blancj, Twile...
I wasn't trying to say that I didn't like the article, or even that I don't agree with it overly much, at least the core of what the article was about. I was mostly commenting on the overall degradation of the kind of information that is found on Toms Hardware anymore.
And yes, you are right, there are still great technology articles here, such as the following:
http
/www.tomshardware.com/2006/06/27/xxl_displays/
http
/www.tomshardware.com/2006/06/26/xeon_woodcrest_preys_on_opteron/
http
/www.tomshardware.com/2006/05/23/amd_reinvents_itself/
The problem is merely that they are being degraded with a constant barrage of fluff that you have to sift through, and even those technology articles that Toms still puts out are starting to become less detailed and more poorly researched, such as the following:
http
/www.tomshardware.com/2006/04/17/thecus_brings_sata_to_external_storage/
For example, had the writer of the previously listed article even gone to Thecus site, when writing the article, they would have seen that Thecus already had a NAS version, and that it didn't use the theorized method of implementation at all. All it would have taken was a simple visit to the manufacturer's site, but they didn't even bother to do that. Toms did eventually review the N2100, and it was a good write-up, but one of the few.
In fact, even this bit of writing could have been more in-depth, and could have covered different methods of people actually communicating on the Internet, and ways in which this limitation is being overcome, slowly but surely. That said, did the writer do that? No, instead this entire article was one large lump of fluff that was written out of thin air with little in the way of concrete references other than a mention of a study that was done in the '60s, and that should have been nothing more than an anecdote.
For quite some time I have had two hardware sites that I visit when I want serious information: Anandtech and Toms Hardware. During this time Anandtech has stayed true, however has been unable to write much in the way of serious content. It is as if the writers for that site do not have the time that they used to, and that is sad.
Toms Hardware, on the other hand, has increased the number of articles that they put out, however many of them are fluff and contribute nothing worth mentioning to the site, especially poorly researched pieces of drivel (such as the article to which this is a response to), where, even if they had a good point, they do little to back that up. Even those product reviews that Toms does have been starting to suffer as well (such as the previously mentioned N2100), in that they are not as well researched as they once were. Content has become king, and quality has gone out the door.
You don't think that takes away from a site? It most assuredly does. Just look at CNet or ZDNet. Every now and then they have a gem, but they put out so exceedingly much drivel that no one would ever look at them as a serious technology site. Toms isn't there yet, isn't even anywhere near the ballpark, but if they keep going in that direction then they will be, and I just don't want to see that happen, for I know of no other good SERIOUS technology site.