Abit To Bow Out of Mainboard Market
Steve Kerrison writes "Taiwanese technology firm Abit will be pulling out of the mainboard market at the end of this year. HEXUS.channel, citing sources close to South East Asian distributors, reports that the company will continue to deliver mainboard products until the end of 2008 and will still honour all warranties in subsequent years. Rumours of this decision circulated in May but were dismissed. Apparently the decision was made in the last couple of weeks. Abit is a popular brand amongst PC hardware enthusiasts, many of whom will be disappointed to see it leave the market."
I think I'll fire up my dual processor 366 MHz BP-6 for old times' sake.
Abit was the only brand of motherboards I knew of that acknowledged the capacitors problem and claimed to use 100% known-good Japanese caps in their boards. With them gone, does that leave any good companies, or will all motherboards still be doomed to leaky budging and exploding capacitors?
Morphing Software
As I was when my KG7 and KT7 both quit last month with bad caps. To heck with ABIT!
Good night, sweet prince, And packs of capacitors sing thee to thy rest.
~Mike (Titan_X)
Home server for my folks. Works great. Was way ahead of its time.
Given the generally good quality of Abit main/motherboards, and the fact that they were reasonably priced: will the loss of their competition raise the price of their competitors? Or is the market broad enough this won't impact the price points? (I would place them in the same field as Asus / ASrock / MSI / BIOSTAR / Foxconn / etc.)
Either way. It is a loss.
I mentioned tinker-toys once in a post - now I'm modded down for life.
It looks like the margins have become too tight for all but the largest mainboard makers to survive, with massive companies like Foxconn able to exploit extreme economies of scale.
Which is exactly what the TV industry went through. Even the big players left and licensed their names to Chinese companies. Do you really think the Sony TV is really a Sony? Or RCA or GE .... It's just a commodity.
The margins are just too low to even bother with them.
I think Abit is the manufacturer of my girlfriend's computer who's motherboard just died. It better be coincidence only!
Anything and Everything about the Net
I've been using exclusively Abit boards for my main PC for the last 6-7 years or so. I've loved every one of them, KR7A-RAID, IC7-MAX3, and now the IN9 32X-MAX are the ones that stick out in my memory best. Always top quality, and top performance.
I lol'd
I remember getting the Abit BH-6 and the Celeron 300A which easily took to overclocking @ 450mhz.
Most stable, rock solid board I've ever owned.
RIP.
If you think about it's true. More and more people are buying laptops, or portable computers like Shuttle XPC, Mac Mini.This is why companies like VIA, and Abits are quiting they have seen writing on the wall.
After all it makes sense why built $3000 desktop just to upgrade when you can buy a decent laptop for $800.
Even veals have more autonomy!
All ABIT motherboards I have ever owned had bad capacitors even though they claimed they didn't. I have owned the KT7E with the AMD Athlon XP 160++ and it ran OK for the first year and then ever since it couldn't run for more than a few days without becoming fubared. I then looked over the motherboard carefully and noticed the capacitors were going bad, so I went and got myself an NF7 nForce2 MB w/ an AMD Athlon XP 1700+ and didn't even think about RMA'ing since I figured at the time the KT7E was pretty much aging anyway and I didn't care for VIA chipsets to begin with. The first NF7 had to be RMA'd cause it hardly ever posted fully even then the second the nvidia drivers loaded up for the AGP card (GeForce 4 Ti 4200 64MB AGP 8X) it crapped out. So, I did cross shipping which worked out great (had to pay full price up front for the board and then they would refund you the cost except shipping when they did receive the defective MB).
The board I received of the NF7 was in fact newer and had the 2.0 board revision with the new 400FSB chipset. Worked great for nearly two years and then again POST wouldn't go successfully. RMA'd again and this time I got back a motherboard that has memory issues. Try running Opera for half an hour and browsing around and get graphical glitches where half the window wouldn't render. Try playing Steam games and 1/3 of it wouldn't render and games crashed to desktop.
So, then I figured why not try replacing the 512MB stick I was using with 3x512MB newer from newegg. I did that and did not solve memory corruption issue. So then I tried with getting a GeForce 7600 GS 512MB AGP 8X to replace my aging GeForce 4 Ti 4200 64MB AGP 8X. No go, still memory corruption issues.
You might ask why didn't I RMA a third time? Well, I didn't notice the issues until two months later (was busy with college work to do any serious gaming or anything) when my warranty expired on the motherboard. So I suffered with that crap for a while then this past christmas I saved up enough I got myself an ASUS Maximus Extreme board with a Q6600, 2GB (2x1GB sticks) RAM, and a GeForce 8600 GTS 256MB GDDR3 PCI-E x16 card, and I have been enjoying it ever since, but it hasn't been a year or two yet so I cannot vouch for how long lasting it is. :)
This space is not for rent.
