Author Topic: Asus laptops  (Read 3467 times)

Offline Mike

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #15 on: May 02, 2012, 05:14:24 PM »
a fanless laptop, add a ssd hard disk and that would make it a dream come true, of course after adding pclinux to it

http://www.asus.com/Eee/Eee_PC/Eee_PC_X101/#overview

this thing has a atom 455, of course it can work without a fan, perfect, it comes with meego as the os, weird selection


Nice, good price range also..but, moma says if it don't have at least a 15 inch screen, she don't want it......sorta like she says, they started little bitty tiny weeny, then started getting bigger, then bigger (Desktop) now trying to go back to tiny weeny again, seems they can't makeup their minds..
She says, let the rest do whatever they like, she ain't changing.... :D
 ;D :)
I'm not upset that you lied to me,
I'm upset that from now on I can't believe you.
~Friedrich Nietzsche~


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Offline T6

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #16 on: May 02, 2012, 05:50:06 PM »
yes, lots of users don't want to have a laptop with a screen smaller than 14" some will handle 12"  but atm most netbooks remain in 10.1

recently acer released some 11 and 12" netbooks with some hardware making them almost laptops, it is hard to find balance in size, price and performance while having the right screen size

for the moment i am very happy with the 10.1" screen but also want a 11 or 12"(nothing keeps me happy  ;D  )
"If you wish to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe."

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Offline bicol_willem

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #17 on: May 02, 2012, 06:20:22 PM »
if it has good specs, it has full warranty and the price is decent it is worth a try

And ... If warranty is honored. Something I found out too late ....  ;)
I do think however that in general the products are OK. We also run an meanwhile old EeePC 701 and a Emachine (= Acer) 630 with no problems so far. The problem starts when you happen to buy a "Monday morning unit" put together by a drunk Chinese early Monday morning and you need WARRANTY.
Also that may (and probably will) vary from country to country. Here in the Philippines I found Acer's warranty no more then a irritating joke.

Offline Yankee

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #18 on: May 02, 2012, 06:53:02 PM »

And ... If warranty is honored. Something I found out too late ....  ;)


Some of the bigger credit card companies offer free extended
warranties.   For example if the X101 came with a 1 year warranty
they would extend it by 1 year, making it a 2 year warranty.   Just
call with the receipt, and they'd probably arrange a replacement.

FYI
ASUS EeePc 900HA netbook  1.6 Ghz Atom CPU  1GB RAM
160 GB internal HD    Seagate 250 GB USB portable drive 
Intel ‎Mobile 945GSE Integrated Graphics Controller
Atheros AR242x/AR542x Wireless Network Adapter
Intel (N10/ICH7 Family) High Definition Audio
Dynex 5-Button Wired Optical Mouse
LXDE

Offline bicol_willem

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #19 on: May 02, 2012, 07:25:42 PM »

And ... If warranty is honored. Something I found out too late ....  ;)


Some of the bigger credit card companies offer free extended
warranties.   For example if the X101 came with a 1 year warranty
they would extend it by 1 year, making it a 2 year warranty.   Just
call with the receipt, and they'd probably arrange a replacement.

FYI

Yes.... but the duration of the warranty doesn't mean a thing if not honored.  ;)

Offline Yankee

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #20 on: May 03, 2012, 03:35:54 PM »

And ... If warranty is honored. Something I found out too late ....  ;)


Some of the bigger credit card companies offer free extended
warranties.   For example if the X101 came with a 1 year warranty
they would extend it by 1 year, making it a 2 year warranty.   Just
call with the receipt, and they'd probably arrange a replacement.

FYI

Yes.... but the duration of the warranty doesn't mean a thing if not honored.  ;)

Yes, easiest is if the store is nearby, and the extended warranty would usually
result in a replacement.
ASUS EeePc 900HA netbook  1.6 Ghz Atom CPU  1GB RAM
160 GB internal HD    Seagate 250 GB USB portable drive 
Intel ‎Mobile 945GSE Integrated Graphics Controller
Atheros AR242x/AR542x Wireless Network Adapter
Intel (N10/ICH7 Family) High Definition Audio
Dynex 5-Button Wired Optical Mouse
LXDE

Offline Yankee

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #21 on: May 03, 2012, 07:25:08 PM »
I wish the X101  was more like the EeePC900.

