Reviews
-
Dino PC Matteodon review Great if gaming is a priority, and the big monitor is a plus. Image quality isn't the best, though, and it's slower than overclocked systems£550 -
Cyberlink PowerDirector 9 Ultra64 review Much faster and more refined than before, PowerDirector is now well equipped for demanding as well as casual use£80 -
Samsung Galaxy Apollo I5801 review It may have updated software, but the Apollo lacks its predecessor’s excellent AMOLED screen and it feels far cheaper. -
AOC e2440Va review If you're after a new LED screen, the e2440Va's price and thin design might appeal, but image quality isn't on par with the best.£140 -
Acer Aspire 5742G review The 5742G lives up to Acer's reputation for value, with good performance and decent features, but it lacks a few expansion ports£545 -
recommended
TopView A2281Wd+ review Some might call it old-fashioned, but this is a decent monitor at a sensible price.£107 -
Sony Vaio EA3S1E review The EA3S1E combines solid performance and excellent connectivity in a stylish package, but has disappointing battery life.£660 -
Armour Home Electronics Q2 Internet Radio review It's incredibly easy to use and sound quality's pretty good, but it's an expensive internet radio.£90 -
recommended
Aria Proteus Inspire review The budget AMD processor limits performance and it lacks a dedicated graphics card, but this is still one of the cheapest Blu-ray-equipped PCs available£512 -
Chillblast Rapier review An underpowered graphics card and average monitor detract from an otherwise very powerful PC with lots of upgrade potential.£550 -
Asus N53J review It’s not particularly portable, but the N53J decent multimedia laptop for anyone yet to invest in Blu-ray£750 -
Wired2Fire VX-5 review Performance from the heavily overclocked processor is impressive, but the integrated graphics can’t handle games.£550 -
Asus ML248H review Decent image quality and a unique design make the ML248H an attractive proposition, but it's far too expensive compared to the competition.£280