Reviews 51951 Published by

Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

Casing: Corsair 4000D White Review
Input: Dark Matter by Monoprice Collider TKL Review: Middle of the Road
Storage: Seagate FireCuda 530 1TB SSD Review (tested with Windows 11), Patriot High Endurance microSDXC 128GB Flash Memory Card Review, Seagate Barracuda 510 1TB NVMe SSD Review





Casing:

APH Networks: Corsair 4000D White Review

About a year ago, some of my friends were telling me about how they got into online dating. To give you a little bit of background, I personally never had or have any use for it as I am in a stable long-term relationship. That said, I have no problems recommending online dating to people. I understand online dating has a bit of stigma attached to it, given many people still hold on to a 1990s or 2000s perspective. However, being a bit of an academic myself, I was curious how some of these apps worked, so I downloaded a couple of them onto my spare iPhone, with the full knowledge of my girlfriend, to find out. Upon opening the apps, they required me to create a profile with some information, which is fair. When they started to ask for photos, I was a bit stuck. I was not about to use any images of myself and going on Google to find pictures is just asking to get banned. Therefore, with a bit of artificial intelligence and Photoshop, I generated a set of unique and completely fake photos of a very realistic looking guy. After taking a quick look around these dating apps, I became curious as to whether my fake guy would actually generate real interest. I left my profile up and put my spare iPhone away. A few days later, it was buzzing with notifications and some awkwardly even came from people I know in real life. I did not want to cross any ethical boundaries, so not only have I not accepted any of the connection requests, I also quickly deleted these apps and considered my research a success. Creating a fake online dating profile may be as old as the Internet itself, but when presented differently in a different time, new perspectives can be gained. Last year, my colleague Hai reviewed the Corsair 4000D, which he positively reviewed. Today, I got yet another 4000D, except this time, it is the white version. Do we have any new insights to it given it is presented differently in a different time like my fake online dating profile? Read on to find out!

Corsair 4000D White Review (Page 1 of 4) | APH Networks

Input:

Tom's Hardware: Dark Matter by Monoprice Collider TKL Review: Middle of the Road

Solid performance, average features



Dark Matter by Monoprice Collider TKL Review: Middle of the Road

Storage:

TweakTown: Seagate FireCuda 530 1TB SSD Review (tested with Windows 11)

It's here. Seagate's FireCuda 530 can reach speeds in excess of 7,300 MB/s and is the first SSD upgrade certified for PS5 use.



Seagate FireCuda 530 1TB SSD Review (tested with Windows 11)

Mad Shrimps: Patriot High Endurance microSDXC 128GB Flash Memory Card Review

The High Endurance microSD cards from Patriot Memory can be easily used in harsh operating conditions, while offering enough performance for recording quality 4K footage. Currently these are available with capacities of up to 128GB and include a microSD adapter to be compatible with even more...

[M] [M] Patriot High Endurance microSDXC 128GB Flash Memory Card Review

ServeTheHome: Seagate Barracuda 510 1TB NVMe SSD Review

We test the Seagate Barracuda 510 1TB NVMe SSD in our review to see how it compares to other drives of this generation



Seagate Barracuda 510 1TB NVMe SSD Review