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Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

5 Ways to Access a Locked Windows Account
AMD Ryzen 9 Threadripper Lineup Leaked
Corsair Glaive RGB Mouse Review
Corsair Vengeance RGB 3000 MHz DDR4 Review
Create Your Own Router and Firewall Solution With pfSense
Entire AMD Vega Lineup Reportedly Leaked - Available on June 5th?
SteelSeries Arctis 7 Review



5 Ways to Access a Locked Windows Account

Here are five of the most approachable ways for resetting or recovering your Windows password along with abridged instructions on how to execute them and some alternatives

Read full article @ TechSpot

AMD Ryzen 9 Threadripper Lineup Leaked

AMDs entire Ryzen 9 Threadripper CPU lineup has been leaked, featuring 16, 14, 12 and 10 core parts with clock speeds of up to 4.1GHz. The company’s brand new enthusiast CPU lineup is set to launch this June and bring the company’s outstanding Zen architecture to the high-end desktop.

The Ryzen 9 lineup, code named Threadripper, will be compatible with a modified version of the company’s SP3 socket, code named SP3r2, which was originally designed for AMD’s 32 core Naples server parts. The new high-end desktop platform is code named “Whitehaven” and brings support for quad channel DDR4 memory support and 44 PCIe lanes to hardware enthusiasts, content creators and developers.

Read full article @ Wccftech

Corsair Glaive RGB Mouse Review

Corsair is back with a brand-new gaming mouse in the shape of the Glaive RGB. With a focus on ultimate comfort, the Glaive RGB actually comes bundled with three interchangeable thumb grips to give you the best experience possible. Priced at £69.99, is it worth the cash?

Read full article @ KitGuru

Corsair Vengeance RGB 3000 MHz DDR4 Review

Ready to take your system to the next level? Then you're in the right place! Today we are taking a look at the new Vengeance RGB 3000 MHz DDR4 memory from Corsair. Delivering blazing fast performance, and hopefully some overclocking headroom. Of course, speed isn't the only thing on offer today. The kit comes equipped with 32GB (4 x 8GB) C15 memory; more than enough for high-end gaming systems, workstations, and more.

Read full article @ eTeknix

Create Your Own Router and Firewall Solution With pfSense

Over-the-counter routers are fine and work as they should, but they simply aren't enough for some of us. Quite a few of the standard routers located around the homes of the world allow for an open source WRT-based firmware to be installed, but that might still not be enough. If that's the case, you might want to look into the idea of building your router. Today, I'm going to take you through the basics and show just how easily you can get a router and firewall with any feature you could want on more powerful hardware than pre-built routers offer.

Read full article @ eTeknix

Entire AMD Vega Lineup Reportedly Leaked - Available on June 5th?

Reports are doing the rounds regarding alleged AMD insiders having "blown the whistle", so to speak, on the company's upcoming Vega graphics cards. This leak also points towards retail availability of Vega cards on the 5th of June, which lines up nicely with AMD's May 31st Computex press conference. An announcement there, followed by market availability on the beginning of next week does sound like something that would happen in a new product launch.

On to the meat and bones of this story, three different SKUs have been leaked, of which no details are currently known, apart from their naming and pricing. AMD's Vega line-up starts off with the RX Vega Core graphics card, which is reportedly going to retail for $399. This graphics card is going to sell at a higher price than NVIDIA's GTX 1070, which should mean higher performance. Higher pricing with competitive performance really wouldn't stir any pot of excitement, so, higher performance is the most logical guess. The $399 pricing sits nicely in regards to AMD's RX 580, though it does mean there is space for another SKU to be thrown into the mix at a later date, perhaps at $329, though I'm just speculating on AMD's apparent pricing gap at this point.

Read full article @ techPowerUp

SteelSeries Arctis 7 Review

The main party piece of the Arctis 7 is that it features lag-free wireless connectivity of up to 12m, with a 15 hour battery life. Gaming headsets, especially of this calibre tend to have a 10-20hr battery life, which isn't very long comparatively, though this tends to be entirely down to the size and quality of the drivers used.

Read full article @ Vortez