LostCircuits posted a review on the Phenom II X4 810 and X3 720 Black Edition
HotHardware.com posted a review on the AMD Phenom II X3 720 Black Edition and X4 810 Processors
The Guru of 3D posted a review on the AMD Phenom II X4 810 and X3 720BE processors
Tweaknews posted a review on the Cooler Master ATCS 840 Full Tower Classic ATX Case
Techgage.com posted a review of Intel's Q8200S and Q9400S 65W Quad-Cores
Viper Lair posted a review on the MSI X58 Eclipse Motherboard
Hardware-TEST.dk/ Hwt.dk posted a review on the AMD Phenom II X3 - 720 2.8GHz
PureOverclock posted a review of the ECS A780GM-A Ultra motherboard
InsideHW.com has compared performances of AMD Phenom II X4 810 with DDR3 and DDR2 memory
Rbmods posted a review on the Sunbeamtech Mini-ITX Acrylic Case
Small computers is the word in today's world. Asus EEE series and MSI:s Wind PC are very common in thin-client business. However it's possible to build your own mini sized computer. Keyparts are mini-itx motherboard and mini-itx case. Today we will take a look at Sunbeamtech's Mini-ITX Acrylic case which is designed for HTPC:s.Sunbeamtech Mini-ITX Acrylic Case Review
Ninjalane has just posted their review of a tower cooler from ThermoLab called the Baram
Legit Reviews posted a review on the Intel Core 2 Quad Q8200S Processor
NVIDIA GeForce 3D Vision Review
Legit Reviews posted a review on the NVIDIA GeForce 3D Vision
LeadTek WinFast GTX 285 Review
Bjorn3D takes a look at the LeadTek WinFast GTX 285
Legit Reviews posted a review on the NVIDIA GeForce 3D Vision
The NVIDIA 3D Vision Bundle consists of a Samsung Syncmaster 2233RZ 22" 3D Gaming LCD Monitor and NVIDIA 3D Vision Stereoscopic glasses. This $599 bundle will give you an out-of-the-box immersive 3D PC Gaming experience as long as your system has a GeForce 8800 or higher gaming graphics card. Read on to see what the future of 3D gaming looks like as you don't want to miss out on this!NVIDIA GeForce 3D Vision Review
LeadTek WinFast GTX 285 Review
Bjorn3D takes a look at the LeadTek WinFast GTX 285
A new year can be exciting. It's a time for renewal, and resolutions, and even some times it's a time a new president. But this new year, it was also a time for gamers. At the Consumer Electronics Show this past January in Las Vegas, Nevada, a new video card was debuted, the Nvidia GeForce GTX 285. Built upon the GTX 200 series architecture, the GTX sports a smaller die process (shrunken from 65nm to 55nm) that lowers power consumption and lowers heat, but packs more performance than its predecessors. And though the GTX 285 is the younger sibling to the GTX 280 that was previously Nvidia's top-of-line offering, the new GTX 285 is now definitely its big brother.LeadTek WinFast GTX 285 Review
The GTX 280 has a little brother, in the GTX 260 with 216 stream processors, and LeadTek offered an overclocked version of that video card in the WinFast GTX 260 Extreme+. And though while technically not as fast as its big brother the GTX 280, the factory overclocked GTX 260 Extreme+ posted some impressive numbers, especially if it was coaxed into providing some extra speed with a little extra overclocking. Today we have the LeadTek GTX 285 video card to test and we're going to see just what its capable of doing.
ocaholic.ch posted a review on the Corsair TX850W power supply
Overclockers Online has posted a new review on the GELID Silent Spirit CPU Cooler
DreamWare Computers posted a review on the Tuniq TR-1 Thermal Material Remover
InsideHW.com has reviewed GeIL EVO Cyclone memory cooler
PCShopTalk posted a review on the ATI RADEON HD 4830 Video Card
DragonSteelMods posted a review on the Lexar Shoot-n-Sync Wi-Fi 2GB Memory Card
Bjorn3D takes a look at the LeadTek WinFast GTX 285