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  •  PostTime : Monday, 10 March 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : Gabriel Ikram
    Motherboard
    AMD 780G @ AnandTech

    Video
    GIGABYTE GV-RX387512H HD3870 512MB Crossfire @ Motherboards.org
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  •  PostTime : Friday, 07 March 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    The name may conjure up images of an evil galactic overlord, but fortunately Zonbu is not here to enslave us. Quite the opposite -- the company aims to offer freedom from many of the headaches associated with owning and maintaining a conventional (read: Windows) PC.
    Zonbu's notebook -- also known as the Zonbook -- runs a version of Gentoo Linux rather than Windows and is sold with an accompanying subscription service. The pricing model is similar to that of the cellular phone ...
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  •  PostTime : Thursday, 06 March 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : Gabriel Ikram

    Display
    Hyundai W241D 24" @ bit-tech

    Video
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  •  PostTime : Monday, 03 March 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : Brandon Hill
    Notebooks
    ASUS U6S 12.1" Ultra-mobile Notebook @ PC Perspective
    Toshiba G45 @ Laptop Logic

    Processors
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  •  PostTime : Friday, 29 February 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : Brandon Hill
    Notebooks
    HP Pavilion dv6500t Special Edition Notebook @ HardwareLogic

    Processors
    Intel Core 2 Duo E8500 Wolfdale CPU @ HotHardware.com
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  •  PostTime : Thursday, 28 February 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : Brandon Hill
    Notebooks
    MacBook Air vs Lenovo ThinkPad X300 @ LogicTV

    Motherboards
    VIA EPIA-SN Mini-ITX Motherboard @ TweakTown
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 12 February 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    Logitech's latest top-of-the-line mouse boasts breathtaking design -- a sleek, low-slung, black-and-chrome wedge that looks like a flying car from Blade Runner or a half-sized, sexed-up TV remote. It also features breathtaking versatility: In addition to gliding gracefully about your desk, the cordless MX Air works when held in midair and pointed at a PC across the room, whether for multimedia playback or couch-based Web surfing.
    Oh, and it has a breathtaking price: $150. Yes,...
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  •  PostTime : Friday, 25 January 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    We've remarked more than once that hardware shoppers can often get good values by buying last year's model instead of a new, mildly freshened version of a product, because the manufacturer is sure to have lowered the older version's price to make room for its successor. Xerox is the exception that proves the rule.
    Last April, we gave a thumbs-up review to Xerox's Phaser 6180, a color laser printer boasting speeds of 26 pages per minute for black and white and 20 ppm for color. It ...
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  •  PostTime : Wednesday, 02 January 2008  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly
    Can't decide between a handheld PDA and an ultralight notebook PC? Neither can some of the manufacturers aboard Intel Corp.'s Ultra-Mobile PC (UMPC) bandwagon: Entries range from two-handed handhelds like the Samsung Q1 Ultra reviewed here last summer to itsy-bitsy laptops like Sony's 4.5-inch-screened Vaio UX. About the only thing they have in common is Windows.
    Fujitsu's LifeBook U810 stands out from its UMPC colleagues in at least two ways. For one thing, it's not just a pound-an...
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 04 December 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    Butterfingers? If you're like us, the word made you think of a candy bar (Get out of our heads, Nestlé! Damn you and your peanut-buttery goodness!), but of course it really refers to a clumsy person, one prone to accidentally dropping things. Like you.
    Don't bother to deny it; we've all fumbled our car keys or groceries -- or, worst of all, our notebook PCs. Systemax, the Ohio-based manufacturer that sells its wares mostly through its TigerDirect.com and Global Computer S...
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  •  PostTime : Thursday, 29 November 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    All that hype about the paperless office never came true, but the notion of the wireless office is rapidly taking hold as more small and home-based businesses replace wired LANs with WiFi networks. Products like the Lexmark X6570, an 802.11g-enabled all-in-one that costs just $150, make cutting the Ethernet cable a very compelling proposition.
    the X6570 does just about everything except manufacture and sell your products for you. It's an inkjet printer that does a very credita...
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  •  PostTime : Friday, 16 November 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    Excuse us for a sec, OK? We'll start the review momentarily but just need to switch into our Professional PC Critic Veteran Reviewer Voice Omigod! That is like the cutest thing EVER lemme see lemme see! Oh I so have to get one of these RIGHT NOW only two pounds could you DIE? Four C's you WISH, come on no way WAY, $400? Omigod I am like losing it right here. Hello? Paper bag? Breathe into?
    Ahem. The Taiwanese tech heavyweight Asus, best known here for motherboards and other deskto...
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 06 November 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    For five years now, users have been picking up Tablet PCs, cradling them in one arm like clipboards, sampling their appealing handwriting recognition and pen-input applications ... and saying, "They're too heavy."
    Fujitsu aims to change that. The LifeBook T2010 is a convertible Tablet PC/notebook that weighs no more than some tablet-only slate designs -- 3.6 pounds.
    Frankly, that's still too much to carry under an arm all day, but Fujitsu's trimming a pound or two pa...
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  •  PostTime : Monday, 22 October 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    Of course the whole "zero footprint" thing is an exaggeration. True, the HP Compaq dc7800 Ultra-Slim Desktop doesn't touch your desktop when it's riding piggyback on the company's L1906i 19-inch LCD monitor. But the monitor takes some desk space, as do the keyboard and mouse -- although when the system's idle, you can stash the keyboard beneath the monitor to reclaim 30 square inches or so.
    Nevertheless, the configuration HP calls an Integrated Work Center (IWC) is about as c...
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 09 October 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    A funny thing happened after two or three weeks using the HP Compaq 2510p: We found ourselves forgetting it was small and thinking of it as just a notebook. It's time to recharge the notebook. We should install OpenOffice.org on the laptop. D'oh! We left the notebook at home!
    To be sure, the business-traveler-targeted portable is small, measuring a trim 8.4 by 11.1 by 1 inches and weighing in at 3.5 pounds. That's not so light that you'll forget it's in your briefcase (especia...
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 25 September 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    The classic image of a robot as a lurching metallic automaton has been challenged in recent years by products like iRobot's Roomba home-roaming vacuum, which looks more like an oversized dinner plate than C-3PO. Now comes the Drobo, a device that looks like an ordinary external hard drive or network attached storage (NAS) unit but which Data Robotics dubs "the world's first storage robot."
    That may sound like marketing puffery, but based on Dictionary.com's definition of a rob...
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  •  PostTime : Wednesday, 12 September 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    The science of ergonomics, as you know, was invented by Goldilocks, whose pioneering research into beds that were too hard, too soft, or just right blazed the way for countless studies of comfort and complaint in humans' interaction with their environment.
    Now Logitech is applying the porridge-eater's methodology to PC interface design: The keyboard half of the Cordless Desktop Wave bundle ($90) aims to make typing less tiring than a plain-vanilla keyboard does, but without t...
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  •  PostTime : Tuesday, 21 August 2007  | Posted by :  DigitalWeekly  | Author : DigitalWeekly

    Logitech's newest product is hardly bigger than your thumbnail. It's smaller than most postage stamps (0.5 by 0.7 inches). You can place it on a quarter with no overhang at any corner.
    Oh, yeah, it comes with a mouse, too.
    The tiny trinket is what Logitech calls the world's smallest USB receiver, tuned to the same interference-resistant 2.4GHz radio signal as most of the company's other wireless mice. There's a storage slot for it inside the VX Nano Cordless Laser Mo...
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