Latest Articles

Flickr

[Basic - Medium] There are a lot of photo sharing services on the web now. The first and still the most feature-rich is arguably Flickr and in this article we give you an overview of its features and how to use it.


Mozilla Firefox 3.0

[All Levels] Mozilla recently launched its new and improved version of Firefox, version 3, with fresh looks and  plenty of new features. We've had a chance to play around with it and have put together an article which will give you an overview of all the new Mozilla Firefox 3 features.


Windows Vista Backup

[Basic - Medium] What ever system you use to make sure you have a safe backed up copy of your files, make sure you’re doing it regularly and comprehensively. Many operating systems have a built in backup utility, including Vista. In this guide, we show you how to use it.

 
Latest News
Current News  More News    
1 2 3 4 5
Building a 300W Fan Controller from an ATX PSU
Friday, May 30, 2008

This sounds crazy but it’s true! If you want to have more than 20 high speed fans in your computer and want to control them in an effective way, you can go ahead and build your own fan controller. In this tutorial you will learn how to convert your old 300W ATX PSU into a powerful fan controller.

Why would you want to build a 330W Fan controller? Do you really need that type of power for fans? Is it even possible? Well the answer is yes! “From time to time we receive some of the craziest requests in our [M]ailbox, so goes the tale about a young fellow who wanted to use up to 20 fans inside his computer. Frowning my eyebrows I did not question him further since I know this fellow has an extreme way of living, instead I went on thinking that maybe some of the older ATX PSU's I have around might proof to be of good use. Now few months later I'm ready to share with you the [M]axtreme Fan Controller, nothing but an ordinary ATX PSU.” Keep a pen and paper ready to note down the tweaks and tricks of building high power 300W fan controller as you read the entire tutorial on Madshrimps.

    
Video Cards or GPUs
Friday, May 30, 2008

XFX 9800GTX Black Edition @ motherboards.org
ATI 8.5 Catalyst Performance @ AMD Zone
Palit GeForce 9600GSO Sonic 768MB @ Techgage
ATI HD 2900 XT @ GideonTech
EVGA e-Geforce 8800 GT KO Series @ TechwareLabs
Gigabyte Radeon HD 3850 and 3870 @ xbitlabs.com
Foxconn GeForce 9800GTX @ AMD Zone
Chaintech GeForce 9600GT OC 512MB @ TweakTown
Triple SLI- AMD or Intel @ t-break

    
Computex Explained
Thursday, May 29, 2008

Next week, John is heading over the Computex, the annual IT trade show in Taipei, Taiwan. There are just absolutely heaps of PC component manufacturers based in Taiwan and anybody who is anybody has a stand at Computex. John plans on interviewing reps on the stands like he did at CES earlier in the year. Another website who were also at CES and now at Computex have written up an article explaining what it is. If you’d like to know more about Computex before we start featuring content on it next week, head on over to Futurelooks and find out.

    
Mid-week vlog
Thursday, May 29, 2008

Normally our vlogs are on a Friday but this week John surprised me as we were about to film more of the Blu-ray series we’re working on. The camera rolled (so to speak) and while I was about to start the intro, John announced it was a vlog! Watch it here.

    
NVIDIA predicts the future...
Thursday, May 29, 2008

At the Spring 2008 Editor’s day, NVIDIA presented their forthcoming series of graphics processing units which will be released next month. According to NVIDIA, usage of GPGPU, that is the use of graphic chips by regular programs, represents the future of computing. On the Editor’s day NVIDIA explained how amazing GPGPU is and showed several examples of applications where performance increased dramatically through the use of these techniques.  The idea behind this new technology is that the video card GPU will process regular programs instead of using the CPU - and NVIDIA’s CUDA compiler will make it possible. The CUDA compiler is capable of compiling any program written in C so they can be run on any NVIDIA GPU from series 8 and above. Source – hardwaresecrets.com.
    
