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ViewSonic VS-VE150
by Staff Writers
On the outside, there is little to distinguish the ViewSonic VS-VE150 from many of the other TFT screens on test this month, but it is in its image quality that it ultimately stands out.
Apr 3, 2000
Feature
Naked DSL Buyer's Guide
by Daniel Long
The best plans, the hidden costs, and is it really the best broadband deal on the market?
Mar 14, 2008
Feature
XP vs. VISTA
by Barry Collins
Still not sure whether it's worth upgrading to Vista? We put XP and Vista through the ultimate face-off.
Mar 26, 2008
Feature
Feature: Man vs Machine Part 1
by Staff Writers
Davey Winder explores the moves that brought artificial intelligence out of the labs and into the black and white world of popular science.
Jun 12, 2003
Review Group
AMD Vs Intel: 51-CPU megatest
by Darien Graham-Smith
There may be two main CPU manufacturers, but picking the right processor is anything but simple. We put 51 CPUs through their paces
Jul 29, 2008
News
Google vs Microsoft: new tricks unveiled
by Guy Dixon
Google announces plans to turn on an offline mode for its free Internet word processor - is it now safe to switch to Google "software"?.
Apr 2, 2008
Feature
Freelancers vs Telecommuters
by Staff Writers
In general, people who work from home using computers and the Web fall into two categories. Firstly, there's the self-employed freelancers who have set up their own companies and then sell their servi
Jan 1, 1900
Head to head: QuickBooks vs MYOB
by David Hellaby
It might seem unfair comparing MYOB’s best selling single user product with Quicken’s multi-user small business accounting package, but the key difference between the two is number of licences and not the functionality.
Jun 20, 2005
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