As one of Australia's few locally designed netbooks, the Kogan Agora lives up to some lofty netbook ideals, but it’s sadly ho-hum in too many aspects to be seen as a real netbook contender.
The HP Pavilion s5180a punches above its weight and provides a welcoming entry point for a starter or low-end upgrade system.
A simple package whose two detection engines ensure great malware detection, but it fails to inspire in other areas.
It’s missing a couple of key features, but nevertheless, Vegas Pro is highly sophisticated and quick to use for serious video editors.
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
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
Stunning design goes hand in hand with fine usability, but the non-replaceable battery and high price count against the Eee PC 1008HA Seashell
Better HD image quality than you’d expect for such a small camcorder, but the price is still a little high.
It's very, very thin, and very light. MSI’s X340 somehow manages to be sleek, sexy and undesirable all at the same time.
Iomega’s latest shows promise, but it’s outclassed by others
A step behind ATI’s HD 4870 on price and performance.
Decent power, but bigger, dearer and noisier than the HD 4850.
Still holding its own at this price, but note the HD 4830.
A capable card – decent performance without a high price.
A convenient all-in-one media package, but many of the applications can be had for nothing elsewhere
A cheap card, with the bonus of reasonable gaming ability.
Not the perfect value card it once was, but still worth a look.
Powerful and flexible, but also a little complicated for small business.
A couple of nifty gimmicks and an extended warranty help give this netbook the boost that its ergonomics don’t.
An impressive touchscreen all-in-one PC for an equally impressive price, but the single-core Atom holds it back