Dear Amazon, Stop screwing Ryzen CPUs with ridiculously inappropriate packaging

AMD Ryzen Box Crumpled
We’re not sure who needs to hear this on Amazon, be it Jeff Bezos or a warehouse manager, or someone in the transportation logistics group, but for the love of all that’s sacred, you can PLEASE stop saving on shipping materials by ship AMD Ryzen 5000 series processors that cost several hundred dollars? Please, with a Raspberry Pi on top?
Look, we understand – about packaging items is a waste and a hassle. You know, like when you order a lip balm and it is shipped in a box that would be big enough to hold 100 lip balms and could easily have been sent in a direct mail – like the ones you, for some reason , are also using it to pack AMD’s Ryzen 5000 series CPUs that are missing.
Hey Jeff or whoever you are on Amazon that is totally taking this seriously, see the image at the top? That’s how an AMD Ryzen 9 5950X arrived from one of its deposits, according to Reddit user Healthy_Talk_8346. Real conversation – not a package suitable for a $ 800 CPU. Forget for a moment that some people like to store and even display their retail packaging. This almost rectangular cutout should be square, because that is where the $ 800 chip resides before the user decides to install it. Oh, but it gets worse.

FIY – the box was also wet … But the envelope was not. It happened entirely in the place of the Amazon distro …, “said the user, adding that”condensation accumulates on the case’s CPU cover.

Are you kidding me? Is there a gap in the warehouse where this thing accidentally fell? But at least the pins are not crooked, as was the case with another buyer who bought a Ryzen 5 5600X earlier this week and received it in a direct mail as well. That’s how that one arrived …
Folded pins AMD Ryzen 5 5600X

There are so many crooked pins around the four edges of the CPU and I have no idea how to fix them. I tried tweezers and razors and used my phone’s camera as a magnifying glass, but I was unsuccessful on a single pin. They are too small for me to work. AARRGGHGHGGH !!!!,“wrote the unlucky buyer.

Jeff, my dear, are you seeing the problem here? There are many crooked pins and, according to the buyer, they are on the four sides of the CPU. Sure, it can probably be fixed, but this is based on being able to successfully bend dozens of pins back to their proper orientation without breaking any of them. That’s it, or send the CPU back and wait weeks or maybe even months for another chance to order one of these highly elusive CPUs. Is not cool.

We would like it to be isolated incidents, but together with the rest of the team here in HotHardware, we find ourselves reporting this kind of thing with an alarming frequency today – like three times in the past week. Remember this?

Crushed box AMD Ryzen 9 5900X

This is a shattered Ryzen 9 5900X retail box, shipped from you in a cardboard box with ample packaging material inside. Just kidding, it was sent in a direct mail too. The $ 550 CPU inside survived the ordeal, although the buyer claims it was about to fall out of the box when it arrived. Damn it.

And hey, we understand that AMD also has some responsibility here. AMD should be using stronger packaging (and we assume that this is how Intel CPUs ship, too, but we haven’t noticed the same complaints lately). But if you’re seeing what we’re seeing, we’re not sure if it would matter what the hell AMD would use, except for a titanium case.

Going back to the $ 800 Ryzen 9 5950X (which is as rare as chicken teeth now on the MSRP) that spurred this open letter, congratulations on at least working with the person who bought the chip.

I just ordered my motherboard to test it and see if it works. Letting it dry until Sunday, when the motherboard arrives. After I explained the rarity [of the] situation for them and explained what it would take to confirm the functionality, Amazon gave me a ‘one-time exception’ of a 30 percent ($ 252) discount to pay for a motherboard to test the CPU, so I can’t complain their customer service at least, “wrote the user.

It’s an incredible gesture, really. But do you know what would be even more incredible? IF YOU STOP SENDING CPUS IN SOFT PACK MAILERS! You raised $ 96.15 billion in the first three quarters of 2020 (the fourth quarter results have not yet been published) with a profit of $ 6.33 billion, almost 200% more than in the same quarter of 2019.

Congratulations, this is a scratch. How about using a part of it in a better package for Ryzen 5000 series CPUs? Unless my neighbor asks for one, he recently took my favorite flashlight and lost it, the idiot.

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