Dec 24, 2012
Maingear Nomad 15 laptop
In the desktop replacement market, whitebooks and barebones are popular choices for the easy customization and wide component compatibility that their hardware sets tend to offer. Popular examples are the Clevo barebones used by numerous resellers and system builders such as XMG, Eurocom, iBUYPOWER and Sager. While many Clevo products have been reviewed here, they also all have a tendency to look similar and very basic. Especially considering the high prices, users may be expecting some appreciative aesthetics to accentuate the hardware power without the gaudy and sometimes excessive spectacle of the Alienware brands.
The U.S.-based system builder and reseller Maingear attempts to hit a note in between while providing just as much power as other DTRs. Though the manufacturer continues to specialize in desktops and government solutions, their custom gaming notebooks are a relatively newer venture and are only now beginning to seriously push their mobile products.
In this review, we take a closer look at the Nomad 15, Maingear’s latest 15.6-inch incarnation built upon an MSI-based shell. More specifically, the chassis is near-identical to that of our reviewed MSI GT60/GX60 which we highly recommend reading due to the similarities. The notebook as reviewed includes almost all the bells and whistles: a Core i7-3840QM, GeForce GTX 680M with a massive 4 GB VRAM, 16 GB DDR3-1600 RAM and a pair of 128 GB Crucial m4 mSATA drives in stripe formation. The system will run users about $2599 as customized, though the system can be had for only $1549 with mainstream options. The following review takes a closer look at the aesthetics and hardware performance to see if it holds up against the current crop of high-end gaming notebooks and competing DTRs.
dell alienware m11x battery,keyboard for lenovo thinkpad t500
Oct 1, 2012
17.3 inch gaming laptop
Maingear has launched a new addition to its powerful range of gaming notebooks, in the form of the Maingear Nomad 17 Custom gaming laptop.
Users will get a quad-core chip capable of hitting 3.8GHz, up to 32GB of DDR3-1600 RAM, a wide array of HDD choices (including SSD and RAID arrays), and there’s also an SSD caching option that works automatically for faster load times and disk-intensive tasks.
The unit ships with NVIDIA’s GTX 675M GPU, USB 3.0 / 2.0 ports, eSATA, Bluetooth, Ethernet, 802.11n, HDMI and VGA outputs.
It’s also boasting a hand-painted paint job, a backlit keyboard, a 1080p display (17″ matte), a multi-touch trackpad, and a speaker system with a built-in subwoofer.
Maingear Nomad 17 Specifications:
Processor: Up to 3rd generation Intel i7-3840QM
Video Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675M or 680M
Display: 17.3″ Full HD 1920 x 1080 – (1080p) (16:9 Aspect Ratio) Anti-glare LED Backlit Matte Finish
Memory: Up to 32GB Dual Channel DDR5 – 1600Mhz
Optical Drive: Up to 2X Blu-ray reader/8x Multi Combo (BD-R, DVD+-RW, CD-RW)
Hard Drive: Up to dual 512GB Solid State Drive or dual 750GB 7200RPM SATA 2.5
Network Adapter: Integrated 802.11n b/g/n wireless
Audio: THX TruStudio Pro Integrated High-Definition Audio HD Audio with speakers by DynAudio
Media Card Reader: Built in 4-in-1 Media Card Reader
Operating System: Genuine Windows 7 Home, Professional or Ultimate 64-Bit
Battery: Removable Li-Polymer Lithium-Ion
I/O Ports: 1 HDMI out, 1 DVI-I out, 2 USB 2.0, 3 USB 3.0, 1 IEEE-1394 Fire Wire, 1 S/PDIF out, 1 RJ-45 LAN, 1 RJ-11
Dimensions: (W)16.85″ x (H)2.17″ x (D)11.34″
More laptops info: Lenovo T400 keyboard, dell vostro 1510 battery replacement
Sep 30, 2012
Gigabyte GeForce GTX 680 OC 4GB Graphic Card
Apr 24, 2012
Dell Vostro 3350 laptop and battery life
Design
The Vostro 3350 slips into a look that the Latitudes have had for the past two years. Its magnesium alloy frame is colored in Aberdeen Silver, with black trimmings in the front and back. If silver is not your cup of tea, red and bronze options are available as well for an additional $30. The hardened metal top makes it as sturdy as the Lenovo ThinkPad E420s and HP ProBook 5310m ($899 direct, 4 stars), though with some minor screen flexing. Its dimensions aren't as thin as the Dell Vostro V130 ($928 direc, 3 stars) andLenovo ThinkPad X1 ($1,399.99 direct, 3.5 stars), thanks to its built-in optical drive.
Battery Life
The Dell Vostro 3350 ($741 direct), a 13-inch small business laptop, caters to professionals who prize battery life and mobility above everything else. If they need the extra horsepower, this laptop can accommodate those needs as well. The power of its second-generation Core i5 processor, over nine hours of dell vostro 3350 battery life, and budget-conscious price earn the Vostro 3350 an Editors' Choice in the small business category. That's nearly triple the the Dell V130 battery life(3:02) and Lenovo X1 battery life (3:20) and double that of every other laptop in this group. It simply had no equals in this department.
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Apr 8, 2012
Lenovo Ultraportable Business laptop - Thinkpad X220

