Word salad. Never said my experiences equaled the totality of reality.
You said "Unless you're talking the fastest few people that use aimpoint vs the slowest green readers, you're not representing reality." I'm here to say your experiences are not reality either.
I haven't seen anyone in a high level amateur tournament using it that wasn't slower or quite frankly, ruder to other players.
Not a one, eh!? Big fan of absolutes. "Not representing reality" and "haven't seen anyone." I'd wager that you haven't even noticed some of the faster players using AimPoint.
I can totally see where you're faster, but you're also using examples of outliers that take forever reading greens "normally." I despise them too. I'm also the guy that believes we should ban lining up the line on the ball.
I feel I'm comparing them to someone who reads a putt from behind the ball and behind the hole, which is pretty commonplace.
The simple fact is this: an AimPoint read takes about five to ten seconds. The "read" itself is about three seconds spread over two parts: a second or so at the "spot" to "get a number" and then two seconds at the ball to hold up fingers if you want to. If you have to get a number at multiple parts… add a second for each. The rest of the time is walking around a little, which AimPoint readers have to do much less of than someone who goes to the other side of the hole.
If you only quickly read the putt while crouching behind the ball and replacing it, that would be the only faster way of "reading" greens, but nobody playing anything serious does that.
Slow players are slow. AimPoint is, in and of itself, pretty fast.
I've been watching my daughter's college event the past few days. One girl (using AimPoint) took just over a minute to hit a five-foot putt. My daughter took 23 seconds the next hole to hit a putt of the same length. The same girl in the first took 76 seconds to hit a tee shot… while my daughter took 18.
Slow players are slow. Methodical players are methodical.
You can also do a lot of your AimPoint read before it's your turn to putt (as you can with the "traditional" way to read a green).