Quote from: jelly on September 25, 2021, 20:14:41
Can someone explain to me how these reviews are done, or how the titles of the reviews are given?
The title says "high performance" and then in the verdict the first Con is "CPU performance is slightly below average". This is not the only example. I've seen many reviews with high grades while at the same time the cons overweight the pros.
What's up with this?
The reviewers of this site generally have a strange rating and scoring system. There is no single absolute scale of points (less points, worse, more means definitely better). All points are set at random, as a particular reviewer thinks. There is no problem, where an experienced person like me sees specific numbers (if they are of course true, and not bought by the manufacturer), there you can evaluate it yourself and I do not care, like experts, on the points set. But in the case, for example. the strength of the case or noise, where there are no exact measurement methods, points make the choice impossible. And think as you like here until you take the model in your hands and turn it over. And then what is the point of the review?
They practically do not check video ports (the real version of the protocol, and not what marketers write (more often lie), bandwidth, and it can be underestimated by installing a cheap interface module). They do not check USB ports for current limits, although almost all manufacturers do not comply with the 3.0 and higher current standards - where the minimum recoil current should be 0.9A, and they sell junk with 0.45A maximum outside the "reinforced" ports with a special icon.
They do not check memory latency (although AMD here traditionally drains Intel with a bang, which is easy to check in the same AIDA64).
They do not always indicate clearly what the real drawdown of the notebook's performance will be when switching it from AC to battery. This is extremely important.
They do not test batteries for random battery drops under load, although in some series (like Dell) this is almost the norm.