HP iPAQ h1940 @ TrustedReviews
"The iPAQ range of Pocket PC based PDAs have always been a step ahead of the competition. The first colour iPAQ was such a desirable unit that Compaq found itself unable to produce enough to meet the demand. The sleek brushed aluminium design has carried through the entire life of the range and it looks as good today as it did back then."
Read more at TrustedReviews.
Samsung 173T @ Bjorn3D
"It is time to look at another LCD from Samsung. Over the past couple of months we have looked at the 192T and the 172MP. Now we have the 173T. All of these monitors have offered something special about them. 192T was the nice big 19” screen and the 172MP brought us a true multimedia with TV tuner and many inputs. What the 173T brings us is a 17” monitor that can be rotated for working on web pages or desktop publishing."
Read more at Bjorn3D.
Kingston HyperX PC3500 reviewed @ MetkuMods
"...And then there is that problem that overclocking these modules needvery high voltages, which void your warranty and can be unhealthy formemory modules. But if you are going to be extreme, you need extremememory and Kingston HyperX PC3500´s filled with Winbond BH-5 chips arejust that."

Read more at MetkuMods.
HWZ review: MSI KT6 Delta-FIS2R (VIA KT600)
"Overall, if you are looking for a feature packed Socket-A motherboard but at a more affordable price point than the nForce2 Ultra 400 and aren’t really picky on performance, the MSI KT6 Delta-FIS2R is worth considering. At about US$128 (or S$230), the MSI KT6 Delta-FIS2R sounds a tad pricey. As mentioned much earlier, it costs just as much as MSI’s top nForce2 Ultra 400 offering, but it offers more features — which really justify its extra cost."
Read more at HardwareZone.
EPoX 8HDA3+ Socket 754 Motherboard @ EOC
"The 8HDA3+ is based on the K8T800 chipset, supporting Athlon Socket 754 processors. The new chipset is loaded with features and we will see how well EPoX has incorporated this chipset into their design and of course put the board to the test against our Intel 3.2C on 875/865 motherboards."
Read more at EOC.
Designtechnica reviews the HP DeskJet 9670 Wide-Format Printer
"The versatile 9670 is great at what it does but comes with a high pricetag. We had a tough time deciding exactly what environment (business,home office or personal) this printer would fit into. HP states that the9670 is great for businesses, creative professionals and photographyenthusiasts. In a business environment where only black text documentsare used this printer would be overkill. The business that utilizeslarge spreadsheets and requires color printing will find the HP 9670fits the bill perfectly."
Read more at Designtechnica.
DinoxPC Review: Three Athlon XP 2600+ Analysis
"Actually we have three different models of Athlon XP 2600+ CPUs. Two based on core Thorougbred and one on core Barton with 512KB L2 cache. The differences between the three models are on the core frequency, the FSB frequency and the size of L2 cache.
In this article we would show how the three CPUs performs on differenttests, like graphic tests, office automation, video encoding and so on."
Read more at DinoxPC.
OCZ DDR PC-4200 Dual Channel @ Madshrimps
"This article will not only be a review, it will discuss the discrepanciesfound from the label on your DDR, to the chipset claims of bandwidth. AsOverclocker´s (Enthusiast´s), we can be an overly demanding and ficklebunch. We are insatiable when it comes to hardware performance, andwhether it be DDR, Graphic´s, or CPU´s, we plug them in and immediatelybegin seeking the performance ceiling. Yet when we overclock our memory,we overclock the FSB, ergo the Processor. While we can use memorydividers, any experienced Enthusiast knows, this is simply slowing thesystem, and even with the best latencies, the divider defeats thatpurpose. This is especially true so long as were discussing theCanterwood/Springdale chipsets, for which OCZ Technology PC4200 wasgenerally designed. At present the i875 MCH is the best "peak bandwidth"chipset available on the market."
Read more at Madshrimps.
Intel Desktop Control Center @ DarkVision Hardware
"NVIDIA released their System Utility yesterday, this leaded to me doing some research about Intel his Desktop Control Center program. The features of Intel Desktop Control Center are very interesting. All overclocking and tuning options are configurable from a Windows environment, without rebooting."
Read more at DarkVision Hardware.