- Oct 13, 1999
- 22,377
- 7
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Chaintech to exit motherboard business
Fewer manufacturers = less choice, higher prices and less innovation
Seems as if Chaintech has had a rough 12 months. They will still make video cards and will make memory modules instead of motherboards. This is strange because some companies such as eVGA and BFG are going into the motherboard business. There has to be profit somewhere in the motherboard business...
I've actually only owned two Chaintech boards. First was the 7NIL1, the only Nforce2 Ultra 400 board that was mATX. More recently, just got a VNF3-250. The boards seem pretty solid. I also just got a Chaintech 6800LE video card, plus I have two of their VIA Envy24T PCI soundcards.
I wonder which tier 2 motherboard manufacturer will call it quits next? Shuttle was the previous one. Here's my eulogy to Shuttle.
Here is something both interesting and disturbing...
In May of this year I purchased a Shuttle AB60R motherboard from Mwave when they had them on special for $25.
By early July, Shuttle has announced they were quitting the motherboard business.
I don't buy another motherboard until...
In late August of this year I purchased a Chaintech VNF3-250 motherboard from ZipZoomFly for $56 shipped.
A few days after I receive the board, I read that Chaintech has announced they will stop motherboard production.
WTF is up wid dat!?!?!
OMG, now I'm afraid to buy motherboards that I like, for fear that some bad juju associated with my purchase will put the company on an inevitable course to stop motherboard production.
Hmmm, on a more positive light perhaps I can hire my services to these motherboard companies. I can threaten to put them out of the motherboard business by purchasing one of their boards unless... they GIVE me one for free. That won't count as me purchasing one, so they should be safe from my bad vibes!!! LOL, this would be just like that character in the book Mostly Harmless by Douglas Adams, the lorry driver who was the rain god... Everywhere he went, the clouds rained on him. One person said, "hey, he can offer services to drought-ridden countries." The next guy said, "forget about that, he can offer to NOT visit places that don't want rain, such as sporting events, etc."
Fewer manufacturers = less choice, higher prices and less innovation
Seems as if Chaintech has had a rough 12 months. They will still make video cards and will make memory modules instead of motherboards. This is strange because some companies such as eVGA and BFG are going into the motherboard business. There has to be profit somewhere in the motherboard business...
I've actually only owned two Chaintech boards. First was the 7NIL1, the only Nforce2 Ultra 400 board that was mATX. More recently, just got a VNF3-250. The boards seem pretty solid. I also just got a Chaintech 6800LE video card, plus I have two of their VIA Envy24T PCI soundcards.
I wonder which tier 2 motherboard manufacturer will call it quits next? Shuttle was the previous one. Here's my eulogy to Shuttle.
Here is something both interesting and disturbing...
In May of this year I purchased a Shuttle AB60R motherboard from Mwave when they had them on special for $25.
By early July, Shuttle has announced they were quitting the motherboard business.
I don't buy another motherboard until...
In late August of this year I purchased a Chaintech VNF3-250 motherboard from ZipZoomFly for $56 shipped.
A few days after I receive the board, I read that Chaintech has announced they will stop motherboard production.
WTF is up wid dat!?!?!
OMG, now I'm afraid to buy motherboards that I like, for fear that some bad juju associated with my purchase will put the company on an inevitable course to stop motherboard production.
Hmmm, on a more positive light perhaps I can hire my services to these motherboard companies. I can threaten to put them out of the motherboard business by purchasing one of their boards unless... they GIVE me one for free. That won't count as me purchasing one, so they should be safe from my bad vibes!!! LOL, this would be just like that character in the book Mostly Harmless by Douglas Adams, the lorry driver who was the rain god... Everywhere he went, the clouds rained on him. One person said, "hey, he can offer services to drought-ridden countries." The next guy said, "forget about that, he can offer to NOT visit places that don't want rain, such as sporting events, etc."