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Shipments of PC parts to drop in 2016

I've got a mate who used to work for Asus in Taiwan. Now he is a journalist and works closely with many companies. He posted this a couple of days back, figured I would post it here.

Asustek, Gigabyte motherboard shipments to drop 10% in 2015
DIGITIMES [Monday 14 December 2015]
With demand for PC remaining weak, Asustek Computer and Gigabyte Technology are both expected to see their brand motherboard shipments drop 10% on year, each shipping around 17 million units in 2015, while other small players will see much worse declines in the year, according to sources from the upstream supply chain.

Elitegroup Computer Systems (ECS), Micro-Star International (MSI) and Biostar are seeing losses from their motherboard businesses, while China-based Onda reportedly will gradually phase out from the industry in 2016. The sources believe the global motherboard shipments will drop another 10% on year in 2016, forcing more motherboard players to quit.

Asustek and Gigabyte each shipped about 8.5-9 million motherboards in the first half thanks to their strong marketing and price cut promotions. However, Intel's releases of its new Skylake processors did not boost consumers' demand as expected and the two players only shipped less than five million motherboards in the third quarter. Since their shipments are unlikely to dramatic sequential growths in the fourth quarter, their annual shipments are only expected to reach between 17-17.5 million units each.

ECS also turned its focus away from its own-brand motherboard business. China-based motherboard player Onda, which ships about one million motherboards a year mostly to the mid-range and entry-level segments, is also rumored to quit the market.

And what he says about it.

> No word on ASRock, but I suspect dropping more than MSI as - if their marketing is anything to go by - it has collapsed in the last 18 months. Will be loss making also.
> MSI were at 6M a couple of years ago, about the same as ECS so will also be loss making. And despite their very successful Gaming branding it seems it's not helping their sales ultimately. Their gaming site is evidently a company in full pivot to notebooks though - their entire HQ building is now MSI Gaming branded. It'll be a slow burn out for them in MB in favour of Graphics and NB.
> No more ECS 'L33T' stuff. Mini PCs and OEM only I guess. Their company is in a bad way, I heard they had to sell their fancy HQ in a prime area of Taipei in the last few years (not sure if true).
> Biostar will be doing an Abit/DFI very soon. I'm surprised they lasted this long tbh.
> It'll be a two-company market in 3-5 years as Gigabyte/ASUS vacuum up what's left.

Sounds like MSI are really struggling. I can understand now why they didn't bother to release the 780ti Lightning and why they took so long with the 980ti Lightning.

It seems we are less easily fooled about "gaming" products than we were a couple of years ago. This is quite evident for me because I have now pretty much gotten rid of all of my gaming stuff and have bought regular office equipment. Chairs, headset and so on.

Half of the problem for me is that gaming products are usually far too expensive for the actual quality of the product being offered. IE, you think by spending £80 on a gaming mouse that you are buying a very solid peripheral that will last you for years. Of course, though, there is a caveat. All that the extra £50 has gained you is the fact that it has an LED or two on it, not that it is in any way, shape or form more substantial.

And then you have the utterly cringe worthy products like the MSI GODLIKE !. For me this board has been defaced and completely ruined by the fact they called it GODLIKE. Of all of the things that should ever be used by that name a god damned motherboard is not one of them.

It's got to be one of the most embarrassing products I have ever seen.

I'm not too worried about Asrock. They have carved out a name of themselves by making boards that actual people can actually afford. So "gaming" moniker aside I think Asrock will still hang around just making nice cheap products that people can afford.

Asus IMO have just gotten better and better. However, like Asrock Asus do cater to the low end and IMO that is where the sales are going to be.
 
Sounds like MSI are really struggling. I can understand now why they didn't bother to release the 780ti Lightning and why they took so long with the 980ti Lightning.

That's totally unrelated to their financial position with respect to motherboards. The 780Ti Lightning was abandoned when nVidia said the voltage would have to be locked to avoid it outperforming their higher priced Titan at the time. All of the development work and investment had already been made (largely from the 780) and it was basically ready to roll out. The 980Ti was genuinely just delayed in the final stages, probably as they spent two months deciding whether to ship it in yellow or silver.

