Reviews 52668 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

PowerColor LCS HD4870 (Water-Cooled) Graphics Card Review
DriverHeaven posted a review on the PowerColor LCS HD4870 (Water-Cooled) Graphics Card

In the Radeon HD 4870 family there have been numerous overclocked models released in the last few months but few go to the extreme shown by todays review product, the PowerColor Liquid Cooling Solution HD4870.
PowerColor LCS HD4870 (Water-Cooled) Graphics Card Review

Black Friday Review of the Thermalright T-Rad 2
Bjorn3D takes a look at the Thermalright T-Rad 2

With GPU's getting hotter and hotter, it is starting to be impossible to overclock a graphics card with a stock heat sink. This is where Thermalright comes in. They have designed what looks to be an amazing cooler. With the ability to have two 92mm fans or one large 120mm fan, it should cool much better than any stock heat sink.

The problem is what is a good heat sink without a good graphics card? You can't enjoy a great game without having a GPU that has the power to display all of the eye candy. With a better cooler you can crank up the GPU clocks, alowing you to acheive more frames, and thus smoother gameplay. That is why Thermalright has made the T-Rad 2 able to run on a majority of the current high end GPU's.

It would be a smart thing to invest in one of these coolers to gain more game performance at a low price. And with your card running cooler, its life span will improve by a fair margin. This will help lower the chances of needing to RMA a dead card, so you won't have to miss playing any of your favorite games. With this cooler, your card will last longer, which will allow you to hold off that upgrade until your card struggles to play new games.
Black Friday Review of the Thermalright T-Rad 2

Reviews 52668 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

NorthQ FlexQ Combo Cooler Review
DriverHeaven posted a review on the NorthQ FlexQ Combo Cooler

Today we will have a look at a rather strange cooler from NorthQ, the FlexQ Combo cooler. What makes the FlexQ Combo unique is that it can be installed not only on most processors as a low profile cooler, but on several GFX cards as well. But given its small size, can it perform well enough to be a competitive product?
NorthQ FlexQ Combo Cooler Review

Sony Ericsson W980 Walkman Phone Review
ITreviewed has reviewed the Sony Ericsson W980 Walkman Phone

On paper the W980 Walkman Phone ticks most boxes and is a fantastic piece of gadgetry: it is beautifully finished with cool lights that flash all over the place, offers stylish touch-sensitive buttons, and even has a full 8GB of onboard memory. But it's only when you use the phone for a few days that its unintuitiveness becomes apparent. Most annoying are the tiny call start and end buttons, along with the even smaller menu, shortcut and cancel buttons. You're never entirely sure which button to press when navigating menus either, and navigating the contacts menu isn't as quick as you'd expect. Usability issues aside, those after a phone that doubles as an excellent quality music player with more than enough storage space and a sufficiently well-designed media manager should consider the W980. If your priority is a phone - in particular voice, messaging and contacts management - you may soon become frustrated with the W980.
Sony Ericsson W980 Walkman Phone Review