Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

PCStats has posted a review on the MSI MX400 Pro-VT32S Video Card

MSI has added S-Video VIVO (Video In, Video Out) and 5 ns SDRAM. Last but not least, who could forget the pretty red PCB too! The MSI MX400 Pro-VT32S can be quite a worthy competitor, can being the key word. At stock, it doesn't have enough power to compete with the higher end cards, but when it's overclocked it leads to quite a performance gain! Many times being able to compete with cards that should be faster such as the ATI Radeon.
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Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

TweakTown has posted a review on the Aopen AX37 Plus motherboard.

VIA has been battling it out with Intel for some time now; and nowhere is the battle more fierce than in the War for the Pentium 3 Processors. Come take a ride aboard the Aopen AX37 Plus Motherboard as TweakTown let's you know how good the VIA chipset really is, as well as how Aopen handles implementing it.
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Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Overclockers Online has posted a review on MSI's KT266 based socket A motherboard, the MSI K7T266 Pro.

Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

PCinsight has posted a review on a 17 LCD panel from Samsung

Benchmarking a monitor is more of a subjective process, meaning that the results being reported are what I actually see on the monitor, versus what some benchmark actually reports about the hardware (such as a 3D gaming benchmark illustrating how fast a graphics card performs). In order to test the overall quality of the display, I used a program called Displaymate, manufactured by Displaymate Technologies (formerly Sonera Technologies).
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Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

LITTLEWHITEDOG has posted a review on two copper coolers from Vantec, the CCK-6027D and the CCK-6035D.

Both heatsinks are equipped with the micro fin design, which allows for more fins and an overall larger surface area, therefore creating better heat dissipation as air passes over them. The CCK-6035D is taller than the CCK-6027D model by 10mm (or about .394 of an inch for the metric-challenged). Both models also use a Two Ball Bearing fan, which generally has a longer MTBF (Mean Time Before Failure) than sleeve bearing fans. The specs don't show it, but during my testing I noticed the CCK-6035D fan was rotating at approximately 7336 RPM's while the CCK-6027D fan was only running at 6250 RPM's. You should also note (from the specs below) the CCK-6035D has a 0.29°C/W Thermal resistance while the smaller CCK-6027D has a rating of 0.32°C/W.
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Reviews 52663 Published by Philipp Esselbach 0

Tweakers Asylum has posted a review on Powerquest's PartitionMagic Pro 7.0. This version includes support for Windows XP, as well as several other new features and options.