- Jan 11, 2005
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As a resident lurker who seldom says anything, I feel the need to speak up; people are actual debating these false benchmark statistics! Bias is clearly showing through, on BOTH sides of the ridiculous fence.
Benchmarks are NOT news items, as some treat them. Even the dinkiest tech sites do benchamrks scientifically. A specific procedure is used with a constant platform, documented standards and controls, all to provide a result that can be reproduced.
But our friends with the R520 benchmarks did none of this. Why, they got the magic numbers in an email from Taiwan! How lucky of them! We should all be glad HA has such deticated friends in Taiwan that they are willing to take the time to carefully find all the components needed to re-create the testbed and laboratory conditions to create an identical copy to the original platform. I'm sure it wasn't that hard though, as we all know computer parts of all types and brands grow on Silicon trees in Taiwan.
So, after HA sent "Taiwan" their top-secret benchmark scripts (that obtain totally different scores from other sites like Andandtech) the ever-deticated pals in Taiwan run these benchmarks on the scientifically re-created testbed at various low resolutions. You'd think faster clock speeds, top-of-the-line memory, and various brand-spanking-new design decisions would make a positive difference, but I'm glad "Taiwan" is here to set the record straight.
Benchmarks are NOT news items, as some treat them. Even the dinkiest tech sites do benchamrks scientifically. A specific procedure is used with a constant platform, documented standards and controls, all to provide a result that can be reproduced.
But our friends with the R520 benchmarks did none of this. Why, they got the magic numbers in an email from Taiwan! How lucky of them! We should all be glad HA has such deticated friends in Taiwan that they are willing to take the time to carefully find all the components needed to re-create the testbed and laboratory conditions to create an identical copy to the original platform. I'm sure it wasn't that hard though, as we all know computer parts of all types and brands grow on Silicon trees in Taiwan.
So, after HA sent "Taiwan" their top-secret benchmark scripts (that obtain totally different scores from other sites like Andandtech) the ever-deticated pals in Taiwan run these benchmarks on the scientifically re-created testbed at various low resolutions. You'd think faster clock speeds, top-of-the-line memory, and various brand-spanking-new design decisions would make a positive difference, but I'm glad "Taiwan" is here to set the record straight.