I've put a couple hundred dives on my Suunto D9, and I'm pretty happy with it. I like knowing the consensus is that Suunto=conservative, because I don't beat myself up if I push its limits - I try to dive a smooth, solid profile, as it were, but sometimes I ascend too quickly, or stay too long at depth on a repetitive dive*, and I know the computer is merely warning me. No computer I've seen will actually track what's REALLY going on in your tissues, they're all just algorithms, so I like the conservative ones for that reason.
*I always dive with 2 computers. You should too. Best recommendation I've ever gotten, and one of the best ones I can give anyone who travels. When one computer fails (when, not if), you've got the other one ready to go because it's been diving with you the whole time, and you can just swap the computers' places on your rig and keep diving - nothing like being left on the boat on an expensive trip when everyone else is diving!.... (I also like comparing how the 2 read my dives, Oceanic Veo 180 & Suunto D9, where they match & where they deviate slightly....)
I've also put a couple hundred dives on my A/L Airsource 3, which I do like and I won't be going back to a hosed octo anytime soon. Reason being: most of my dives are functionally solo, and I like having one less thing dangling and catching kelp. (This probably isn't the place for arguments on solo vs buddy diving, though I'm sure there are some strong opinions.)
The one thing I do NOT like about the Airsource 3: when you get sand in the buttons, they become stuck, almost irreparably. There really does need to be some way of getting under the buttons to dislodge them. It could get you into serious trouble if the inflate button stuck during a dive....