1.66Ghz processor, fan cooling, 3 USB"s, SDHC, 8 hour battery,
Intel 3150 graphics, 8 GB SSD,  closed copy of PCL Linux LXDE 2012,
10 ft. power cord (for the coffee shop)

How about $200 - $225 retail  plus shipping. (someday)

Dreaming Again.
ASUS EeePc 900HA netbook  1.6 Ghz Atom CPU  1GB RAM
160 GB internal HD    Seagate 250 GB USB portable drive 
Intel ‎Mobile 945GSE Integrated Graphics Controller
Atheros AR242x/AR542x Wireless Network Adapter
Intel (N10/ICH7 Family) High Definition Audio
Dynex 5-Button Wired Optical Mouse
LXDE

Offline Mike

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #22 on: May 05, 2012, 08:43:20 AM »
Wife says she is looking at a Dell alien box....anyone know about this one? I've sold and worked on many Dell's but this one, I don't know anything about it..Thoughts?  ???
I'm not upset that you lied to me,
I'm upset that from now on I can't believe you.
~Friedrich Nietzsche~


Joe Gable
Dave "Exwintech"
Linux Counter #288984

Offline horusfalcon

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #23 on: May 06, 2012, 03:45:55 PM »
Laptops are as good as their warranty is. Here in the Philippines Acer sucks big time in that regard.
I bought a unit last December which failed in January. Today (2 May) I still have no laptop. Its all about giving the run about. First a few failed attempts to "fix" things by there local service center. Then to Acer in Manila where they had no parts for it. Finally pushed for refund (out of the question) then for replacement. Finally today I was text that Acer would consider replacement but ... I had to send all the accessories that came with it. No problem, got that covered. But then .... they also want back the carton box where it was packed in during delivery. Who keeps such box? That is only for shipping purposes ain't it. But they will use any technicality to avoid honoring their warranty. I offered them to keep all that stuff from the replacement as I don't need it. No way ..... "policy is .....blablabla".  Bye laptop, bye Acer.... Stuff it, has tired me already too much!

Yup, your tale is not all that uncommon, sad to say.  I keep everything from units under warranty in a closet somewhere until said warranty expires.  I mean, boxes, plastic bags, twist ties, documentation, invoices, receipts - everything even peripherally related to the item.  Usually it all fits neatly back in the shipping carton, anyway.  Put it in the closet after sticking a post-it label on it with item and date of purchase.  I've been down this road too many times before.  I've also gotten good at nesting boxes together for storage for this reason.

You could just go with a better company or do as I learned to do:  find a reliable refurbisher and don't buy new equipment unless you absolutely need the bleeding-est edge technology you can buy.  You save money up front, and your expectations for the unit aren't as high because it's a generation or two back from the latest. My refurbisher of choice recently changed hands, and I haven't had need to buy from them again lately, so I'll hold my recommendation of them until I do.  So far, I've been a satisfied customer, though.  (a D620 laptop, two Precision 390 Workstations, and three 20" Dell LCDs, all refurbished, all still working after a couple of years.)

I've seen Dell hardware dissed as unreliable or cheap, and there are some problem units out there, (for example, Dell + Nvidia eventually seems to spell failure in a laptop) but even these are easy to keep in repair with the info Dell makes freely available on the web.  Their laptops don't tend to be pretty, and are built like a puzzle box (it only fits together ONE way), but are sufficiently rugged and durable for most purposes, and have decent performance, too.

Toshiba has been recommended here, and for stuff that's mission-critical it's hard to find better price/performance ratio anywhere, but I personally hate working on 'em - ya gotta make a screw map (or take pictures) as you go tearing down a Toshiba laptop or you will spend five times more time putting it back together properly than you did tearing it down.

Sorry to hear about this.  It's becoming more and more prevalent in the industry, too.  Kinda sad, that.

Later On,
D
"The Way is not a matter of knowing or not knowing.  One word to a wise man; one lash to a bright horse."

Dell Latitude D620, PCLinuxOS 2012.08 KDE4/LXDE, 3.2.18.pclos.bfs, specs here.

Offline horusfalcon

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #24 on: May 06, 2012, 03:48:34 PM »
Wife says she is looking at a Dell alien box....anyone know about this one? I've sold and worked on many Dell's but this one, I don't know anything about it..Thoughts?  ???

She's probably talking about an Alienware machine.  Dell owns Alienware (and has for a few years now).  It's good stuff, but can be unrighteously expensive, and needs good care and feeding because it tends to be so high-spec.  (e.g., keep it clean or bad stuff can happen quickly.)

Later On,
D
"The Way is not a matter of knowing or not knowing.  One word to a wise man; one lash to a bright horse."

Dell Latitude D620, PCLinuxOS 2012.08 KDE4/LXDE, 3.2.18.pclos.bfs, specs here.

Offline T6

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #25 on: May 06, 2012, 04:06:36 PM »
"I keep everything from units under warranty in a closet somewhere until said warranty expires.  I mean, boxes, plastic bags, twist ties, documentation, invoices, receipts - everything even peripherally related to the item."

i do that too, only needed the boxes two times but i still do it  :D

after working on warranties i understand why most times is asked to return the unit in the box with the accessories

when you return the unit some codes are required to store and transport the unit, also to store the unit you don't have another box unless the problem is so big that the company sends boxes to store the faulty units, similar to what happened with xbox360, you had to inform that the unit failed and they send you a box to mail the faulty unit back to where it can be replaced or repaired, this is not a standard procedure for most companies since it is not that common to see a specific device to fail in great amounts and the companies take longer to respond or have a solution appropriate for everyone

also when you return the unit without the accessories someone has to respond for the accessories, if you as employee let a incomplete unit or a unit without a box enter to the system or to transport it to other place, you have to respond for the unit or the accessories that can end lost or damaged

it is a unfair situation because most times the pay you get working there is less than the cost of the unit and you have to respond with your money and mostly you get fired after paying for the unit  >:(
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Offline Georgetoon

