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Monday November 30, 2009 9:18 PM AEST
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Your search for "Naked" returned 6 results.

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HP Photosmart R607
by Darren Ellis

The slimline HP Photosmart R607 follows on from the R707 in that it shares many of that camera's fine features and styling, including its plastic/magnesium-alloy casing.

Dec 17, 2004
ATI RADEON 9000 PRO
by Daniel Gardiner

ATIs RADEON 9000 is somewhat deceptively named itd be easy to think of it as the next logical step up from the RADEON 8500 series...

Oct 1, 2002
Review > MP3 Players
Samsung Digimax 35 MP3
by Feann Torr

Samsungs multi-use camera comes with everything youd expect and then some. Twenty-first century style headphones, a transparent carry case, USB connector cable, tilt/swivel stand and our review camera came with a 16Mb (RCA brand) Compact Flash memory card.

Jan 1, 2001
Review > Components
Intel Pentium 4 2.8GHz
by Daniel Gardiner

The Athlon XP 2700+ represents a significant leap forward for the Athlon line – it solves a long-term problem by stepping up the default frontside bus (FSB) speed from 266MHz to 333MHz.

Jan 2, 2003
Review > High-end PC
Modtech Civic-64FX
by Dan Chiappini

It’s one of the facts of the gaming hobbyist’s life: cutting edge games require cutting edge hardware. It’s as set in stone as Moore’s Law (which is itself now 40 years old). Every 12 to 18 months you need to upgrade or get left behind. Our contenders this month make a very good case for starting with a clean slate, and none more so than this month’s winner, the Modtech Civic-64FX.

Dec 31, 2004
Review > Components
AMD ATHLON XP 2700+ vs. INTEL PENTIUM 4 2.8GHz
by Daniel Gardiner

The Athlon XP 2700+ represents a significant leap forward for the Athlon line – it solves a long-term problem by stepping up the default frontside bus (FSB) speed from 266MHz to 333MHz. This means that the Athlon XP can finally run in sync with 333MHz DDR RAM. While most currently available Athlon motherboards support 333MHz DDR, there is virtually no performance boost between this and 266MHz DDR when running an Athlon XP with a 266MHz FSB. The extra speed offered by the RAM quite simply goes to waste, because the CPU can't keep up with it.

Dec 1, 2002

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