I started with an Evolution table saw and an Evolution sliding mitre. The latter I still have. It works fine, with care you can set it up to be accurate enough. Like others, I finish all cuts for anything that needs high accuracy or good finish with a shooting board anyway. It is very convenient to be able to cut wood reasonably accurately to length in a few seconds. I know I could get a better one but it is good enough, as long as I change the blade now and then.
The Evolution table saw OTOH is long gone. It is good value for not a lot of money and does work quite well (especially, as mentioned, the fence). It is very noisy. I agree that the plasticky angular settings are not very good. So that was replaced by an old Wadkin (AGS10) which with a very little work (mainly new blades) is wonderful. I use a 415V inverter from Direct Drives for the three phase, which includes soft start and software stop in 8 seconds. Quiet, and soooo accurate. I don't have a planer (yet, though one is due next month) and it is accurate enough to make a 90 degree cut on a piece of timber then use the cut face as the bottom surface in the lunchbox thicknesser. It licks the pants off the Evolution in accuracy, speed, power, convenience and low noise. But it does need space. I had room for a 12' x 6' extra shed, which this sits in, so it is set up for long ripping, up to 8' when the door is open. A router table sits in the corner and also acts as the outfield table. There is also a lathe and a small Inca bandsaw, a disc sander and a bobbin sander. Crowded and certainly no room for a bench, but yes, this is the dusty shed with the best dual-motor Camvac. Obviously I can't do wide crosscuts, but I don't work with sheet material unless I get it cut at the dealer.
Agree with MikeG that you don't have nearly enough room for a table saw like the Wadkin or Charnwood in your half garage unless it was almost the only tool in there. In those circs I'd go for the Dewalt, as SunnyBob suggests, which seems the best of the "site saw" types.
I have just got a small Inca 7" table saw and am setting it up. I admit this is an indulgence, as I like Inca tools so much, but I am setting it up and collecting the accessories to focus it on small, precise jobs such as tenon and mitre cutting. They do appear from time to time on auction sites. This would be an option for a small workshop and can be portable - only 9 kg plus another 9 for the motor. But you can't just buy one when you want.