A twenty or more minute of difference is negligible? If the DSAT computers are calling for twenty minutes less deco and thousands of divers do those dives uneventfully eventually you have to conclude that one computer is right and one is not. A twenty minute difference on a 60 minute dive does not seem slight or negligible but definitions vary.
The actual calculated saturation difference between the two computers may well be insignificant, but the fact that each has to choose one finite point to switch from no-deco to deco (an artificial distinction) can make the difference
expressed in minutes considerable- when dives are shallow. In dives that are deeper, where saturation builds up more rapidly (a steeper slope on the graph) the difference in minutes will be much less, even if the difference in conservatism is the same. A computer that is 1% more conservative might show a 20 minute difference in NDL's on shallow dives, while that same 1% might mean less than a minute difference on a 150' dive. Divers tend to see the large difference in minutes of no deco time on shallow dives and assume that translates into a large difference in conservatism, when in fact it may not. It should not be a reason for concern about the safety of any computer.
The original poster compared going into deco to falling off a cliff- and lots of divers see it that way. But it's a lot more like hikers descending a very gradually increasing slope, and deciding at what % grade to turn back. If one person decides to turn back at 30% and another at 32% grade, and they both head straight downhill, they will turn around at almost the same time. If they traverse the slope at a very shallow angle, the 30% hiker may turn around a long time before the 32% hiker. His turnaround point is no more conservative, his risk no greater, it just took relatively longer to get there.
I need to come up with a graphic for this, it's a common misunderstanding. But yes, two computers could be calculating almost identically and show considerable differences in no deco time on shallow dives. The risk differential could be negligible, because the "in deco" one is perhaps barely in deco and requiring a very short stop, while the "not in deco" one may be requiring a safety stop. A 20 minute difference in a series of shallow dives may not mean much (unless, of course, you have a DM or boat who treats going into deco as if it were a mortal sin); a 20 minute schedule difference in a 130' dive would be a lot more significant.
I hesitate to call any computer "right" or "wrong". They aren't measuring anything in the diver, they are providing broad statistical correlations with dive profiles. Differences between algorithms probably matter less than differences between divers, hydration, physical condition, etc.
Ron