Apr 6, 2012
Samsung Business Notebook NP200A5B-A04ZA Durable Value
Now it’s easy to look good on the go – for longer. A modern, premium-style design features a slim bezel and a choice of vivid colours. But it also has up to 7.0 hours of battery life – and can wake up within a few seconds. So when you’re hanging out you won’t be left hanging around.
Vividly stylish



The key to easier use
Up to 7.0 hours battery life

Ports Information

Mar 21, 2012
Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich

Samsung Nexus phones running Android have always been powerful and responsive in our test labs, but the upgrade to Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) has made this latest handset the fastest Android model we’ve seen so far. This OS version takes the nuts and bolts from Android Gingerbread 2.3 and adds the dynamic interface and multimedia optimisation of Honeycomb 3.0. This combination makes it more than a match for Apple’s iOS.
Killer features
Aside from a slinky robot-inspired font and well-tweaked user interface, what really sells ICS to the fans is its customisable versatility. Android’s flexibility comes from the fact that it’s an open source Linux OS that amateur programmers love. That might scare some first time users, but it means the Nexus has an interface and widgets that you can tinker with as much as you like.
Android 4.0 can be used without any hardware controls at all, though the Nexus does have a volume rocker and an on/off button. There’s also support for facial recognition, which works a treat. The face unlock feature is the most immediately impressive – the front camera recognises your mug and unlocks the handset once it’s sure it’s you. It’s fast, slick and works from a variety of angles, and is immediately usable. Google warns you that it’s less secure than a PIN, and we were able to unlock the phone using a picture, but try as we might, lookalikes couldn’t gain access to the handset.
Social networking isn’t as tightly integrated as it is with Mango or iOS 5. Accessing out-of-the-box support is slick though and the interface looks great but only offers Google+. The service isn’t quite the success Google had expected, or the only social networking app we would expect pre-installed on a smartphone. Fortunately, as a contingency plan, Google has sensibly opened the Nexus to third parties to offer Facebook and Twitter apps.
App selection
Given the Wild West approach of Google’s open source mobile OS, the Android Marketplace is much more of a mixed bag than Apple’s tightly controlled App Store. The variety of apps, both free and paid for, is bewildering, but the quality also varies wildly. ICS doesn’t add much in terms of Android 4.0-specific apps, but Samsung does have a few for the Nexus. There’s nothing to match Apple’s mighty App Store though.
You also don’t always get to experience apps as their developers intended, either. That’s because Google opened Android to both tablet and smartphone vendors. The OS is now installed on so many different devices that sometimes some apps don’t work as well as they should on all of them.
Media handling
There’s no Zune store or iTunes equivalent on the Nexus, which meant we had to rely on third-party software downloaded from the Android Market. However, the phone’s media playback credentials offer some of the best audio and visual fidelity money can buy.
ICS also gets kudos points for offering true multitasking. We flipped between resource-intensive media apps without breaking a sweat on the Nexus, which is something Windows Phone 7.5 can do but the latest version of Apple’s iOS can’t.
But the real trump card that Google has over Apple and Microsoft is Flash playback. Flash is the technology behind a lot of rich online content, but iOS and Windows Phone don’t support it – so if you like watching video on BBC sites, you’re stuck. Accessing the web using the Chrome-based browser on Android 4.0 is also very fast, with no staccato or lag over a decent connection speed.
Verdict
One of the best features of Android ICS is the ability to customise home screens and resize your widgets. With a potential for apps blocking up your screen, Google
has decided to give us even more control of widgets and resizing is simple: press and hold on a widget and an outline comes up that can be altered to suit your needs – we even made widgets scrollable. But the downside is it only works for official Google apps.
With the enhanced widgets, tablet-optimised environments and tweaked animations, this makes the user interface the best Android offering on the market right now. It’s still not quite the excellent user experience iOS 5 offers but it’s as close as you can get on any other mobile device.