@ugokind
Impressive indeed. You did quite some pro's engineering there.
The camera sucks and so does the mic on G53 but I figured out that modifying/replacing the inbuilt camera and mic still wont give me the results I want, so I dealt this problem through buying a Microsoft's life cam cinema HD webcam. It does 720p video recording at 30 fps plus has autofocus and much better low light results. The mic on this device is also above average, rather pretty much better than most headphone mics I've used. It cancels a lot of noise and also has nice sensitivity for anyone to use at a considerable distance. Plus its cheap too around $45 at amazon, so my understanding is that its a better workaround for the problem than taking apart the entire laptop to change the camera and mic which would still be sub-par to any external dedicated device solution. The only downside is that you have to carry around an extra piece of hardware, which may not be convenient at all, plus it also occupies/engages a USB port.
The keyboard on the G53 is also flimsy and has weird flex in it when you type. The back-light leaks from the bottom of the keys if you view it at a wider angle. Still it is not that bad that one wouldn't get used to it. So once you get used to it it is not that big of a nuisance as it may appear at first. So I didn't consider it worth the trouble and just let it be. Still you may appreciate the fact that often times you use your laptop in the night with room lights out, and if you are not used to typing without starring at the keys then back-lit keyboard is worth it all. Its still a handy feature and if you don't want it you can disable the lights.
G53SW has a meager wifi N 150, i.e. 150 mbps which is not something to write home about at all and I've seen many people change the built-in Atheros wifi+BT module with the intel offerings. I know intel wifi cards 5xxx and 6xxx are better, stable, long range and more throughput (data rates) etc but since I haven't experienced any signal dropping or data-rate issues I consider investing that money in something which would rather give me performance boost in my computing tasks, like an SSD. Well, this doesn't mean I wouldn't change the internal wifi card ever, on the contrary I might change it in future if I get the chance but for now I am not venturing into it at the moment, I think its not worth the trouble at the moment. But if you want BT 4.0, strong and stable wifi and 300 mbps or 450 mbps data rates then changing the mini-pcie wifi card is the way to go.
The built-in speakers/sound system is also shoddy. The loudness at its peak is muffled by the fan noise, plus at its highest the sound doesn't escape the room you are using the laptop in, its weak. I have seen louder speakers in cheaper laptops many as low as half the price as this one. The THX utility supplied does a decent job by breathing a little life in this otherwise dead sound system but still these speakers seem to be thrown in just for formality and are barely OK for normal use. These are no Beats audio or Bang and Olufsen ICE power or Altec Lansing or JBL or Harmon Kardon etc but I still expected better. Anyways not many folks, afaik, use the built-in speakers for listening to quality music or watching movies, they use headphones or external 2.1 and up sound system for best quality and experience. Therefore I went with some nice pair of cans, although I wanted Audio Technica ATH-M50S but they were a tad too expensive for my taste. Then I considered Sennheiser HD280 and Sony MDR XB500 but finally settled for the cheaper JVC RX700 that shipped for under $40. And I am happy with my purchase, they offer much more for the price you pay.
The DC input power jack's placement is weird too. Firstly, the adapter plug needs to be inserted with great care, that includes rotating the plug and inserting at precise angle otherwise one may harm the jack. Secondly once it is in place it fits in snugly which raises the issue that if somethng untoward happens to the adapter or adapter cable it may break the power jack or board on the laptop end without pulling out the plug. Thirdly, The power plug connects to the DC input jack at a weird angle and precludes anything to be used freely on that side of the laptop like a mouse. And lastly and most importantly if you connect the Ethernet cable instead of using wifi, which is situated next to the DC input power jack, then it becomes a jumble. I had to deal with this sort of mess for some time but then I got rid of Ethernet and switched to wifi. Bought a cheap wifi N 300Mbps router, TP-Link TL-WR841N. Its cheap (got it for $23), DD-WRT compatible and rock solid with DD-WRT firmware. Although I haven't flashed it with DD-WRT yet, its still going strong and holding on its own with the stock firmware. Now, to solve the issue with the adapter plug and DC input jack, I bought the Bix Power LC53 90 degree (right angle) converter through amazon (~$10 shipped). I attached the adapter plug to the LC53 and LC53 into the DC input jack on the laptop and now it goes in easily, comes out easily, without stressing anything it rotates within the jack easily, this gives you the freedom of orientation, and if something goes awry on the adapter cable side it can detach itself much easily. In short it provides more space, you get the flexibility in movement and most importantly under pressure/pulling force (in case you step on the adapter's DC power cord) it releases the cable from the DC input power jack. It has solved almost all the issues related to the power jack/plug/connector.
