A powerful and well-equipped touchscreen PC, but is Dell's all-in-one really the future of the home desktop? Read our full review
A very likeable all-in-one – albeit limited in its usefulness beyond basic functions. Read our review of Shuttle's new all-in-one X50
The Olympus PEN E-P1 may look like a throwback to retro photography, but it’s expensive and flawed. However, it's beautiful image quality renders almost impossible to dislike.
There’s so much to like about this package that it might just be worth switching operating systems to get hold of it.
The A330 is a competent, fully featured and easy to use DSLR, but a backward step in some respects.
A stunning piece of design to rival any Apple offering, and the price is surprisingly reasonable
Well priced, with a robust chassis and touchscreen option that make it a good choice for classroom use, and any one else wanting a netbook that's a little bit different
The HP Pavilion s5180a punches above its weight and provides a welcoming entry point for a starter or low-end upgrade system.
The Touch Pro2 is the ultimate corporate smartphone in terms of features, but it’s just too big and beefy.
We like the ambition of producing a low-cost BlackBerry, but until it drops in price there’s too much competition.
Nvidia’s long-awaited 3D kit finally arrives and when it works, it’s every bit as good as we’d hoped it would be.
A hugely likeable phone that excels at web browsing and manages to just live up to its ambitious name.
Part laptop and part nettop, the Gigabyte Booktop M1022M is the first netbook we’ve seen that overcomes the ‘3 USB problem'.
A stunning piece of design matched with excellent battery life, but with an Atom inside the price is surely too high
Packed with features and closer to Adobe Premiere Elements, CyberLink PowerDirector 8 is close, but still not close enough.
Lightweight but perfect for heavy duty business, this ultraportable is sure to impress.
Well made, lots of goodies and an improved interface make this the best touch-only phone from HTC so far.
Packed with features, but the keyboard is terrible and the touch-enabled OS confusing.
Acer brings 3D to the masses with a 3D screen on a mainstream laptop
The design is impeccable, the build superb and the screen extraordinary, but the price is a huge barrier. We ponder the icon that is the Macbook Pro 17in