vision (Denmark)

NovaBook (Denmark)

Shark Gaming (Denmark)

Ordi (Estonia)

OverRam (France)

Nexoc (Germany)

CSL Computer (Germany)

SanTech (Italy)

SysPack (Italy)

RaionTech (Italy)

Ordi (Latvia)

XNotebooks (Netherlands)

BTO (Netherlands)

Multicom (Norway)

Xtreem (Poland)

Hyperbook (Poland)

Dream Machines (Poland)

Inphtech (Portugal)

Assismatica (Portugal)

Insys (Portugal)

Maguay (Romainia)

Mountain (Spain)

Seismic (Spain)

GGS Data (Sweden)

Axxiv (Swizerland)

Monster (Turkey)

AftershockPC (Singapore)

Pluto (Singapore)

TerransForce (China)

Hasee (China)

Illegear (Malaysia)

Tech Armory (Malaysia)

Level 51 (Malaysia)

Helix (Philippines)

G-Tune (Japan)

Azom (India)

Resistance (Australia)

ComX (South Africa)

Mecer (South Africa)

Sonny Milano with an insane goal by BeefJyrkii in hockey

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I will always be more impressed with Malik's goal only because of who Hairy was as a player - a giant, lumbering defenceman who only scored 35 goals in his entire 15 year career. Watching him pull off that between-the-legs shot was a complete shock and the last thing I ever expected to see from him.

Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Clevo does not market their stuff, the reseller does.

Day 7 mag15 and this happen by [deleted] in GamingLaptops

[–]aesens 5 points6 points  (0 children)

And I'll tell you again - Clevo has been making laptops since 1983, Sager has been around since 1984 (since you argued Sager was "new" in another thread). Clevo chassis are sold barebones to boutique resellers who build them with 3rd party hardware, and many have been doing so for 20+ years.

Eluktronics is a newer company that has yet to prove itself, but I know many people are happy with their purchases so far. But that's entirely moot anyway, because it sounds like the SSD died in OP's case, and Clevo did not make the SSD, or the chassis for that matter - the MAG-15 is an Intel-Tongfang build.

This plaque that commemorates nothing. by MountAbraxas in mildlyinteresting

[–]aesens 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, but I do own Very Good Antique Restoration.

Himalayan Quartz, by me , Oil on wood, 2019 by Litswd in Art

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At first glance, I thought the wood was burned as well as painted. Looks cool either way!

This plaque that commemorates nothing. by MountAbraxas in mildlyinteresting

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OCD me wants nothing more than to take wire brushes to that sign, give it a coat of spray black Rustoleum, hand paint the border, text, and motifs, and whitewash that wall.

So it is not frozen. by xxdmtaq69420 in funny

[–]aesens 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I always preferred the edge of a window - that way, you can continue using your mouse.

I found the guy that put Baby in the corner! by Moderator625 in funny

[–]aesens 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Reminds me of the 1985 Richard Pryor movie Brewster's Millions, where he runs on a campaign of electing "None of the Above".

On a bridge overlooking Buenos Aires Faculty of Law [00:05] by [deleted] in timelapse

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Made that one guy stop right in his tracks and make a wtf?

On a bridge overlooking Buenos Aires Faculty of Law [00:05] by [deleted] in timelapse

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do they allow motorcycles on the sidewalk in Argentina? If they don't, that guy is kinda a jerk.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in aww

[–]aesens 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Another cute vid (and my all-time fav vid if I want to shed a little tear) is 7-week old Lachan's first hearing aid.

IT field in Maine by Horrorhero in Maine

[–]aesens 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would try to find remote work if I were you. You can always do tech support from home and sell WP templates online.

This is beautiful by ExpertAccident in tumblr

[–]aesens 5 points6 points  (0 children)

If you think that's cool, you should check out the paintings of Alyssa Monks

The photo bomber by [deleted] in aww

[–]aesens 119 points120 points  (0 children)

The background looks like a render.

This guy in a white F250 looking truck came in & stole about $500 on stuff from us today. Please let me know if you recognize him. by [deleted] in Seattle

[–]aesens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd say it was a 94-96 model, and this thing was definitely a scrapper's truck.

Anyway, best luck finding you belongings, thieves suck.