Storage and Memory
Thursday, May 29, 2008

Storage:
4GB USB Flash Drives Roundup @ xbitlabs.com
32GB OCZ ATV USB Flash Drive Review @ Legit Reviews
Thermaltake BlacX Hard Drive Docking Station Review @ TechwareLabs

Memory:
Aeneon XTune DDR3-1600 CL9 @ Neoseeker.com

    
Syncing a Windows PC with an Xbox 360
Wednesday, May 28, 2008

I personally don’t own an Xbox. In fact I don’t have a console of any kind. John has his heart set on getting a Sony PS3 later in the year. Maybe. We’ll see. Anyway if you do have an Xbox, did you know that you can sync it with a PC so that you can use it as a multimedia center to play video or audio files you may have stored on your PC, on your Xbox? Since most Xbox units are in people’s lounge rooms, this seems like a pretty nifty thing to be able to do. In this guide, Jason shows you how to do it whether you have a Vista PC or an XP PC.

    
Folding@home to run on NVIDIA GeForce Video Cards
Wednesday, May 28, 2008

“Folding@home is a distributed computing project -- people from throughout the world download and run software to band together to make one of the largest supercomputers in the world. Every computer takes the project closer to our goals. Folding@home uses novel computational methods coupled to distributed computing, to simulate problems millions of times more challenging than previously achieved”  - Vijay Pande and Stanford University.

Mr Pande made a presentation last week, explaining current projects such simulating viruses and conducting research into a cure for Altzeimers. He asserted that “a petaflop of computing can and does make a difference in research.”

But perhaps the most exciting part of the presentation was when a “NVIDIA GPU client [was shown] running a live demo on the next generation GeForce graphics card.

NVIDIA has 70 million graphics card on the market today that can use CUDA programming, which means that the folding project could get a huge boost in the performance if more end users with NVIDIA GPUs join the project. Source: LegitReviews.com.

(Rating-4.00)
    
Chips and Bits
Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Motherboards:
Asus' P5Q and P5Q3 Deluxe @ Tech Report
Intel P45 Preview Gigabyte DS3R + DQ6 @ TweakTown 
ASUS P5E3 Premium WIFi-AP @n Edition @ motherboards.org
Jetway's JNC62K (GeForce 8200 mini-ITX) @ bit-tech.net

Processors:
AMD Phenom X3 @ madshrimps.be
Intel Core 2 Duo E7200 - Budget Penryn @ TweakTown

Systems and Notebooks:
Acer Aspire Predator Gaming PC @ bit-tech.net

    
Peripherals and Multimedia
Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Peripherals:
ViewSonic VP950b Professional Monitor @ biosmagazine
Logitech Harmony One Universal Remote @ TweakTown

Multimedia: 
Razer/THX Mako 2.1-Channel Speaker System @ Techgage Networks Inc.
Audioengine A2 Computer Speakers @ TheTechLounge
Honeywell Airlite 700 Wireless Bluetooth Headset @  Hardware Secrets
Lite-On DX-401S Blu-ray USB2.0 ROM Drive @ TweakTown
CREATIVE (TM) X-FI XtremeGamer  FATAL1TY PRO SERIES @ TechwareLabs

    

 
Syndicate  Print  
Latest Video
Building a Blu-ray HTPC, ep 5: Software Installation: This episode explains the installation of Vista and other drivers and software. Not the most exciting episode, but necessary none the less!
 
Most recent blog entries
A New Era Awaits
Mike's Blog By Mike onWed, 23 Jul 2008 21:25:55 GMT

Technology over the past 20 years has taken amazing strides, bringing new resources to medicine, science, entertainment, social and ergonomic resources, allowing us to go boldly into what is now often referred to as the Digital Era.

Comments (0)More...

The Force Unleashed
Mike's Blog By Mike onWed, 23 Jul 2008 21:23:32 GMT

Apart from making fans like myself soil their pants, the legacy of Star Wars still lives strong even after Revenge of the Sith. Scheduled for release on September 17, 2008 for Australia on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii, PSP, Nintendo DS, seco ...

Comments (0)More...

Blogging on my new toy - the HP 2133 Mini-Note
Fiona's Ramblings By fiona on6/30/2008 10:07 AM

I am pretty happy with myself today. I am lucky enough to be sitting back on my chaise lounge at home, writing this blog on a HP 2133 Mini-Note PC. It's a miniature notebook - 8.9" screen. The keyboard is also small but it's spaced just ...

More...

Still Getting Used to Life with an LCD HDTV
Fiona's Ramblings By fiona on6/26/2008 4:29 AM
A new HDTV takes a bit of getting used to, so it turns out. Several things really stand out to me.
 
More...

Print