dodecahedron wrote:the argument the "more people have Lite-On drives" - i still don't buy that as a valid reason to choose a Lite-On drive for testing over any other drive.
the graphic output of PlexTools Pro does seem more "professional" and pretty. in Ians words, more polished. IMO, this is definitely a valid consideration when choosing which util to use for testing, as this output is going to be displayed on the reviews. (and this, in my opinion, is definitely a much more important consideration than how many readers have a Lite-On or Plextor drive).
I guess we will just have to disagree on those two points. I think that the greater ownership of LiteOn drives is a
very valid reason to choose a LiteOn drive for CDRLab's official test bed. It shouldn't be the only reason, certainly, but since the point of a site like this is to provide usable information to its community, providing information that is most usable to most of that community is of very high importance.
As for the presentation of the results, I don't think that the subjective prettiness of the charts is important at all. As long as the charts are readable, the most important thing is the quality and quantity of the information contained therein. When I am reading a review I value solid objective information, not fluffy presentation. I prefer substance to style. And to me things like media manufacturer, testing speed, drive model, firmware version, testing extent and testing date are
not at all extraneous information. Even the "KProbe" label isn't completely extraneous, because it contains KProbe version information that may be important in interpreting results.
Also, for what it is worth (nothing to me), I happen to think that KProbe's charts look more professional than Q-Check's. The only aspect of KProbe's charts that I don't like is the labeling of the time axis. The labels are hard to read since they aren't divided into even numbers.
Everyone has different GUI preferences, and no one's preference can be said to be any more valid than anyone else's. Therefore, I don't think that visual appeal is a very good discriminant for deciding between competing test suites. If all else is equal, then sure, pick the one that is prettier according to the tastes of the final arbiter. But it would be a real shame if prettiness were a primary consideration and style won out over substance. Let's choose the test suite that provides the most accurate, useful and comprehensive information, whichever that may be.
cfitz