Quote from: Veyron on October 05, 2020, 11:33:52
QuoteWhile Intel's Tiger Lake lineup has certainly lived up to its performance promises
Lost me there.
Haha. My thoughts exactly. So far Tiger Lake hasn't been very impressive, and NBR just posted an article shortly before this one discussing the fact that despite its performance in benchmarks, its real-life performance is severely lacking.
Quote from: Anonymous on October 05, 2020, 11:46:01
The fact is, most casual customers won't bother about it, or too ignorance about it. They just come in, see what's the latest, and checkout. Never compare or bothers to read lengthy review. Are they regretting after buying it? Perhaps, but most likely won't do anything about it, the other most might just resell it, and get a new one - or switching to something more comfortable that most of their colleague knows, or buying an Apple.
Yup. Sadly, most people do little to no research before a purchase like this. Hell, many, if not most, people don't even do much research before buying a car or even a house. And companies know and rely on that.
Quote from: Mark S. on October 05, 2020, 12:55:15
Quote from: Veyron on October 05, 2020, 11:33:52
QuoteWhile Intel's Tiger Lake lineup has certainly lived up to its performance promises
Lost me there.
The first graph contradicts the first sentence of the article :)
To be fair, the reference designs in the graph use a different CPU than the OEM laptops, so it doesn't necessarily contradict the first sentence (other articles and benchmarks do that), but it does beg the questions why a graph was made comparing one CPU in reference computers to another CPU in OEM computers and why whoever made the graph thought it was a good idea to use the same color for three different lines.
Quote from: Spunjji on October 05, 2020, 15:41:43
I'm fairly glad to finally see this overdue article, but I have some criticisms / things I wish you'd mentioned:
1) You really could have hammered home how Intel's preview device doesn't represent performance in real devices. That's an epic bait-and-switch that they pulled on the public, and by getting your team (among others) to review it, they made you complicit.
2) You didn't mention anything about the performance differences between Intel's iGPU in different devices - or how it mostly fails to catch up with Renoir's Vega 8 in actual games.
3) You do a bit of "both sides" equivocation which isn't entirely warranted. Not only are AMD's model names pretty straightforward, there's no way to buy a "Vega 8" or "Vega 7" outside the context of the chips they're attached to - and nobody's going to have much trouble figuring out that the 4000 series are faster than the 3000 series. It's also nonsense to condemn their products for being based on the same chip when that's true for all of Intel's products, too.
4) Maybe a shout-out for Nvidia somewhere? They're literally the worst when it comes to this kind of behaviour.
All that aside, it's good to see this problem getting more attention. It's absurd that AMD, Nvidia and Intel are allowing OEMs to get away with selling high-rated products at performance levels beneath that of their own cheaper products.
1) Yup. They even posted an article all excited about the performance when benchmarks were first released, completely ignoring that fact, then, after I pointed that out (probably not
because of it, but a review site shouldn't be beaten to the punch about something so important by a reader) they posted another article mentioning this issue.
2) This is especially odd since they very recently published an article discussing this, so they are clearly aware of it, yet choose to ignore it and continue proclaiming TL as a great step forward.
3) To be fair, AMD's naming scheme for mobile is pretty screwed up, too, being out of step with desktop and therefore causing confusion.
And it must be kept in mind that, as shown in your first point, it's not just the manufacturers, but the review sites who are complicit in misleading consumers. Review sites are supposed to be, you know, reviewing products and providing non-biased, objective, and analytical critiques to aid consumers in making purchase decisions, and that is not what they're doing when they act like NBR and others have been regarding TL. I do very much appreciate articles like this and the one mentioned before where they explained why the reference design benchmarks are pretty much meaningless, and wish they would do more articles calling out the industry on these ridiculous things they do. And I wish they would consider things more carefully so they aren't going back and forth all the time (TL is amazing > well, not necessarily > TL is amazing > well, actually not > TL is amazing...).