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #26 on: May 06, 2012, 05:31:23 PM »
"I keep everything from units under warranty in a closet somewhere until said warranty expires.  I mean, boxes, plastic bags, twist ties, documentation, invoices, receipts - everything even peripherally related to the item."

i do that too, only needed the boxes two times but i still do it  :D

after working on warranties i understand why most times is asked to return the unit in the box with the accessories

when you return the unit some codes are required to store and transport the unit, also to store the unit you don't have another box unless the problem is so big that the company sends boxes to store the faulty units, similar to what happened with xbox360, you had to inform that the unit failed and they send you a box to mail the faulty unit back to where it can be replaced or repaired, this is not a standard procedure for most companies since it is not that common to see a specific device to fail in great amounts and the companies take longer to respond or have a solution appropriate for everyone

also when you return the unit without the accessories someone has to respond for the accessories, if you as employee let a incomplete unit or a unit without a box enter to the system or to transport it to other place, you have to respond for the unit or the accessories that can end lost or damaged

it is a unfair situation because most times the pay you get working there is less than the cost of the unit and you have to respond with your money and mostly you get fired after paying for the unit  >:(

Okay, I didn't do any of this and support is where Asus really excels. My Asus tablet's camera went on the fritz and I called up support.  They determined it needed to be repaired after we tied several tests, ec. (BTW, I got this tablet as a gift).

All I did was give them the serial number and they did the rest.  Asus provided me with an RMA, shipping label, etc.  All I did was package it up (in my own box) and send it in. 

Now, I'd like to say that turn-a-round was fast, but I can't.  It took a month.  But, so far (knock wood), everything is working better than when I originally got the tablet.

Based on how Asus responded, I'd definitely buy a laptop, desktop, etc. from them. 
Toonfully,

Mark
-----------
Lenovo 14" ThinkPad Edge (0578F5U) with Core i3 Processor(i3-370M) 2.40 GHz 4GB RAM
Acer Aspire 9300 Laptop
Desktop Icy Dock system with AMD PHENOM X4 QUADCORE 9650 2.3GHZ 4MB L1 , ‎NVidia GEFORCE 9400GT 1GB 2X DVI PCIE graphics card, 22" Chimei monitor.

Offline bicol_willem

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #27 on: May 06, 2012, 06:47:57 PM »
"Okay, I didn't do any of this and support is where Asus really excels. My Asus tablet's camera went on the fritz and I called up support.  They determined it needed to be repaired after we tied several tests, ec. (BTW, I got this tablet as a gift).

All I did was give them the serial number and they did the rest.  Asus provided me with an RMA, shipping label, etc.  All I did was package it up (in my own box) and send it in.

Now, I'd like to say that turn-a-round was fast, but I can't.  It took a month.  But, so far (knock wood), everything is working better than when I originally got the tablet.

Based on how Asus responded, I'd definitely buy a laptop, desktop, etc. from them. "


NOT so in the Philippines  (I guess you live in a country where consumer protection actually works).

Offline horusfalcon

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #28 on: May 06, 2012, 11:17:38 PM »

[snip:  everything Georgetoon said except...]

Based on how Asus responded, I'd definitely buy a laptop, desktop, etc. from them. " {emphasis mine.}

NOT so in the Philippines  (I guess you live in a country where consumer protection actually works).

Weren't you describing Acer, not Asus?

The bit about wanting the original shipping carton is a bit extreme, and, depending on where you live you may have a right of redress about that as long as the original product box is well packed in a carton sturdy enough for the return trip.  (I've no idea what the Philippines is like these days, though...)

That said, I still hang onto everything during warranty.  I've become good at re-using these boxes and stuff to package other items for shipment, too.  (Reuse, recycle... save on packing materials.)

Later On,
D
« Last Edit: May 06, 2012, 11:22:55 PM by horusfalcon »
"The Way is not a matter of knowing or not knowing.  One word to a wise man; one lash to a bright horse."

Dell Latitude D620, PCLinuxOS 2012.08 KDE4/LXDE, 3.2.18.pclos.bfs, specs here.

Offline bicol_willem

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Re: Asus laptops
« Reply #29 on: May 07, 2012, 03:56:44 AM »
"Weren't you describing Acer, not Asus?"

Good one horusfalcon, I didn't even notice that  :D :D :D

Since I am now in the 5th month waiting, I opened all options left where under contacting Acer in Taiwan.
I don't know how this ends but I wont go down without exhausting any and all options at hand. At least I will know I tried it all.