 |
Abit Alledgedly Lay Off More Staff |
 |

31-07-2008, 23:01
|
 |
Monkey Trousers.
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Manchester, UK
Posts: 11,787
Thanks: 809
Thanked 693 Times in 606 Posts
|
|
Abit Alledgedly Lay Off More Staff
The rumour mill is working overtime regarding Abit TW laying off more staff.
Several sites are reporting multiple lay offs from various different departments.
I will add more news as I get it.
In the mean time, if an Abit representative would like to comment here, please feel free.
Quote from tweaktown:
Quote:
Universal abit lays-off more staff Published: 30th July 2008 @ 11:20 AM
Author: John Freeman
According to several sources both inside and outside Universal abit Motherboard Company; abit has laid off many staff from various departments within its HQ based in Taiwan. This follows a move from the previous HQ address in Nei-Hu to new premises in Nan-Gang to reduce expenses just last month.
The beleaguered company has been down on its luck ever since the then CEO fiddled with the public companies stock prospects according to allegations. The subsequent investigation and resulting court cases have not yet been finalized, however, the abit brand was sold to Universal Scientific Industrial and the proceeds were used to level off some of the debt the public company had incurred.
Universal Scientific Industrial Co., Ltd. is a DMS/ODM/OEM manufacturer in 4C (Computing, Communications, Consumer Electronics and Car Electronics) industries, which means other companies employ them to design (in some cases) and manufacture for them. Brands they have dealings with include HP, Dell and ASUS, Since USI is part of ASE, one of the largest Semiconductor manufacturers in the world today, which was purported to be under consideration for a partnership with the Carlisle group not too long ago. One has to question what the purpose to buy abit was. However since they bought abit in a bid battle between several big players, rumoured to be ECS, Foxconn and Asus, most of the original abit support and admin staff were laid off. The marketing team remained, as did the PM team with all the key engineers needed to continue making high-end to mainstream motherboards. That was in early 2006.
As of the end of July 2008, most of the Research and Development team have been laid off, and between 3-4 people from almost every engineering department from Quality Control to Field Application Engineers too. Everyone from the previous PM team who designed the likes of the MAX and Fatal1ty series that many enthusiasts grew to love have all moved on over the last year. There doesn’t seem to be much left of what was once a prosperous and productive team well worth recognition. Some of those PM members went to Biostar, and others went to Foxconn. Both companies have seen a marked improvement in enthusiast level products recently, with abit’s offerings becoming more and more mediocre. The irony was that many times abit could not use USI resources as they charged too much, or did not have the Quality Control in place for the enthusiast sector. Pretty strange considering that USI is supposed to own abit and ideally help it’s underling to achieve better products with better results. The bottom line is that USI never understood the brand and never leveraged it as it could have. The abit GM who had stood firm and resolutely as he handed over control to the new masters eventually left for personal reasons, leaving a new person in charge who had no experience in the enthusiast sector. That person hailed from another semi-conductor firm, and has been applying those threadbare methods of lower margins, but higher volumes. While some would say these methods are slowly crippling the enthusiast aspect of the abit brand, the subsequent loss of faith in the abit brand by the public at large has resulted in warehouses being full and few if any buyers lining up.
Looking deeper at the USI acquisition of abit, one has to question in which direction are they headed? Recent shows and events such as CeBIT and Computex suggest the motherboard line-up was still pretty strong. I’m guessing the resulting orders have not been what were required and as such the lay-off stands to reason. Does this mean an end to abit? Or simply an end to the motherboard segment, while the company does a subtle shift to align itself more closely with what USI can make easily, namely: notebooks, UMPC’s and photo frames. Dare I ask if the photo frame can be overclocked?
|
|
 |

01-08-2008, 16:14
|
 |
Super Moderator
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Hamilton - Scotland
Posts: 4,527
Thanks: 4
Thanked 320 Times in 276 Posts
|
|
Yes it doesn't look good, as you say it's difficult to know what is fact.
Think the key fact for Abit fans is seeing some boards appear. Buff appeared quite upbeat mid July but have heard nothing since.
|

28-08-2008, 16:55
|
 |
Monkey Trousers.
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Manchester, UK
Posts: 11,787
Thanks: 809
Thanked 693 Times in 606 Posts
|
|
Looks like all the rumours were true, Abit have announced today that they are to stop producing motherboards at the end of the year, but will honour any RMA's for a further three years.
It's always sad to see a manufacturer go, and we wish Abit and all it's staff good luck for the future.
|

28-08-2008, 16:58
|
 |
Quand le soleil devient froid
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: K Ward
Posts: 2,391
Thanks: 289
Thanked 151 Times in 123 Posts
|
|
Indeed, especially when they have given us some great boards.  RIP Abit.
__________________
|

28-08-2008, 18:06
|
 |
Even a bust clock tells the right time twice a day.
|
|
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Belfast
Posts: 3,995
Thanks: 334
Thanked 332 Times in 284 Posts
|
|
Yup the 1st board i ever oveclocked was an ABIT with my 1Ghz Athlon. KT7 MAX RAID i think.
I hope all the mobo engineers find a new home, like the Epox folk who went to EVGA.
It would be a shame to lose all that talent to some other industry.
__________________
New to the Forum? Add your specs to your profile with this GUIDE
|

28-08-2008, 18:44
|
 |
Certified Human
|
|
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: The Shades
Posts: 1,371
Thanks: 33
Thanked 106 Times in 82 Posts
|
|
I was Abit all the way from my first KT7A up to NF7-S, only had problems with an AT7. Moved over to Asus and that has been nothing but trouble, five motherboards, five faulty. I'm giving Gigabyte my business atm.
|

28-08-2008, 19:23
|
 |
Monkey Trousers.
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Manchester, UK
Posts: 11,787
Thanks: 809
Thanked 693 Times in 606 Posts
|
|
I was Abit right back to the BH6 and right up to the NF7-S V2.0, but I never got on with their boards after that. Shame really.
|

28-08-2008, 19:27
|
 |
Banned.
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 0
Thanks: 0
Thanked 162 Times in 141 Posts
|
|
Damn shame is what it is. 
|

29-08-2008, 00:01
|
 |
Super Moderator
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Hamilton - Scotland
Posts: 4,527
Thanks: 4
Thanked 320 Times in 276 Posts
|
|
Quote:
|
Damn shame is what it is.
|
Yep , but it's also the laws of supply & demand, You don't supply a new model to the market for around 10 months & the parent company demands you shut down 
|

29-08-2008, 00:19
|
 |
Banned.
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 0
Thanks: 0
Thanked 162 Times in 141 Posts
|
|
It's not like the brand is dead, just having a coma that's all. 
|
| Thread Tools |
|
|
| Display Modes |
Linear Mode
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 00:18. |
|
|
|