Buy Apple iPod touch 8GB - White - 4th Generation Cheap

Tuesday 19 June 2012 | 0 comments

Way, way exceeded my expectations
I have been bowled over by this little device.

I bought it thinking that it would be a good replacement iPod for my ancient model, with a bit of mobile browsing thrown in - very useful as I didn't want to be chained to my laptop.

But the iPod Touch turned out to be so, so much more than this. It takes a generational leap forward in gadgetry,...

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Save your money for something else that lasts!
*Update 15/05/12 It's not been long over a year and a half and my iPod has given up the ghost! One day it was fine and the next I get a battery graphic with a thin red bar indicating it's too low on power and needs charging. But it was in one of my speaker docks on charge when this happened which was odd. So I used the apple sync lead and tried charging it via my pc's...

Review Generic 4G Touch Luxury Black Genuine Leather Case Cover for New Apple iPod Touch 4th Generation - 8GB 32GB 64GB

Monday 18 June 2012 | 0 comments

Exactly what I wanted (got there at last!)
I previously had a 'leather' case for my 4th generation iPod Touch, however, it was of a different design to this one, whereby the Touch was held in place by a plastic inner case. Once in place, the product looked great and the black plastic holder was barely visible. The problem was the quality of the plastic that held the Touch. It was a hard, brittle material and the...
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OK case
it is a ok case but after only 4 months the sides are falling off and the magnites are coming out. However the stand is a good quality one and is very useful if you want to watch a movie or music vidi.......

Review SanDisk Sansa Clip+ 8GB MP3 Player with Radio and Expandable MicroSD/SDHC Slot - Black

Sunday 17 June 2012 | 0 comments

 
Awesome little player! Well worth the money!
Well, I've just started going to the gym, and I didn't want to take my huge iPod video with me and have to carry it around in my track bottom pocket or in my shorts. So i figured I would go and get an iPod shuffle. Well first of all the new iPod shuffle has bad reviews left right and centre, plus you cant change the headphones, so then I thought I'd get one of the older...
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Good but much too quiet
A good, easy-to-use MP3 player that works straight from the box. Quick drag-and-drop file upload, no need for additional software, quite cheap. BUT after using it for a couple of months I find two significant problems. Firstly it is too quiet. Even at max volume you can't hear the output in a moderately noisy environment like a city street or an underground train -...

Review Acer Aspire 5755G 15.6 inch Laptop (Intel Core i7-2630QM Processor, 8 GB RAM, 750 GB HDD, NVIDIA GeForce GT 540M, Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit)

Saturday 16 June 2012 | 0 comments

Great for the price
I have the i7 6GB RAM variant.

The good:
- Build quality isn't bad. Acer don't have a fantastic reputation in this regard, but although it's fully made of plastic (as opposed to the Al/Mg chassis of some, more expensive competitors) it doesn't feel cheap or flimsy. The backing is a kind of matte, grooved finish that, while not turning any heads, is...

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space bar doesn't work
you are only as strong as your weakest link. The space bar doesn't work unless you hit it in the top half of the space bar key. that means it takes twice as long as to do your typing as you constantly have to go back and put the spaces in. doesnt matter how good the rest of the laptop is it just so annoying. Its a black mark for Acer ... if they can get something so...

Review Lenovo G770 17.3 inch Laptop - Black (Intel Core i7 2620M 2.7GHz, 8GB RAM, 750GB HDD, Blu-ray combo, LAN, WLAN, BT, Webcam, Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit)

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great laptop
I bought this Lenovo G770 laptop (Intel Core i5 2450M 2.5GHz, 8GB RAM, 500GB HDD) for my uni work. My older HP 17' laptop has become very noisy and it'll go for someone as a gift after its fan will be replaced. But going back to the topic... the lenovo laptop is just great; before I bought it I had watched its review on youtube ([...]) and I was a bit worried about the...

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Do not buy
I did a lot of research into laptops before I purchased the G770. Unfortunately not enough. To cut a long story short. I was trying to play a Blu-Ray from my laptop to my TV and HDMI output was very glitchy. Tried to update graphics drivers and this is where it all went wrong. Switchable graphics and AMD do not get on. You cannot update AMD drivers and they are over a...

Review Apple MacBook Pro 15 inch Laptop (Quad-Core i7 2.2GHz, RAM 4GB, HDD 500GB Graphics, Radeon HD 6750M SD)

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READ FULL REVIEW>>>

This laptop is by far the best thing I've ever owned! I understand why people get annoyed because of the price in comparison with other top brand names. A few years ago I was a complete Mac hater! I never wanted anything to do with Apple because i too thought it was a money machine that drained the customers of all their cash to keep up with the latest gadgets. Last year though, i made the plunge! I'm a musician and gamer, and i wanted something that would really benefit me in these areas (more so for the music though). Since buying this machine, I haven't looked back. I can't believe how fast and smooth this laptop is. Apple really have made something that works so well in the users hands. At first it takes a LOT of getting used to, especially coming from Windows, you'll find that sometimes you get frustrated, but surely that will only last for a limited time, because the more you get used to the layout of Mac OS X, the easier it gets (obviously). I love the little details on it too, for instance, you don't have to clog your desktop up with a million and one folders, but it has this nifty little platform at the bottom where you can place all your preferred applications and what not (I understand you can also do this on Windows.) The graphics processor is also fantastic! It has incredible detail and it's also very powerful. They keyboard layout is easy and quick, when it comes to turning volume up, down, fast forwarding etc. It's so great how user friendly this thing is!..................

