The good Matte screen eliminates annoying reflections Long battery life The bad Cramped keyboard Relatively small hard drive Samsung, buoyed by the success of its first wave of netbooks, has wasted no time in releasing a second-generation device. The N150, rather excitingly, ditches the stalwart Intel Atom N270 CPU for a newer, faster, more efficient processor known as the Atom N450.

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Samsung N150
The good Thin and unique, all-white design Virtually no backlight bleed through Comprehensive on-screen display Built-in headphone jack The bad Shallow viewing angle Lacks a DVI connection Doesn't include an HDMI to DVI cord or HDMI cord Design and features The 23-inch BenQ V2400 Eco has a completely white chassis, including a white power cord and a white VGA cord. The bezel is 20.32mm wide all around, while the screen itself is only 19mm thick

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BenQ V2400 Eco
The good Good productivity and graphics performance Slot loading drive Good keyboard The bad Ordinary battery life Design Samsung's not a brand that you'd naturally associate with notebooks, and its efforts to date have been a bit mixed. The Q320 is a basic enough looking notebook of moderate size (326.0x228.5x33.2mm) and weight (2.2kg), making it semi portable with a bag.

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Samsung Q320
The good Decent keyboard Low asking price Simple style The bad Ordinary style Heavy Poor battery life Design The rush for the latest, greatest, thinnest, most powerful laptop — sometimes with optional attachment for opening horses' hooves — often leaves more ordinary fare by the wayside. In pretty much every respect, Samsung's R519 is that kind of laptop. The latter ordinary fare laptop, that is, before you go getting all excited

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Samsung R519
preview HP's Proliant DL785 is a behemoth server. Coming with two handles on either side, this 7RU machine definitely needs two people to move anywhere

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HP Proliant DL785 G6
The good Amazingly powerful for a 15-inch laptop Highly configurable Adds 16:9 display The bad Configuration options can get expensive Far from portable Keeping the same look and feel as the recent 17-inch M17x version , the Alienware M15x is an imposing black slab of computing power that's thicker and heavier than most 17-inch laptops. We love having high-end options such as Intel's uber-powerful Core i7-920XM CPU, and it's a plus that Alienware has finally gotten on-board the 16:9 display bandwagon; but if you want serious gamer options such as dual video cards or two hard drives, you'll have to trade up the bigger 17-inch model. While it starts at a deceptively promising AU$2399, our review unit clocked in at AU$4113.90, which is a steep premium for a system with a single GPU and hard drive (not even a solid state one, at that)

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Alienware M15x
The good Fast wireless 5GHz throughput Fantastic NAS performance Storage included Easy to use True dual-band Guest networking Works with Apple Time Machine software Good-looking design The bad Expensive; limited networking and network storage features No bundled backup software for Windows Hard drive is not user-serviceable No media or iTunes server Picky support for USB printers Only three Ethernet ports No web interface No remote access for Windows users Set-up, administration and storage sharing require OS X 10.4 or later Runs hot Editors' note: Apple recently released a new revision of Time Capsule, presumably to address speed and performance concerns with the older model. We tested the new model and retested the old one for this review.

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Apple Time Capsule (2TB, Late 2009)