Intelcrazy.. Let's not look at you as a "teen". You're a man. I'm going to address you as a man.
First, a little about myself to give you an idea. I've been in the computer field for 22 years. I started out with Atari and Commodore, advancing to programming in basic and assembly, programming for teachers, teaching computers to grade school students, including special ed. I have been there from the advent of the home PC. Along the way I've covered most aspects of my niche, from website design, hosting communities, chats, forums, tutoring, network design, sales, build and support..servers, workstations, etc. Managing computer stores, running my own computer business, subcontracting to computer businesses, gaming machines for hobbyists, general purpose machines, IT support for professionals from manufacturing, doctors, restaurants, aerospace engineering, etc (one of my clients makes jet engines for helicopters, private jets and military equipment). If it has anything to do with computers, from PDAs to web and security appliances, photocopiers, RIPS, printing presses, milling machines, automated dispensing technologies I've done it. I now own a successful computer business and just opened up a new office.
So yes, I may be an IT, but I'm not your typical, ordinary IT guy.
With that said. My experience obviously covers a vast array of products. Anything from $10 to several hundred thousand in value. I'm not talking out of my ass I guess is what I'm saying.
I appreciate that you're just a gaming hobbyist, and there's nothing wrong with that. To me, this field is far more than that as I'm sure you can appreciate.
So.. First, the video card thing. No, I was not upset with the 8800GT. I don't care. Money is not an issue for me. I have no problems dropping several thousand dollars at the suppliers, and screwing around with the stuff I pick up. I do it on a regular basis, in order to offer my clients the best, hands on advice I can give them.
The issue in that thread that I was taking up with Omega is multi-faceted.
A) The guy wasted a ton of money on a processor that in most cases stands 50% idle, yet wimps out with a crappy VGA. He brags of his 3dmark score, but the only reason it's anywhere near what it is is because the benchmark can make use of all 4 cores. The benchmark was only strong because of the processing power. The VGA scores licked nuts. So, I question his gaming computer design prowess.
B) VGA performance is measured in FPS and more recently IQ. Period. The guy was looking for the best VGA. Price was not introduced as a concern. Thus, even though the difference is reasonably small, the 8800GTX is the best performing card on the market, after the Ultra. Period. Whether or not Omega had a point with the minimal difference is actually ultimately immaterial to the question put forth by the OP.
Now, on to harddrives. There are many factors that make up the value of a harddrive. Seek time, in and of itself, is the absolute least of them. In this business, reliability is king. Data has a dollar figure attached to it that would make your head spin.. Far greater than some tool telling you to buy a certain brand because it's 3/10 of a millisecond faster on seek. Data can be worth 100's of thousands of dollars, even more, because in many cases it's not replaceable. I can give you disaster scenarios, and I have a partner that specializes in disaster recovery. The average bill is between 1 and 3,000 dollars.
About PCeye.. His "research", especially in this case, and indeed in most cases, is useless. No offence to him, but he is the classic case of the blind leading the blind. If he came off as someone with the questions, as opposed to the answers, that would be different, as this is a forum where most people come with questions. One of my biggest downfalls is very little patience for people who pretend they know what they're talking about, act like they do, yet don't and mislead people with bs. PCeye is one of those people, using Tool and Die experience as his defence.
Being in the business, I have run into people like him before and I have been called in to clean up their messes. From someone standing in my shoes, it's immediately obvious that he's pretty much clueless when it comes to current tech at least. I'm sure he's a nice fellow and all, but computers isn't his bag. There's a guy who became redundant in his industry, and like so many others took up computers as the next messiah, the saviour of his dying breed.
That's fine when you acknowledge it for what it is. He doesn't. He can't. He'll come back in a thread repeatedly trying to prove his point, more often than not wandering off on tangents. That, then, is what irritates me the most. Better to be thought a fool than open your mouth and remove all doubt.
The research that I presented here in this thread is all fact based, and in fact you could look it up for yourself if you had the notion to do so. I differ from PCeye, and indeed many others, in that I actually have hands on experience, in many cases with a lot of tech that you may not be able to imagine. Harddrive reliability, while something I've run into daily for the last 15 years, is only one small facet of what it is that I do.
Learning on the search engines is fine, as he does. I respect that and do it myself. NEVER is it ok to present yourself as being the one with the answers, all the while misinterpretting and misapplying the data you have collected.. which is what he does.
I'm a true geek. My entire life, apart from my partner, is computers. I have a rather unique gift. The logical, analytical thinking. The ability to envision an entire computer without ever taking a tool to it. PCeye clearly doesn't. It's not something you can learn. It's not a college diploma. You either have it or you don't. Unfortunately for PCeye he doesn't. Kudos to him for trying. I respect his valiant efforts.. and every now and again he does hit on something and gets it right. Unfortunately that's the exception as opposed to the rule, and no college course can fix that.