RE: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)

2008-01-28 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of David Naylor
 Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 12:21 AM
 To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Subject: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)
 
 
 Hi,
 
 Late last year I bought a AS US P5N-E (force 650) motherboard.  It
 didn't work with FreeBSD and SUMP (I can't blame FreeBSD has Linux and
 Windows struggle to run on the board, and it is riddled with bugs).
 
 I'm now hoping to convince AS US that I need a different motherboard,
 does anyone know which AS US boards work (or don't work) with FreeBSD.
  I need SLID, quad core and 4 DIM MS.
 

Why don't you ask us when you have actually managed to get AS US
convinced?  It seems to me your chances of doing this now are
gone.  The Uniform Commercial Code only requires retailers to
offer a 30 day guarentee.  Assuming late last year meant sometime
in December, you should have returned the motherboard to the
retailer weeks ago.  And, AS US has no obligation to take the
board back and supply you with a different one under their warranty.

 One board I was considering was the AS US P5N32-E (with force 680i).
 I know there was a problem with NF (but I can live with that, if it is
 not already solved).
 

I think your nuts to consider AS US again.  You got burned once by them,
do you like getting slapped upside the head repeatedly?

The best chance you have of
salvaging this train wreck is selling the motherboard on Ebay for
50 cents on the dollar, and treating it as a learning experience.

In the future, don't buy a motherboard from an online retailer
unless you know it works.  And whether you buy one from an online
retailer or a local retailer, return it as soon as you find it
doesen't work.  And of course, test that it works before the 30
day return period is up.

Ted
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Re: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)

2008-01-28 Thread Predrag Punosevac

Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
  

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of David Naylor
Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 12:21 AM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)


Hi,

Late last year I bought a AS US P5N-E (force 650) motherboard.  It
didn't work with FreeBSD and SUMP (I can't blame FreeBSD has Linux and
Windows struggle to run on the board, and it is riddled with bugs).

I'm now hoping to convince AS US that I need a different motherboard,
does anyone know which AS US boards work (or don't work) with FreeBSD.
 I need SLID, quad core and 4 DIM MS.




Why don't you ask us when you have actually managed to get AS US
convinced?  It seems to me your chances of doing this now are
gone.  The Uniform Commercial Code only requires retailers to
offer a 30 day guarentee.  Assuming late last year meant sometime
in December, you should have returned the motherboard to the
retailer weeks ago.  And, AS US has no obligation to take the
board back and supply you with a different one under their warranty.

  

One board I was considering was the AS US P5N32-E (with force 680i).
I know there was a problem with NF (but I can live with that, if it is
not already solved).




I think your nuts to consider AS US again.  You got burned once by them,
do you like getting slapped upside the head repeatedly?

The best chance you have of
salvaging this train wreck is selling the motherboard on Ebay for
50 cents on the dollar, and treating it as a learning experience.

In the future, don't buy a motherboard from an online retailer
unless you know it works. 

Ted,
I love reading your comments as you are so knowledgeable but you should 
give a brake to a poor guy. He is already traumatized

by online experience so we need to conform him.

There is nothing wrong in buying thins from online retailers as you can 
usually save 30-50% in my experience but as Ted said you have to know 
what are you buying.


Tad's idea of Ebay is almost perfect. You can also try to get a read of 
your board on the Craigslist. My advice would be that you put the

price 10%-20% bigger of what you actually pay for for the board.

If the person knows what he is doing he would not buy from Ebay or 
Craigslist anyway.
I just looked the Tuscon's Craigslist and some moron is selling a mother 
board for $50 bucks. Instead of the picture of his mother board he gave  
a link  to  the Geeks' web-site where the same mother board is clearly 
priced $33.95. Including $8 shipping, that is still cheaper
than $50 which his asking price (If I remember well arithmetic from the 
kindergarten:-) ).


Cheers,
Predrag

P. S. Ted, I am so happy you didn't make a progress with that 
anti-Serbian filter you were working on so that I can still read your 
comments and learn. Kind regards from Arizona :-)



 And whether you buy one from an online
retailer or a local retailer, return it as soon as you find it
doesen't work.  And of course, test that it works before the 30
day return period is up.

Ted
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Re: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)

2008-01-28 Thread Wojciech Puchar

Ted,
I love reading your comments as you are so knowledgeable but you should give 
a brake to a poor guy. He is already traumatized

by online experience so we need to conform him.