As a whole (beyond MB's) I think the GAMING brand is doing well for them, while enthusiasts may be wise to what it really is in most cases the market still loves it. Just like black and red, it sells numbers. I'm sure now ASUS have started to react to that trend with the latest ROG line popularity will decline.

JR
 
I don't see how that is news we already knew. Everyone knows PC shipments will decline. That means everyone as a whole will see lower sales.
 
I'm not overly surprised. The Skylake motherboards only sell to accompany the CPUS which were overpriced and had low availability. Everyone knew they were coming out so probably held off upgrading until they were benched and available at more reasonable prices. Same with GPUs - we'll see a decline as more people wait for Pascal.

This is only part of the issue - a lot of people now use tablets and mobiles for general email, internet and social media so there's less of a demand for a 'family pc'. Most people have notebooks and we're shifting away to more portable and wireless solutions.

Nucs, AIOs and the like are all eating up market share and the consoles and mac fans don't have any market for motherboard upgrades.

I'd say the rationalization and decline of some manufacturers just mirrors what's happening in every industry. Think of the automotive industry. All global cars just being re-badged for local markets. Mazda/Volvo/Ford sharing floorplans. VAG, GM/Opel/Vauxhaul/Holden the same. Everyone is doing it.
 
Steam Data Leak.

So as it would seem Steam has dropped the ball and opened the wrong Valve :lol: jokes aside having your profile compromised is no laughing matter neither is sharing your account and credit card details with total strangers.

This was sadly the case with Steam on the busiest day of the year, users found themselves browsing the store to find they were in fact looking at a complete strangers account which included full libraries, account details and even credit card details..

A code update implemented on the 25th of December which was responsible for the crossed lines or "leaky Valve" is believed to be the culprit causing profile page caching issues, this has since been fixed and Steam is now back up and running after a short down time.

All this happened rather fast and social media exploded with many concerned angry users (rightly so) voicing their opinions, it brings many questions to the table including, why tweak code during the busiest sales period for Steam especially on Christmas day of all days, why wasn't the plug pulled the moment it was obvious something was wrong, why didn't Valve make a public announcement on social media?

My advice to all Steam users is to get your passwords changed and keep an eye on your bank accounts, if you see any irregularities report them immediately to the appropriate authorities.

Sources:
Many thanks to Forum User Barnsley for originally bringing this to our attention & TheRegister.


~Wraith~​
 
So as it would seem Steam has dropped the ball and opened the wrong Valve :lol: jokes aside having your profile compromised is no laughing matter neither is sharing your account and credit card details with total strangers.

~Wraith~​

Thanks!

To add some more detail that has appeared

The details displayed were read only (as far as people have been able to obtain). This means that while people could see certain bits of your card details/billing addresses etc they could not actually change it.

If you were logged in but did not visit the steam store then you should be ok as the caching layer was only to do with the store, not the community/user side. Ascessing your payment details would involve the store too.

In terms of what exactly was displayed, it is the exact same as it would be if you were to access it normally. So that is the last 4 details of your debit/credit card, potentially your billing address, your email and various bits to do with steam wallet.
 
Just thought I would let people know that there is another Tom Glancy bundle on at Humber Bundle ATM

Saw it this morning when I got up, just got to work and nothing to do yet so thought I would post it here in case anyone didnt get an email.

Have to say, I liked the previous one better.
 
EVGA QRC/QRG Quick Release CPU/GPU AIO announced at CES 2016
c63Flum.jpg
 
7-1080.2372018661.jpg


The first M.2 SSD to feature a heatsink from stock?

The controller seems to be the Marvells 88SS1093
the M8Pe will most likely be featured in 128gb 512 and maybe 1tb capacity.

Source
 
7-1080.2372018661.jpg


The first M.2 SSD to feature a heatsink from stock?

The controller seems to be the Marvells 88SS1093
the M8Pe will most likely be featured in 128gb 512 and maybe 1tb capacity.

Source

very interesting. good to see large capacities.
 
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