Ty Pendlebury
Recent articles for Ty Pendlebury
Shuttle XPC ST20G5
by Ty Pendlebury
The Shuttle XPC is an icon of SFF design, and there are as many iterations as there are chipsets.
Jul 5, 2005
Polycom PVX 6.0.2
by Ty Pendlebury
PVX is designed as an office application but could as easily appeal to people wanting to make personal video calls.
Jun 20, 2005
PCMARKET SDS-1
by Ty Pendlebury
The $1000 PC was once regarded as the Holy Grail of computing, but now almost every manufacturer has one.
Jun 10, 2005
Altech PC Gameforce Soldier
by Ty Pendlebury
Producing a PC for under a thousand dollars will inevitably lead to compromises – do you go for a better screen or more processing power?
Jun 10, 2005
ACER Aspire SA20
by Ty Pendlebury
The Acer Aspire SA20 is a machine built on a budget and it performs accordingly.
Jun 9, 2005
ViewSonic VX924
by Ty Pendlebury
Pixel response times on an LCD – or the time it takes for a pixel to change from one colour to another – keep on dropping, and now we present you with the fastest unit to hit the market yet: the ViewSonic VX924 which is capable of refreshing at 4ms.
Jun 7, 2005
Feature
Introducing VoIP
by Darren Ellis
We've traversed the acronym laden landscape of VoIP for you, and present you with the PC Authority guide to VoIP: what it is, what kinds of services you can find, what savings you can expect to make and how it is that you can go about setting up VoIP for yourself at home.
May 17, 2005
Polyview V293
by Ty Pendlebury
LCDs are finally hitting the sweet spot for price and quality, which means we can all safely cast aside our CRTs.
May 4, 2005
Acer Aspire 1691WLMI
by Ty Pendlebury
The Aspire is a very good unit with several features which enhance its usability. It will suit on-the-go entertainment and productivity, at a price that won't burn your wallet.
May 4, 2005
Canon Pixma MP780
by Ty Pendlebury
It doesn't seem likely that one device could be all things to all people, but the Canon PIXMA MP780 is the closest thing we've seen yet. It has a feature set that would leave few wanting, and is capable of professional results. Not only that, but this is by far the quickest inkjet in this roundup.
Apr 7, 2005
Review
Samsung SCX-4100
by Ty Pendlebury
It wasn't too long ago that mono-lasers by themselves cost over $500, but now that colour lasers have dropped in price, mono-lasers, too, have shuffled down a peg. Samsung has delivered a laser printer with a decent scanner for a very low price. It's a SOHO device, but without some of the features associated with that, such as faxing and document feeders.
Apr 7, 2005
Review Group
Multifunction Printer Roundup
by Darren Ellis
You don't have to settle for printer that just prints. PC Authority tests six of the latest all-in-one devices.
Apr 7, 2005
Lexmark X7170
by Ty Pendlebury
A Lexmark multi-function device, the P6250, won our last photo printer roundup, so the expectations were high for its big brother, the X7170. Unlike our Labs Winner, this machine is definitely targeted at the business market. For an extra $100 premium, the machine adds office-oriented functions such as faxing, a copy feeder and a better scanner. It's also noticeably larger than its brethren.
Apr 7, 2005
HP PhotoSmart 2710
by Ty Pendlebury
Digital photography is gaining in popularity, and the features offered by the HP PhotoSmart 2710 are designed to cater to this: PictBridge, a large colour screen and on-printer photo editing. The HP is the most expensive machine here, but isn't geared to one particular market or another.
Apr 7, 2005
Epson Stylus Photo RX630
by Ty Pendlebury
Epson has gone all-out on their digital photo flagship -- it has eliminated all office-centric features to deliver an enthusiast's juggernaut with film scanning, a six colour ink-tank, and plenty of memory card slots.
Apr 7, 2005
Brother MFC-620CN
by Ty Pendlebury
With a performance reflecting its relatively lower price, the Brother didn't score as well in most printing tests. The photo print in particular took over four times longer than many of the other printers, and its quality was inferior in comparison. Text quality was also poor, particularly on the smaller 6pt font where visible banding occurred.
Apr 7, 2005
AceCAD DigiMemo A501
by Ty Pendlebury
Taking the concept of the Tablet PC to the budget end of the market is the AceCAD DigiMemo A501. It uses an electronic pen with an ordinary nib and a magnetic backing plate to replicate notes you write on ordinary paper.It will take an A5 pad which slots inside and can be up to 120 sheets thick.
Apr 6, 2005
Shuttle SB95P
by Ty Pendlebury
Shuttle's SB95P is a small form factor (SFF) aimed at the enthusiast/gamer market, and it takes advantage of the i925 iteration of PCI-E. Though Shuttle are known for their XPC’s striking looks, in this case the colour scheme is nothing to write home about: is gun-metal anyone's favourite colour?
Mar 2, 2005
Kloss KL-I915B
by Ty Pendlebury
This is one nice looking white plastic and aluminium barebones system, with smooth lines and compact minimalism. Being a SFF PC makes ventilation vital, and the Kloss is built from the new BTX standard, which was designed with thermal effectiveness in mind.
Mar 2, 2005
Feature
PC troubleshooting guide
by David Kidd
Is your PC the stable, error-free platform you need? We didn't think so. Leigh Dyer, David Kidd and Ty Pendlebury present the essential guide to fixing your PC.
Mar 2, 2005
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