The Trackpad buttons on the G53 are also very hard, you need to sweat in the gym and build some brawn if you want to get used to it or wanna use it comfortably. I'm never comfortable using the laptop trackpad so it is immaterial to me if it has got a nice or nasty trackpad. I bought a Logitech M315 mouse, its cheap and nice, I'm using it and loving it.
For the 15.6" display size this laptop is humongous and it wont fit in ordinary backpacks that are made for 15.6" laptops. So I didn't take the risk trying other things and other brands and went with the ASUS ROG G1 Backpack on their estore website. Although the description said upto 15.4" laptops but when I did a bit of search on the internet I found out that it works, so I ordered it. Besides it was cheap too just $30 on their website and $42 with shipment. The surprise, when it arrived the package had a pair of ASUS Eee Sticks included for free as well. Though I don't find any significant use other than a wireless 3D pointing device but it is still something nonetheless. The backpack is well built, strong and sturdy, the laptop fits snugly into the backpack which is a nice thing plus it is spacious as well without being over-sized. Overall, this backpack is worth every penny, well, including the free pair of ASUS Eee Stick.
The only thing, however, I so desperately want to change is the display. Believe me, the display brings this otherwise awesome machine down to its knees, its pathetic at best. Yes, its FHD and very bright but color rendering is awful so as the viewing angles. I have yet to see worse blacks. The blacks look either whitish or grey. If you look at the screen slightly above the normal angle (above the angle perpendicular to the screen) everything gets white washed which results in color dilution and reduce color sharpness. If you look at the screen below the normal angle (below the angle perpendicular to the screen) everything gets darkened and black. It happens even at the minimum brightness level. Prolong usage gives me headache. Gaming is just OK but watching movies is pure pain. Because movies have so much natural black in their scenes. I have yet to discover the exact angle at which I wouldn't get negative at either edge of the screen. If its not the bottom end its the top end or the other way round. Color shifts, washing out and negatives is the order of the day for its display. Pixel density, however is good thanks to its FHD resolution on 15.6" diagonal display. ASUS went with the idea to make its display extra bright so one can brag about its brightness but that's not the point. It ruins everything, the quality of the display matters much more than just brightness. I would rather take good viewing angles with dull brightness over extremely bright ones with terrible viewing angles. But I can only whine and complain, I guess that's the case with most cheap laptop screens these days but ASUS G53 is no cheap laptop, I paid a 1000 bucks for it and that's why I am disappointed. I've bought an HDMI to DVI cable to connect this laptop to my HP x23LED monitor, although that too is an average cheap FHD monitor but is like a gazillion times better than this laptop's display screen. And now I plan to game and watch movies on the external monitor for good.
I do plan to throw in a 128/120GB SSD in the second drive bay as a boot drive for OS+Software installations. And considering either SAMSUNG 830 or Intel 330/520, just waiting for the prices to drop to some reasonable level (~$1/GB). The other thing is I also plan to increase the RAM in tandem with the SSD, although RAM is sufficient and 6GB doesn't hurt me at all. Finally, the only thing I wish to change is the display, I rather wish ASUS charged an extra 50 or 100 bucks but should have included a better display. I even wish it were a 1600x900 display but with better quality. Sure you cannot have an IPS panel but you can have a VA panel instead of TN ones. In this case ASUS could have used AUO v7 display instead of AUO v5. But what can we do, they have to make such decisions to knock the price down.
ASUS G53SW ROG Laptop
Intel Core i7 2630QM @ Stock Clock
Nvidia Geforce GTX 460M 1.5GB GDDR5 @ Stock Clocks (for now)
14GB DDR3 1333 MHz (G-Skill + Hynix)
SAMSUNG 830 128GB SATA3 SSD + Seagate Momentus 500GB 7200rpm SATA3 HDD
HP x23LED FHD 1080p monitor
Microsoft Lifecam Cinema HD 720p, Logitech M315 2.4G Wireless Mouse
JVC HA-RX700 Headphones, ASUS ROG G1 Backpack with ASUS Eee Sticks 😛