Reviews 52572 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Maximum CPU has posted its review of the Kingston 1GB U3 DataTraveler.

USB flash drives have been around for quite some time now. However, up until recently, there really wasn't an easy way to install software to your flash drive so it was truly portable. Many programs require registry keys to work correctly or store their info in variety of different locations. This is were the Kingston U3 DataTraveler comes in, which features U3 technology. U3 technology allows anyone to easily install many different programs to their flash drive without worrying if the program will work when they plug the flash drive into a different computer. U3 compatible programs include Firefox, Thunderbird, Trillian, Gaim, OpenOffice, and many others.
Kingston 1GB U3 DataTraveler Review

Virtual-Hideout posted a Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-500 MCE Review

With all that being said, I would feel confident in anyone using the WinTV-PVR-500 MCE who wants to build a HTPC system, or for the user who may have a dual monitor setup and wants to have live TV on the second monitor. The ease of setup and use through MCE also makes getting the WinTV-PVR-500 MCE a plus.
Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-500 MCE Review

Reviews 52572 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

BIOS Magazine posted a review on CMS Products' ABSplus

CMS Products' latest backup and restore product is an external ultra-portable (it'll just about slip into a shirt pocket) 2.5-inch hard disk drive (130x75x30mm, 198g). Available with a storage capacity from 40- to 160GB (95 to 175 ex. VAT), it also comes with good backup and restore software, and is backed by a 3-year warranty.
CMS Products' ABSplus Review

Free-Bees posted a review on openSUSE 10.2

At the moment, saying SUSE will probably bring up talk of Novell and Microsoft, and a certain deal that hasn't been looked upon favourably by many to say the least. However, I'm going to ignore all of that for this review for two reasons: firstly, openSUSE is not Novell. Secondly, that goes far beyond the scope of this article.

So, now we can start properly. openSUSE 10.2 is the latest release of the community project, after the somewhat disappointing 10.1 release, where you were liable to not have package management actually working. Hopefully, we'll discover no such flaw this time.
openSUSE 10.2 Review