This is, of course, standard marketing fare: invent buzzwords, try to sell them to the consumer as must-have "features", and then quietly instruct your salespeople to incessantly denigrate the competition for not having them, even if they're nothing but vapour, your own implementation of a widely used technique, or parlour tricks of such narrow applicability that they're essentially useless.From Tom's Hardware wrote:At every product launch, the two market leaders in the 3D chip segment (NVIDIA and ATi) always serve up the same standard fare for the press: there's a lot of noise from the manufacturers about new technologies while they bandy about a dizzying array of technical terms that they invented themselves. "Fast food" and "very hard to swallow" are really the only terms to describe it. You're soon brought down to earth only weeks later, when the product makes its way to the test labs. The first drivers usually come laced with a portion of bugs - the classic teething problems that go hand in hand with quick product cycles. While it all seems quite savory at first, a nasty aftertaste soon sets in when it becomes clear that only a few of the many new features can actually be used in practice. In fact, the only morsel left on the plate is merely the performance gain over the previous model.
It's not just the computer people who do it; marketers in all industries do it. Why, for example, do we care whether one manufacturer's car has a "VORTEC" V6 engine instead of a "regular" V6 engine? Shouldn't we simply be comparing measured results such as horsepower and torque curves, or fuel economy?
It occurs to me that Trekkies do this a lot. Their ships are superior, we are told, because they have "ablative armour, regenerative multi-phase shielding, transphasic torpedoes", etc., and SW ships don't. Comparisons of observed firepower (against inert objects such as asteroids, to remove uncontrolled variables), travel speed, etc. are shunned at all costs, in favour of buzzword marketing.
I've asked this kind of question before, so I'll try it again: does anyone have any ideas which logic fallacy would best describe this well-worn trick?