One thing to mention is that one computer can be more liberal on a square profile, and penalize you hard (and unpredictably) for yo-yo or sawtooth profiles or short SIs. Even if ScubaLabs DID produce those pretty charts, it doesn't mean that's the case for all types of diving. The only way around it would be to put your "main" computer in "ultra conservative" mode to verify that you won't go into deco on your backup OR to be running identical algorithms. Otherwise, you need a bottom timer and some tables (or dive planner on your primary).
One more thing to mention: The most dangerous aspect of, and my biggest problem with, AI computers is that they tend to induce complacency. So, if you're trying to keep your AI computer connected just so you can have the "Air Time Remaining" or whatever they call it, be aware that that could get you killed. It's FAR too liberal for any real world scenarios as it doesn't even try to compute air-sharing or panic into its calculations.
PS- Mares is one of the companies that uses the goofy, proprietary, unpredictable algorithms that randomly punishes you for stuff you can't foresee.