Reviews 52528 Published by

Tech reviewers have been rigorously testing various products, such as monitors, graphics cards, headphones, memory kits, motherboards, and storage solutions. The Asus ZenScreen MB229CF monitor offers three setup options and is suitable for those who need more space on their desktop. High-end GPUs like the ASUS RTX 5080 Noctua Edition and ASRock Radeon RX 9070 XT Monster Hunter Wilds Edition are also being reviewed, along with memory kits from Kingston FURY Beast RGB and Exceleram #42. Additionally, reviews of motherboards such as the MSI MPG B860I EDGE TI WIFI and storage solutions like the Zettlab D4 NAS have been published.

Displays: Asus ZenScreen MB229CF Monitor Review
Graphics Cards: ASUS RTX 5080 Noctua Edition Review, ASRock Radeon RX 9070 XT Monster Hunter Wilds Edition Review - RDNA 4 Style
Headphones: Meze Audio 105 SILVA Open-Back Headphones Review
Memory: Kingston FURY Beast RGB 64GB DDR5-6400 CL32 Memory Kit Review, Exceleram #42 DDR5-6000 32 GB CL32 Review
Motherboards: MSI MPG B860I EDGE TI WIFI Motherboard Review
Storage: Zettlab D4 NAS Review: Alpha software, ambitious vision





Displays:

OCInside.de: Asus ZenScreen MB229CF Monitor Review

Ever since working from home became the norm, people have been wondering how much longer they will have to stare at their small 13-inch laptop displays. Especially when working with large spreadsheets or graphics, you want a little more space on your desktop. This is where mobile monitors come in. Set up when needed, they can be easily stowed away again after work. Today’s candidate is the 22-inch ZenScreen MB229CF from Asus, which offers three mounting or setup options. In the following review, we’ll show you what these are and how the monitor performs in everyday use.

Asus ZenScreen MB229CF Monitor Review

Graphics Cards:

Vortez: ASUS RTX 5080 Noctua Edition Review

A premium collaboration between ASUS and Noctua, the RTX 5080 Noctua Edition GPU delivers flagship 4K performance wrapped in exceptional cooling, near-silent operation, and unmistakable Noctua styling.

ASUS RTX 5080 Noctua Edition Review - Introduction

TweakTown: ASRock Radeon RX 9070 XT Monster Hunter Wilds Edition Review - RDNA 4 Style

The ASRock Radeon RX 9070 XT Monster Hunter Wilds Edition graphics card is a stylish, well-built version of the impressive RDNA 4 flagship GPU.

Just a moment...

Headphones:

NikKTech: Meze Audio 105 SILVA Open-Back Headphones Review

The Meze 105 Silva brings handcrafted design into a more approachable price bracket with audio performance that leans toward balance, coherence, and long‑session listenability.

Meze Audio 105 SILVA Open-Back Headphones Review

Memory:

Funky Kit: Kingston FURY Beast RGB 64GB DDR5-6400 CL32 Memory Kit Review

Kingston FURY Beast DDR5 RGB delivers speeds of up to 6800MT/s. Featuring Infrared Sync Technology to keep the vibrant customisable lighting in perfect sync, available with sleek black or white heat spreaders and support for Intel XMP 3.0 and AMD EXPO, it’s 100% speed tested and backed by a limited lifetime warranty.

Kingston FURY Beast RGB 64GB DDR5-6400 CL32 Memory Kit Review - Funky Kit

TechPowerUp: Exceleram #42 DDR5-6000 32 GB CL32 Review

Exceleram #42 is engineered to exceed expectations, even before you’ve asked for them. Featuring dual XMP/EXPO profiles at 6000 MT/s for both AMD and Intel, along with modest 32-38-38-96 primary timings, this kit is built for cross system compatibility. Stay tuned as we test this kit and compare it with other options available.

Exceleram #42 DDR5-6000 32 GB CL32 Review

Motherboards:

The FPS Review: MSI MPG B860I EDGE TI WIFI Motherboard Review

Check out the MSI MPG B860I EDGE TI WIFI Motherboard and see if it's the right Intel ITX board for you, B860 chipset, and loaded with features.

MSI MPG B860I EDGE TI WIFI Motherboard Review

Storage:

Neowin: Zettlab D4 NAS Review: Alpha software, ambitious vision

One of the main reasons people like to self-host, whether it be services or data, is to keep things private. It seems that privacy takes a step back every year, regardless of what country you're in. Even your browser leaks information about you. It's one reason I started a "self-hosting" guide in 2024 that I hope to continue in 2026. Keeping your data out of the cloud is one of the easiest ways to protect your privacy, and a NAS is a great way to do that, but there are a lot of different choices in this space.

Attention Required! | Cloudflare