There is nothing wrong in buying thins from online retailers as you can 
usually save 30-50% in my experience but as Ted said you have to know what 
are you buying.




what i always do when have to buy a computer is to (after getting rough 
knowledge what will work in freebsd)


a) go to the shop and say about what i want to buy, telling in advance 
that it has to run freebsd, and i want to check it before buying.


in many shops they refuse to sell at all, but there are other shops :)

b) check everything with live cd+my laptop. disks, network, etc.

c) if it work - buy it, and ONLY complete machine, not parts.


may get slightly more expensive but no problems then
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RE: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)

2008-01-28 Thread Ted Mittelstaedt


 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Predrag
 Punosevac
 Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 2:37 AM
 To: Ted Mittelstaedt
 Cc: David Naylor; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
 Subject: Re: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)


 Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
 
  -Original Message-
  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of David Naylor
  Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 12:21 AM
  To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
  Subject: HELP: Motherboard Selection (ASUS)
 
 
  Hi,
 
  Late last year I bought a AS US P5N-E (force 650) motherboard.  It
  didn't work with FreeBSD and SUMP (I can't blame FreeBSD has Linux and
  Windows struggle to run on the board, and it is riddled with bugs).
 
  I'm now hoping to convince AS US that I need a different motherboard,
  does anyone know which AS US boards work (or don't work) with FreeBSD.
   I need SLID, quad core and 4 DIM MS.
 
 
 
  Why don't you ask us when you have actually managed to get AS US
  convinced?  It seems to me your chances of doing this now are
  gone.  The Uniform Commercial Code only requires retailers to
  offer a 30 day guarentee.  Assuming late last year meant sometime
  in December, you should have returned the motherboard to the
  retailer weeks ago.  And, AS US has no obligation to take the
  board back and supply you with a different one under their warranty.
 
 
  One board I was considering was the AS US P5N32-E (with force 680i).
  I know there was a problem with NF (but I can live with that, if it is
  not already solved).
 
 
 
  I think your nuts to consider AS US again.  You got burned once by them,
  do you like getting slapped upside the head repeatedly?
 
  The best chance you have of
  salvaging this train wreck is selling the motherboard on Ebay for
  50 cents on the dollar, and treating it as a learning experience.
 
  In the future, don't buy a motherboard from an online retailer
  unless you know it works.
 Ted,
 I love reading your comments as you are so knowledgeable but you should
 give a brake to a poor guy. He is already traumatized
 by online experience so we need to conform him.


I loved your post!  Your right - he didn't say, of course, that he
bought online - I didn't want to imply that he did, actually, I
just wanted to make sure that he didn't decide to go online.

 There is nothing wrong in buying thins from online retailers as you can
 usually save 30-50% in my experience but as Ted said you have to know
 what are you buying.


I buy lots of stuff online myself - but you have to be careful, and
you have to be sure of what your doing.  Most of the time, I am -
but I've got burned a few times online  (fortunately, not for more
than $20 USD or so)

 Tad's idea of Ebay is almost perfect. You can also try to get a read of
 your board on the Craigslist. My advice would be that you put the
 price 10%-20% bigger of what you actually pay for for the board.

 If the person knows what he is doing he would not buy from Ebay or
 Craigslist anyway.

Yes - but a lot of people DON'T and so that is why you can unloa.. I
mean sell stuff there.  And of course the old adage of one man's
trash is another man's treasure always applies - I've bought
what just about anyone would consider junk before - extracted
the bits I wanted - then tossed out the rest.  Sometimes when
you need a power supply it's cheaper to buy the device then
toss everything but the power supply in the garbage.

The same things apply to the old car market.  I've seen people selling
a car engine for $600 that I could go buy an old car for $300 that
had the same engine - remove the engine - and haul the rest of
the car to the wrecker and get $50 for the scrap steel.  Of course
I have to have the tools to remove the engine - but they are the
same tools I need to have to deal with the $600 engine.

 I just looked the Tuscon's Craigslist and some moron is selling a mother
 board for $50 bucks. Instead of the picture of his mother board he gave
 a link  to  the Geeks' web-site where the same mother board is clearly
 priced $33.95. Including $8 shipping, that is still cheaper
  than $50 which his asking price (If I remember well arithmetic from the
 kindergarten:-) ).


ROTFL!!  That's one of the best I've heard about.  If you ever want
to kill 10 minutes and get a few laughs, read the craigslist free
list.  I particularly love the ones that start out free TV set doesen't
turn on - you fix  Yeah, like I'm really going to be able to fix
a TV that has it's entire circuitry embedded in a big ASIC inside
the TV

Ted

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