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- May 6, 2019
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I never understood that either. My XG438Q does as well, and it is a complete waste.Why, why oh why on Earth do these displays (not specific to Asus) include speakers? RAH! Internet rage triggered level 11!
yupActually, it says "G-Sync compatible". Is that the modern codeword for "It's actually FreeSync2 but has been validated for use with Nvidia GPU's"?
—https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeSyncIn January 2017, AMD announced the second generation of FreeSync known as FreeSync 2 HDR. In January 2020, AMD Announced FreeSync 2 HDR was rebranding to FreeSync Premium Pro.
AMD FreeSync technology is split up into three tiers known as AMD FreeSync, AMD FreeSync Premium, and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro.
I think it's six of one half dozen of the other.I don't think I'd be comfortable purchasing a high-end monitor from Asus, if only for fear (justified or not) of having to deal with their RMA service.
I had a bad experience dealing with their warranty process for an issue that developed on a new-at-the-time monitor from their business line. Without going into detail, I opted to workaround the issue rather than invest any more time attempting to communicate with Asus.On the one hand, I keep hearing that Asus has poor RMA service, but on the other, I've never actually had to use their RMA service, as their stuff has been absolutely bulletproof for me. I've had tons of stuff go bad on me, but every component I've ever owned from Asus has just worked and never quit.
My LCD displays absolutely refuse to die, which is actually becoming annoying as I feel less of an excuse to upgrade.I've also never had a screen die on me, except my old Panny Plasma TV I used in my home theater, and that was an easy fix, by just replacing the power board in it.
Yeah - Asus stuff is generally good.Maybe my experience was atypical. Maybe they've changed. I can't say I'd have fared any better with XYZ Corp., but the experience was unpleasant enough that I first look to competitors. That said, I haven't ruled them out entirely.
Yeah - Asus stuff is generally good.
But the RMA process is ~that~ bad. If you need it, you are better off just writing it off. I've had to use it three times: a motherboard, a GPU, and a chromebook, and you'd have thought I would have learned my lesson the first time. I severely regretted even opening the claim each time.