Reviews 51970 Published by

Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

Cooling: be quiet! MC1 Pro - M.2 SSD Heatsink Review
Displays: Philips Momentum 329M1RV Gaming Monitor Review, Apple Studio Display Review after 1 Month - The TRUTH...
Input: Mountain Everest Max RGB Gaming Keyboard Review
Networking: HPE Aruba Instant On 1960 24G 2XGT 2SFP+ Switch Review JL806A
Storage: Silicon Power XPower XS70 SSD Review: Fast, Attractive, and Affordable, SilverStone EXB02 Review, Toshiba N300 4TB NAS Hard Drive Review





Cooling:

Tech-Legend: be quiet! MC1 Pro - M.2 SSD Heatsink Review

The be quiet! be quiet! MC1 PRO is a great M.2 heatsink that not only does its job and will lower the SSD temperature, but its affordable as well.



be quiet! MC1 Pro - M.2 SSD Heatsink Review

Displays:

FunkyKit: Philips Momentum 329M1RV Gaming Monitor Review

Level up with the Philips Momentum 329M1RV Gaming Monitor. Experience the new Ambiglow lighting for deeper immersion and overall gaming awesomeness.



Philips Momentum 329M1RV Gaming Monitor Review - FunkyKit

Max Tech: Apple Studio Display Review after 1 Month - The TRUTH...

Everyone is WRONG about the Studio Display from Apple! I've been using it for almost 1 month and I've discovered why people are getting so worked up over it....



Apple Studio Display Review after 1 Month - The TRUTH...

Input:

NikKTech: Mountain Everest Max RGB Gaming Keyboard Review

Mountain claims that their flagship Everest Max RGB Gaming Keyboard is nothing like we’ve ever seen before in the PC market and today I’m really hoping that’s the case.

Mountain Everest Max RGB Gaming Keyboard Review

Networking:

ServeTheHome: HPE Aruba Instant On 1960 24G 2XGT 2SFP+ Switch Review JL806A

In our HPE Aruba Instant On 1960 24G 2XGT 2SFP+ switch review, we check out the second switch in this line and find a fanless solution



HPE Aruba Instant On 1960 24G 2XGT 2SFP+ Switch Review JL806A

Storage:

Tom's Hardware: Silicon Power XPower XS70 SSD Review: Fast, Attractive, and Affordable

High-end gaming drive without a high-end price.



Silicon Power XPower XS70 SSD Review: Fast, Attractive, and Affordable

APH Networks: SilverStone EXB02 Review

I remember when I was doing research at the University of Calgary, I had to do a lot of simulation work with different software. For example, I might get started by using MATLAB for some wireless communication physical layer simulation on Windows. Once I have figured out the optimal network configurations such as modulation schemes, transmit power, and coding schemes, I could move on to system-level simulations using a Linux-based open-source simulator to figure out how reliable the network would be when there is a large number of users. Finally, I need to get back to Windows to log all the results into a spreadsheet to generate some charts. In other words, my research work made me change between Windows and Linux on a regular basis. Things would be much easier if I had one Windows computer and one Linux computer. However, the problem was I only had one desktop computer with sufficient performance. Yes, I knew it was possible to use a virtual machine to work efficiently between two different operating systems or dual boot. However, I was not satisfied with the relatively slower virtual machine solution or issues associated with dual booting. Therefore, my solution was to use two separate storage drives; one had Windows and one for Linux. The result was I could use both operating systems to their full performance, while the downside was I had to open my case each time I needed to swap operating systems. This problem can be solved by using today's review unit, the SilverStone EXB02, which utilizes an expansion card slot to add a removable 2.5" SAS/SATA drive bay. This product allows you to easily add or remove an SSD or HDD from your computer without needing to open the case. Is it a good product worth recommending? Let us read on and find out!

SilverStone EXB02 Review | APH Networks

Mad Shirmps: Toshiba N300 4TB NAS Hard Drive Review

The newer SKUs of the N300 4TB drives do come with 256MB of cache (such as our sample) and coupled with a better hardware revision / newer firmware version the drive can deliver considerably better performance.

[M] [M] Toshiba N300 4TB NAS Hard Drive Review