Sunday November 29, 2009 10:28 PM AEST
PC Authority > Search > GPU

> Darren Ellis
Your search for "GPU" returned 8 results.
Refine by article type:
News (1)
|
Review (5)
|
Review Group (2)
XABRE400 GPU
by Darren Ellis
When we think of SiS graphics, we usually think of low cost, low-end cards or integrated offerings for the entry-level 2D market, with the possibility of some rudimentary 3D capabilities thrown in.
Aug 1, 2002
Viewsonic V1100
by Darren Ellis
Although the Tablet PC was launched with much hype and fanfare, many media outlets have been sceptical as to the validity of the technology. However, the experience delivered by using a Tablet PC firsthand, for any length of time cannot help but impress. I myself went from cynical observer to total convert after trialling three tablets.
Jan 1, 2003
Review Group
PCI Express graphics cards
by Dan Chiappini
We know you want to play games, so we've put 18 PCI Express graphics cards under the microscope to see who really does the job the best.
Jan 12, 2005
Review Group
Performance PCs
by Dan Chiappini
In the market for a new gaming rig for playing the latest games? PC Authority has the answer to your gaming performance woes with five of the hottest machines around.
Dec 31, 2004
ACER TRAVELMATE C111
by Darren Ellis
Acer’s tiny new Tablet PC, the TravelMate C111 marries the functionality of their previous convertible tablet with the low-power high-performance functionality of the Intel Centrino.
Nov 12, 2003
Toshiba Qosmio F10
by Darren Ellis
The Qosmio is the absolute pinnacle in multimedia notebooks. It brings everything you need for a good Windows XP Media Center Edition (MCE) system and squeezes it into a notebook form-factor. Albeit a large notebook form-factor. Yes the Qosmio is a huge and heavy notebook, but it's not nearly as heavy as it would have been if it was packed with desktop internals as many desknotes of this size usually are.
Jan 5, 2005
AMD ATHLON 64 FX-51
by Dan Chiappini
While 64-bit computing has been around for a while (for the two of you who could afford Intel's Itanium, and now Itanium II processors), the dream of 64-bittery for the humble home system has been a long time coming.
Oct 7, 2003
--%>