cadaveca
My name is Dave
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2006
- Messages
- 17,232 (2.52/day)
The cost of such high-speed DIMMs is currently prohibitive to many, so I have a more "down-to-earth" speed that more people might be likely to buy. It's not about showing the best-case scenario, but rather relating what's realistic to what I hope is the majority of readers.yet I have to ask why show the DDR4-3600 if you did indeed test up to DDR4-4400?
You can pretty much ignore that quote, I'm just pointing out that you've once again referred to testing overclocking.
Of course because, I mean, a lot of us want to push our CPUs a little bit too, right? So I found a power consumption level and clock that hopefully many can reach, too. But memory... memory clocking (I mean from top to bottom) has only small impacts on performance overall. To me, there are "gates" that offer incremental performance increases with memory, but those "gates" are tightly held by the cost of that memory.
I need to address several other points I saw now, so this post may be a little long. I'm addressing them in no particular order, either.
Great.
Just because elmor understands doesn't mean that everyone understands. Is it not good for someone who knows the right questions to ask said questions for those who don't? An average reader (I'm not patronizing the TPU membership, I'm talking truly average from whichever walk of life) may not know that the right questions even exist, so is it not a good idea for someone who knows the questions to ask them?
I'm also an overclocker, I'm also in elite league, so what? The review isn't aimed at us. We don't read a review and decide to buy a board. Reviews help those who are not in this position to choose a board, and chances are they don't have a fraction of the understanding to turn benchmark results into an informed decision. You're saying "these are the results, they're good" but not explaining the how or why.
That's a fair point for sure. A while back I discussed with W1zz going into more "basic" writing like you seem to be asking for, but guess what W1zz said? "We are an enthusiast site".
So, what defines an enthusiast? We will all come up with separate answers. However, when people do have questions, like you do, they can ask, and they can get answers, like you are. However, I know when someone's asking because they are generally interested, and when someone's asking just to be critical, so my responses adjust accordingly. You can see that pretty clearly in how I've responded here in this comment thread, even.
Then is the better option not to hold back the review until you can make a worthy comparison? Sure, you lose the "appeal" of being first with the review, but is a worthwhile review not worth more?
In some instances, yes. With this product, no. It's not like they are changing the VRM design or something... and it's not about being first, either. It was actually very interesting for me to write this review, have it not go live for quite some time, and then see some "issues" arise between the time that I kind of touched on in the review, like VRM cooling (although I hardly call think it's that big of a deal with some boards).
That is more than fair enough, but it doesn't explain how you can give it an Editor's Choice award when, for all anyone knows, it ends up being the worst X299 board out there. You've given this board a 9.8 out of 10 - honestly, what would a board score if it were to offer all of the features of the Taichi plus more (maybe another four SATA ports, easier overclocking, another M.2 slot, four extra USB 3.0 ports, whatever the case may be)? Would it score above 10, would the score of this board drop (as well as the Editor's Choice award fall away), or would it really only be able to score a MAXIMUM of 0.2 more than this? By giving it an Editor's Choice award straight off the bat you've limited your future review scoring unless you come back and edit this review, in which case was it reliable to begin with (rhetorical question)?
You mean, I drew a bar in the sand with my score? You bet I did. What crosses that line, and in which way, well, after so many years of doing this, what I expect should be pretty obvious. I mean, board makers send me specific boards for a reason; they know I should like them. It's not rocket science. That's why sometimes I cover products other sites don't, and OEMs send different boards to different sites.
Adding more features doesn't make a board better; let's make that clear. Also, a 9.8 for one board, doesn't mean it is equal to another 9.8 board... one might cost $200 more...
Then I have to ask what would set them apart? "MOAR RGB!!!"? There are only so many metrics that can be used to judge a board - appearance, I/O and performance being the main three. Appearance is too subjective, and I/O is something that can be read on paper (in which case list the specs of every X299 board and give the award to the board with the most I/O connectivity options). That leaves performance, which you want to leave out? Performance is one of the main things setting one board apart from another!
Yeah, you're right. But for me, performance comprises of two things; BIOS tuning and circuit design. When I start talking about that stuff, people don't really care to read it. We do know what pages people read...
I don't see what your point is. It's no secret at all who elmor is or where he works. The people who buy the boards he helps develop are not him, and 99.9 % don't have the understanding he has. Is it not in the best interests of everyone to make sure that the reviews are accurate and helpful to the 99.9 % ?
Sure, but this is a particular subject. He complained about the industry, it was covered here. He said boards sell fine though. I said maybe he's out of touch with his customer base. I mean, boards are selling...
But here's the old thinking, that performance is all there is, or has to be the most important factor, and unless you're competitive, that's not really 100% what the end user is after.
Pre-release testing has indeed got problems as we've already discussed - but pre-release is only handy to those who actually get the hardware pre-release. Once the release hardware is on the shelves and in Joe Soap's computer it isn't necessarily the same kettle of fish as the pre-release version, so is the review even applicable to Joe Soap? If you're aiming your review at Joe Soap you've got to make sure that your experience will as closely exactly match his as possible, which isn't possible with a pre-release review.
Again, we are an enthusiast site. I write for enthusiasts. They come in all shapes and sizes and colors and from all over the world, and they all want different things. I can't keep them all happy. But here, I can show early stuff, and then later, I can show how it's changed over time...
You're so very right, and that's why the dates are right in the beginning. So people know what's what here. But you seem to be expecting something else. I can't please everyone.
I think that's it for now.
I do value the feedback, even elmor's. I mean, we don't have to agree on everything; the world would be pretty boring. Ultimately, I do reviews to create discussions, no matter where they might go. Again, economy of words.
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