Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 Review: Solid Performance, Short Battery Life
The Predator Helios Neo 16 could be a real contender if it weren’t for its disappointing battery life.
The Predator Helios Neo 16 could be a real contender if it weren’t for its disappointing battery life.
A fully enclosed 55 watt CO2 laser with serious power and speed.
Dell’s XPS 13 Plus pulls out the stops when it comes to style and screen quality, but short battery life and minimal ports hamper its practicality.
The SteelSeries Arena 3 speakers do great when it comes to pure volume, but they’re pretty pricey for a 2.0 system.
Montech’s Metal DT24 Premium features some subtle ARGB, and performs especially well with AMD’s Ryzen 7 7700X.
The Vulcan II is a beautiful full-size wired keyboard with smooth mechanical linear switches and gorgeous per-key RGB lighting.
The WD Red Plus is a reduced version of the Red Pro, both designed for network attached storage (NAS). The Red Plus is cheaper and quieter but also slower with a shorter warranty.
Can the Zenith RGB DDR5-5600 C40 prove its worth in a market filled with high-speed memory kits?
The 15-inch MacBook Air feels just like the 13-inch MacBook Air, but bigger, adding one of the most popular size laptops to its lineup.
Cooler Master’s 360L Core raises the bar for value, delivering a top-tier 360mm AIO at only $119 USD.
42-inch OLED display with 4K resolution, 138 Hz, Adaptive-Sync, wide-gamut color and HDR
The HP Omen 16 doesn't stand out much, but it's a good performer for the price and offers plenty of ports and upgrade options.
G.Skill has rolled out its DDR5-7200 48GB non-binary memory kit, but does it provide the performance that consumers need?
Arduino’s latest two boards swap the trusty Atmel microcontroller for Arm power and one of its flagship boards now features an ESP32 co-processor.
DeepCool’s Assassin IV features a unique form factor reminiscent of a Borg Cube, and the cooling capacity to assimilate the heat of even the most demanding workloads.
An affordable, well-equipped and good-looking Z790 option around $230.
More capacity, but not more performance.
Philips’ 221V8LN 22-inch gaming monitor delivers superlative value with a high-contrast VA panel, 75 Hz, FreeSync, and wide gamut color for just $70.
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