Saylick
Diamond Member
- Sep 10, 2012
- 3,928
- 9,160
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What a ridiculous rant. Nobody is condemning extra options.. Uber mode is fine, I have no problem with it as an extra option for consumers to increase performance.
The only problem is, how do you resolve it when it comes to reviews, which are supposed to be FAIR and impartial.
That's why reviews are conducted in default mode in the first place, to impose fairness. There is always extra performance to be gleaned for those that want it whether through overclocking or adjusting settings, but that should not be the focus of a baseline review, the purpose of which to showcase out of the box performance.
You can highlight the baseline by testing the card in each preset that the card comes with when its shipped. If you, the customer, have no intention of running the card in its other settings then simply ignore the data that corresponds to those settings.
Out-of-the-box, the card comes with 2 presets. You can't say that "out-of-the-box" it only has one. The fair thing to do is to test both. The reviewer isn't manually running the product outside of spec here; it's simply that the card has two supported presets, both of which are covered under warranty. It is my belief that you test EVERYTHING the product has to offer so long as it's a standard feature. By not testing each feature, YOU, the reviewer, are CONSCIOUSLY and PERSONALLY making the decision to omit data.
If I was doing a review on a blender which has multiple settings for the different foods you can blend, as a reader, would you expect me to only use the generic "blend" button when I test it?
If I was doing a review on a hair dryer which clearly has a low speed and high speed setting, would you expect me to do a review of the hair dryer only in the low speed setting?
If I was doing a review on digital camera, which clearly has many photo presets for the different types of photos I can take, would you only expect me to do a review with the camera in it's Auto preset only?
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