Meghan54
Lifer
- Oct 18, 2009
- 11,684
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Except that's not how the company pronounces it....
Ok....how about this commercial from Asus......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq9B3evfu8s&feature=related
Except that's not how the company pronounces it....
Ok....how about this commercial from Asus......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq9B3evfu8s&feature=related
Sorry wat? Asus boards are the industry leaders. Just ask any computer tech or anyone with experience assembling computers. Most swear by Asus and or Gigabyte. Their Laptops are also close to No1 or 2 price/value wise for many market segments.
Ok....how about this commercial from Asus......
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq9B3evfu8s&feature=related
I thought we were talking about Jesus.
Sorry wat? Asus boards are the industry leaders. Just ask any computer tech or anyone with experience assembling computers. Most swear by Asus and or Gigabyte. Their Laptops are also close to No1 or 2 price/value wise for many market segments.
Yes that's correct but it's not natural to me, nor most of the people I talk to who sell computers. To us it's Asus (rhymes with faces).
I like Asus but EVGA trumps them in every way.
And I'm a person that worked his way up from tech all the way up to Network Engineer. and still build my machines..
and I choose EVGA for a serious game machine.
yes well you've got the pronunciation wrong, according to the company in question. I'd say we should be expected to pronounce the name of the company the same way the company does such.
Call one of their 1-800 support lines.
Edit: Damn! They changed it!
ASUS tech support - 1-888-678-3688
They say Aye-Suse on the support line now.
^ yep
PS: Don't know what all the fuss is about. It's not like we're pronouncing every other place, object, company name etc. right either. It's all about what gets accepted in a given society. Ex: Nikon, which should be pronounced NEE-CON is widely accepted with the pronunciation N-ai-con to such an extent that the company starts catering advertisement to that society with their pronunciation.
other examples:
Iraq pronounced as I-Rack when it should be E-ralk(as in talk)
Pakistan pronounced as pack-i-s-tan when it should be Palk(as in talk) ee - staan (as in non or naan, if you're familiar )
^ Even the natives of above countries [in the US] would choose the incorrect pronunciation because that's what is most prevalent here. Interestingly enough, Obama pronounces Pakistan almost like a native of that country ... something to think about?
So the point is that it depends on a given society and how much social/cultural power it holds over others. If the Western customers start saying N-ai-con(which is the case now) and the East is still stuck with the original pronunciation, guess who'll rise up eventually ... yep, those with bigger market and thus buying power for the product.
wtf, how did I get so offtrack? I am out of here *disappears*
"Aye" as in "Eight" ?
BMW people argue over Bimmer vs. Beamer....
Why the argument? It's been Bimmers for the cars and Beamers for the bikes for as long as I can remember, going back to the '60's.
The English slang terms Beemer, Bimmer and Bee-em are variously used for BMWs of all kinds, cars, and motorcycles.
In the US, specialists have been at pains to prescribe that a distinction must be made between using Beemer exclusively to describe BMW motorcycles, and using Bimmer only to refer to BMW cars, in the manner of a "true aficionado" and avoid appearing to be "uninitiated." The Canadian Globe and Mail prefers Bimmer and calls Beemer a "yuppie abomination," while the Tacoma News Tribune says it is a distinction made by "auto snobs." Using the wrong slang risks offending [US] BMW enthusiasts.
Yes. Silly Canadians spell it "eh" but I refuse and always spell it "aye" when referencing their peculiar dialect.
"Aye you little hosiers you. Let's go to that hockey game, aye?"