My motherboard was never great to begin with, but they haven't released new drivers or a bios update in over 2 years, and the board has only been out for 3. This means the motherboard doesn't support more than 2.5GB of ram even though it can theoretically support 8GB, and is one of the reasons I'm not running Vista right now. Abit seemed to go way down hill after socket AM2 and 754 came out.
Then again, with board manufacturers all over the place (Palit, Zotac, Asus, Intel, Foxconn, ECS *shudder*, Gigabyte, MSI, and many others), I don't think they'll be terribly missed in the Mobo business. Popularity (in the enthusiast market at least) usually come down to who has the impression of best software.
It's ture computers are becoming a commodity, however, it's only ture for Desktop PC. In 90s having a computer was consider something special, and fashionable. However, as time went buy people got tired of big ugly desktop, and they were replace with towers, and then smaller towers like Shuttle XPC, iMac. This is why people are not longer buy PC anymore, they prefer notebooks, because users can carry then and thanks to wifi it can be connect to internet. Which is why Notebooks types of computers still commands the PC markets. I think we are reaching a point where we will see less and less of big huge computers -- after all it did happen to Mainframe computers.
First it was SIS, and now Abit. So, at the rate we are going in five to ten years motherboard companies will no longer exist..
Even veals have more autonomy!
Yes, I love my ABIT IC7-MAX3. Still my main desktop computer at home, although I primarily use my laptop for most things these days, it still makes a great file and print server. Plus, it's got a lot of funky lights: http://bis.midco.net/black/
Nevermore.
Anyone who calls a motherboard a 'mainboard' deserves to fail.
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
Abit is a popular brand amongst PC hardware enthusiasts, many of who will be disappointed to see it leave the market.
In the late 90s and early 00s maybe. They've been more of a problem-child as of late. Frankly, I thought they were already out of the market.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
I used to be a big Abit supporter, but the last three Abit boards I had were screwy in one way or another. On the last board I had, a fan went out. I called Abit support, and the company wanted me to pay $10 plus shipping for a replacement, even though the motherboard was less than a year old and still under warranty. I told the support rep to stuff the fan.
I've never bought an Abit product since. And if that was a common experience with the company's support arm, I'm not surprised it's exiting the consumer market. Good riddance!
You do know that there is still a motherboard in notebooks right? It is different but it is still there.
Perhaps Fatal1ty would be more appropriate.
http://www.uabit.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=48&page=2&model=338
Nevermore.
I used to use Abit years ago. Never had any issues myself. Asus user now, and don't know if I'd go back, even with out this.
I just bought a Gigabyte motherboard last month, so they're the only manufacturer allowed to get out of the business this year.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
Be careful what you wish for. It's no fun having a broken jaw :(
First VIA drops Chipsets, and now Abit drops boards. Couldn't happen to a better MB manufacturer.
Worst board I ever owned was an Abit KT7A. To this day I'm convinced that Abit Golden Sampled the reviews of that board.
My KT7A was blue screen after Kernel Panic after lockup, And half the time, it would corrupt the drive even though it would pass every hard drive, Processor and Memory test known to man. Abit Finally put out a BIOS that removed the suck from it, but it was pretty much EOL when it came out and cut 1/4th of it's speed. Finally I said the Hell with it, got a NForce based MSI K7N420 and all of the crashes magically disappeared even when pushed to it's absolute bandwidth limit. Never looked back from there.
Another friend of mine bought an Abit board (I can't remember what it was, it was a socket 370 MB) and it wouldn't boot from a floppy disk or CDROM but would boot from a hard disk. RAM and CPU tested OK in an Gigabyte board, so we RMA'd the board and got another one with the exact same problem. Took them 4 months to update the bios for it, and good luck installing the BIOS update when it can't boot from 2 of the three boot medias. Good thing he had a internal zip drive handy.
Only Board they had worth anything was the BE6, and I'd take an Aopen AX6BC over that board anyday. The AX6BC line is still the most stable board line I've ever seen. I've seen lightning strikes take out most components in a system but the AX6BC still survived.
In Soviet Russia, Trojan exploits YOU!
they had good support and a good product so let's hope they still have a foot in the market. UMPs might be a good place for them to shine again.
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
Sad to see this company stop making mobos
I remember my trusty NF7 fondly
The assholes at Abit had to be sued to fix the motherboards where they used capacitors made with a stolen formula.
http://forums.cnet.com/5208-7591_102-0.html?forumID=26&threadID=59483&messageID=706271
I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
cool LED chipset fan, I found that my 92mm heatsink fan pushes enough air to cool the northbridge despite the disconnected mobo fan.
Oh did you ever notice that the BIOS will change the boot order of devices if you plug in a new HDD? I reformatted my computer before I figured out the MOBO was changing the boot order on its own. I'm sorry Dave...
kind of explains why my last MoBo "AB9 Pro" was a POS, they never fixed the firmware, now I'm not hoping they will.
http://xkcd.com/285/
Yea, but in five years you'll have System-on-Chip with Infiniband hubs to your external peripherals.
Motherboards will be things of the past.