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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.iastate.edu!pv7426.vincent.iastate.edu!palane
- From: palane@iastate.edu (Paul A. Lane)
- Subject: Re: Why do we read PC mags?
- Message-ID: <palane.726526202@pv7426.vincent.iastate.edu>
- Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Iowa State University, Ames IA
- References: <GERRY.93Jan8111215@onion.cmu.edu>
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 1993 20:50:02 GMT
- Lines: 70
-
- In <GERRY.93Jan8111215@onion.cmu.edu> gerry@cmu.edu (Gerry Roston) writes:
-
- >Seriously:
-
- >Page 164: data for G2000 wrong... but page 193 its correct.
-
- I assume you're noting that 4MB of RAM were incorrectly listed on page 164,
- but 8MB is the correct amount. Noone's perfect.
-
- >Page 193: G2000 as Editors choice, but the review was mediocre and the
- >chart nothing special. The stuff they picked on, e.g., 64 kB cache is
- >a simple and cheap problem to fix.
-
- I'm guessing here, but the system had outstanding graphics performance,
- was very competitively priced, and had no signficant weaknesses. Add this
- to the company's good reputation and strong balance sheet and you get their
- choice. One might compare it to the ZEOS which came with a mediocre monitor
- and low DOS processor/memory scores.
-
- In truth, I don't think there were any truly outstanding systems (that is,
- much better than all the rest). GateWay might be considered something of a
- standby, as it's primary competitions (Dell, Compaq, IBM, Northgate, and ZEOS)
- all fell down in one way or another.
-
- >Page 232: Tangent has 4 dots for upgradability, but the review
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- >specifically says it has limited upgradability.
-
- The review states that the system supports only 486 processors. The 4 dots
- are for expandability, which implies adding memory, more drives, etc. In
- those terms, a base case, a SCSI controller, and room for 128MB of RAM
- qualify for 4 dots.
-
- >Need I go on? As these people on drugs or just plain stupid?
-
- I think you found one editing goof, you misunderstood one rating, and just
- plain disagree on the editor's choice. Admittedly, I'm sure that you just
- picked several annoyances and could cite other examples.
-
- >Also, how about this. The G2000 and the TriStar are basically
- >identical machines. They have the same graphics card and the same
- >mother board. So, why do they show different performance figures?
-
- I don't know. I didn't run the tests. But I do trust the staff's competence
- to run them. The review specifically noted the similar configuration.
-
- >Also, why do none of the reviews shows a WinMark benchmark for the ATI
- >VLB of greater than 22 when it is advertised as 28 and people here
- >have reported 29+?
-
- Two reasons. One is that claimed performance is not actual performance.
- You see quite a few ads where claims of 66MB/sec are made for local bus
- systems where in fact this is a theoretical limit that nothing will approach.
- The other is that the WindMark rating depends upon the resolution on bit-
- depth selected. I forget the magazine, but they were testing a board at
- several different settings and got different WinMarks results.
-
- >Sorry about the tirade. However, I know that there are at least a
- >dozen readers of this bboard who could team up to produce a vastly
- >superior journal.
-
- I hope you didn't mind my playing Jane (as in Point/CounterPoint). I fault
- PC Magazine for completely ignoring vendor service. They simply quote the
- stated warranty whereas PC World actually bothers to call vendors and note
- service and support ratings. One of the primary reasons for different cost
- between vendors is that one company has practically noone available and under-
- cuts everyone by $100-$200. It isn't worth it.
-
- Paul Lane
-
-