Eric,
I dive the Galileo Sol. I have nothing but the highest recommendation for it. Huge screen. Choice of well organized layouts including a "large number" screen for just the essentials (depth, time, NDL, PSI, Air time) or more detailed information. Extremely legible. Superb AI features and options--including the ability to set alerts for audiible, visual, both, or none! Best compass implementation I have seen on a computer (my beloved SK-7 now sits in a box). Because it is not color screen, I am at 100 dives and battery still shows full. Easily user-changeable battery (although it is a specialized type, but lasts forever). It does multi-gas nitrox, has a great and very fast three button control system. It runs the Buhlman algorithm and can be unlocked for trimix if you want. It has so many features it takes some time to learn and set up, but, during the dive, it is simple and intuitive in its operation. On the boat, gas changes are very easy if you dive different mixes on different dives.
It is a top line piece of gear and priced to match, probably 1100 new including the transmitter. You can find them used for several hundred less if you look around. It is one of those purchases that I have never regretted. If you have a chance to look at one (any scubapro dealer) I would check it out.
it is a big machine, not a wristwatch, and you will want to replace the strap with bungee (easy to do). It is not perfect for some people, and I am sure there are other good computers for less money. But, count me a very satisfied user.
Be careful of the color screens, they are not the panacea for everything. Some of them have small numbers, thinking the color makes them easier to read. For "over 50" eyes, not so, you still need corrective lenses. I can easily read my Galileo in "huge number' mode with no correction--size matters!. Also, in bright shallow water, or on the boat in the sun, color screens are very hard to read, even the best of them, which makes tracking surface interval or changing gas a pain. If you want an eye-opening experience, ask to take one out to the parking lot on a bright day and try reading it or using the menus. The "old tech" lcd screens are still much better in this regard. if your diving is deep, or in more limited vis, and you can find shade on the boat, then color has an edge.