The whole DSO "noise" concept gets very confusing very quickly when you take time to think about what's actually going on and where it's coming from. Here's a few examples.
All Input Referred Sources:
1) Thermal Voltage noise
2) Current Shot noise
3) 1/f and various flavors noise
4) Power Supply noise
5) AC Mains noise
6) Clock noise
7) ADC Sampling noise
8 ADC Bit noise (reference noise)
9) Quantization noise
10) BNC pickup noise
Where do these various noise sources originate, and where/how are they coupled into the scope electronics? Then we are asking the DSO to measure it's own Input Referred noise, and at different scope bandwidths and scale factors!!
Some means of a standard test setup needs to be applied, including scale factor, bandwidth, input termination, temperature and so on. I would think that 3 different input terminations be considered, Open (AKA 1M), Short and 50 Ohm (like the Network Analyzers do), which may give a hint as to what types of noise are contributing.
As the linear power supply noise measurement has shown, scope input noise does matter, regardless of how you chose to define it, or foolishly ignore it.
Here's a typical example, when doing troubleshooting of a couple old Tektronix scopes (2465) the manual suggest the first thing in the troubleshooting procedure is to measure the various power supply voltages and noise levels, some from SMPS and some from linear supplies. Tek even provides all these voltages on a common 16 pin DIP socket on the main PCB Top Side. Improper voltage levels or/and excessive noise levels can point you in the proper direction right from the start.
Anyway, having a nice selection of good, low noise, wide band, high resolution DSOs is certainly good for the end users. Lots of quality instruments to select from
Best,