Results for low in Reviews
Articles
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Low Cost, Mid-Range or High-End? Three CD Writers at 8, 12 and 16 speed
March 30, 2001 – 1:05 PM in CeBIT
Yamaha, AOpen and Mitsumi have different products for different sectors of the market. We wanted to know whether it makes sense to purchase a high-end drive like the Yamaha CRW2100E or if a simple mainstream drive will suffice. -
Intel Brings Low-Cost 848P to Budget Market
November 3, 2003 – 12:02 PM
Intel has modified its 865 chipset for FSB800 and single channel DDR400 memory. The result is the low-cost 848P that will compete in the SiS and VIA budget chipset sector. Its benchmarks also offer some surprises. -
Dual Core Processors For Low-Power, High-Performance Desktops
April 24, 2006 – 6:07 AM
Intel's Core Duo is worth serious consideration if you care about performance, low noise and high efficiency in a PC system. We compared it to efficiency specialists Pentium M and Turion 64, but found the Athlon 64 X2 to be a potential show-stopper.
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AthlonXP Underclocking for a Low-Power Fix
October 1, 2004 – 1:01 PM
It's a lot easier than you think. A few simple tweaks can transform an AthlonXP with the right motherboard into a mobile version that throttles down to a clock speed of 300 MHz for a range of applications that do not need 1 GHz and more horsepower. We also detail why our power-consumption reducing hacks do not apply to the Pentium 4. -
Low Profile Multi-Display Graphics on the Cheap
September 29, 2006 – 6:55 AM in Business
Diamond Multimedia offers MultiView graphics cards for low-profile systems with BizView BV200 for PCI and BV300 for PCIe.
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SBM 1: Low Cost System
September 17, 2007 – 12:02 PM in Overclocking
We build the highest-performance PC that $1,000 can buy, and prepare it to fight some upcoming System Builder Marathon competitors.
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Performance Impact of Low Latency DRAM
July 29, 1998 – 1:01 PM
Predicting the system performance impact of a new type of DRAM is a tricky business. -
Building a Low-Power Home Theater PC System
October 16, 2006 – 8:48 AM in Buyer's Guides
Heat and noise are the enemies of quiet home theater enjoyment, but good component selection addresses these concerns. As we walk through our own Home Theater build we'll consider what changes might have improved the final product.
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Comparison: Low-Price Multifunction Devices
May 20, 2003 – 1:01 PM
Why buy a printer when for less than $200 you can have a photo printer, flatbed scanner and color photocopier all in one? Four models are in the running: Canon, Epson, hp and Lexmark. The results are in images and figures. -
CPU price/performance update: AMD undercuts Intel on the low end
October 6, 2006 – 3:00 PM
In the past few weeks, quite dramatic price reductions in the retails space had time to calm down: Intel's Core 2 Duo is shipping in volume and AMD adjusted its prices to react to the new market environment. Time for an update of our price/performance chart series, just before the launch of Intel's quad-core chip and AMD's 4x4 platform.
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G31 And E7200: The Real Low-Power Story
October 10, 2008 – 1:50 AM in INTEL
While Intel and VIA are battling for the low-power market, an optimized desktop motherboard and an efficient processor can already take your idle power down to almost 30 W, while still providing solid performance. We put Intel's G31 chipset to the task.
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AVIVO HD vs. Purevideo HD Part 3: Midrange and Low-end Card Performance
October 26, 2007 – 8:40 AM
Today's Radeons and GeForces can accelerate HD video, but our testing shows that not all cards in the same family are created equal.
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Big Sound, Low Price: Creative Audigy
September 27, 2001 – 1:06 PM
Creative Labs is bringing out a new range of sound cards based on a new DSP by E-Mu assisted by 24 bit converters. Linked with a new games library, the Advanced HD, the Audigy card is aimed at both game players and musicians who will benefit from the ASIO drivers. And as a bonus, Creative provides a FireWire port. Here is the low-down on a multimedia card that approaches professional standards. -
System Builder Marathon: Low-Cost System
March 24, 2008 – 12:56 PM in Build Your Own
Over the week we build and test low-, mid- and higher-cost systems at standard and overclocked rates. Then we compare them and look at price-performance. Today, it's our under $1,000 low-end build.
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