I would like to know if there is any real factual basis or if they are mere conjecture.
Claim:
I find the opposite to be true. Computers can and will alert people to incredible deficiencies in their diving methodology. Buddies are far less apt to point out such flaws as running your air too low, ascending too fast, missing a safety stop or exceeding time/depth limits. Why take away such a valuable tool from those who might not get to dive with astute buddies? My Cobra taught me to ascend far slower and then do an actual safety stop. This was something that was not high on my instructor's list of good diving habits.
Claim:
Again, I find the opposite to be true. During initialization, most computers will turn on every pixel and light and even beep when done. This will alert you to troubles before you dive. Computers fail for sure, BUT NOT NEARLY AS OFTEN AS DIVERS FORGET TO CHECK THEIR GUAGES. The problem lies in that divers feel that they do not need any training to use their computer competently. The converse is true.
Furthermore, I think air integrated computers are phenomenal. Not only do they let you know how much air pressure is left, but they calculate remaining time based on depth and consumption. Most casual users never get a feel for how much time they would have at any particular depth so this helps them to not overstay their welcome.
You can call them crutches, gizmos or whatever to let us know your distaste for them. I see them more as redundancies that help bring the distracted diver back to reality before the ca-ca hits the propeller. How many people have benefited from low oil/low brake/low gas lights in their cars? The technology is cheap and reliable enough to offer the same type of feedback for divers.
For what its worth I have brought no more facts to this table than any other poster. These are merely my humble opinions based on my observations of hundreds of divers. I am not trying to disparage what they are saying as much as I am trying to offer a counter point of view.
Claim:
The problem with all these crutches, like a computer that beeps to let you know you are running low on air, is that eventually people rely on them.
I find the opposite to be true. Computers can and will alert people to incredible deficiencies in their diving methodology. Buddies are far less apt to point out such flaws as running your air too low, ascending too fast, missing a safety stop or exceeding time/depth limits. Why take away such a valuable tool from those who might not get to dive with astute buddies? My Cobra taught me to ascend far slower and then do an actual safety stop. This was something that was not high on my instructor's list of good diving habits.
Claim:
No beep means you have air or a broken computer. If they reversed the logic and made it beep to mean you had air you would have a valid test.
Again, I find the opposite to be true. During initialization, most computers will turn on every pixel and light and even beep when done. This will alert you to troubles before you dive. Computers fail for sure, BUT NOT NEARLY AS OFTEN AS DIVERS FORGET TO CHECK THEIR GUAGES. The problem lies in that divers feel that they do not need any training to use their computer competently. The converse is true.
Furthermore, I think air integrated computers are phenomenal. Not only do they let you know how much air pressure is left, but they calculate remaining time based on depth and consumption. Most casual users never get a feel for how much time they would have at any particular depth so this helps them to not overstay their welcome.
You can call them crutches, gizmos or whatever to let us know your distaste for them. I see them more as redundancies that help bring the distracted diver back to reality before the ca-ca hits the propeller. How many people have benefited from low oil/low brake/low gas lights in their cars? The technology is cheap and reliable enough to offer the same type of feedback for divers.
For what its worth I have brought no more facts to this table than any other poster. These are merely my humble opinions based on my observations of hundreds of divers. I am not trying to disparage what they are saying as much as I am trying to offer a counter point of view.