READ FULL REVIEW>>>

Review FIFA 13

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Special Offers and Product Promotions

Platform: Xbox 360
  • Pre-order Price Guarantee: order now and if the Amazon.co.uk price decreases between the time you place your order and the release date, you'll be charged the lowest price. Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
  • Check out our Console Bundles Store to see how much you save when you buy a console and games together.

Game Information

  • Platform:   Xbox 360
  • PEGI Rating: Ages 3 and Over
  • Media: Video Game

FULL REVIEW >>>>

Review Call of Duty: Black Ops II (with Amazon-exclusive Black Ops II Wallpaper pre-order bonus)

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Special Offers and Product Promotions

Platform: Xbox 360
  • Pre-order Price Guarantee: order now and if the Amazon.co.uk price decreases between the time you place your order and the release date, you'll be charged the lowest price. Here's how (terms and conditions apply)
  • Check out our Console Bundles Store to see how much you save when you buy a console and games together.

Game Information

  • Platform:   Xbox 360
  • PEGI Rating: Ages 18 and Over
  • Media: Video Game

Frequently Bought Together

Call of Duty: Black Ops II (Xbox 360) + Halo 4 (Xbox 360) + Assassin's Creed 3 (Xbox 360)
Price For All Three: £120.72

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Review Apple iPod nano 8GB - Graphite - 6th Generation

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 Technical Details

  • Tap and swipe through your music library with the Multi-Touch display
  • Walk, run or dance with your nano using the built-in clip
  • Your own personal DJ - let Genius find the tracks you love
  • Listen, pause and rewind live FM radio
  • Ready for a random song? Simply shake to shuffle your tunes
  See more technical details

Review Apple iPod nano 8GB - Graphite - 6th Generation

| 0 comments

Best Ipod Yet
Most of the Mp3 players I have owned have been of the Apple brand, which have been- The ipod mini, 2nd Gen Nano and 3rd Gen Apple. With my 3rd gen ipod reaching the end of its lifespan and my cd collection out growing my Ipods capacity I was looking to buy a new Ipod.

Now I'm not stupid enough to waste my money on the Ipod classic or an Ipod touch (might as...
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Tiny but with poor sound quality
I bought this because I thought the size would be great for carrying around, the trouble is the screen is probably a bit too small for easy touch control, but overall the device is well designed with a logical menu structure.

Now to the important bit and were it all starts to go wrong, try hooking this upto a decent pair of headphones and the sound quality...

Review Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170

Sunday 10 June 2012 | 0 comments



CNET Editors' Rating

3.0 stars Good
Review Date:

Average User Rating

0.0 stars No reviews. Write a review
The good: The Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170 is a midprice big-screen gaming laptop that comes from one of our favorite high-end laptop lines. It includes a powerful GPU for gaming.
The bad: The plastic design looks and feels dated and a bit cheap. Serious gamer and multimedia types would likely spend a bit more for a 1080p screen and Core i7 CPU.
The bottom line: With the recent emphasis on better materials and design across all laptop segments, the gaudy, plastic Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170 delivers decent performance, but not a look to match.
Just in case you're getting tired of all the attention being paid at the moment to ultraslim, ultralight laptops, it's time to take a look at the other end of the spectrum. The Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170 is about as far from an ultrabook as one can get, with a 17.3-inch display, giant 7.5-pound body, and dedicated multimedia controls.
It's also easily the most garish-looking laptop spotted so far in 2012. Not that this should be surprising news -- the Qosmio X775-Q7170 looks identical to the even more expensive Qosmio X775-3DV78 model we reviewed last year. If there's ever been a laptop in need of a visual upgrade, this is it, unless you're into dorm room chic.
For $1,049, you get a decent set of specs, highlighted by a dedicated Nvidia GeForce GTX 560M GPU, along with an Intel Core i5 CPU, 6GB of RAM, and a 640GB 7,200rpm hard drive. An Intel Core i7 CPU wouldn't be out of the question, and serious gamers will probably want to trade up to something with a 1,920x1,080-pixel display, rather than the 1,600x900-pixel one here (the same goes for HD video viewers).
As a reasonably priced desktop replacement, the X775 has things pretty set on the inside, but there's a lot to overlook on the outside -- which is a shame, as the world needs more decent, entry-level big-screen multimedia laptops.

Price as reviewed $1,049
Processor 1.6GHz Intel Core i5-2450M
Memory 6GB, 1,333MHz DDR3
Hard drive 640GB 7,200rpm
Chipset Intel HM65
Graphics Nvidia GeForce GTX 560M / Intel HD 3000
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
Dimensions (WD) 16.3x10.8 inches
Height 1.1 - 1.4 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 17.3 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 7.5 pounds / 9.7 pounds
Category Desktop replacement
The Qosmio line of laptops from Toshiba has always been about big, powerful desktop replacements. But, year-to-year, or sometimes model-to-model, the various Qosmio laptops often look quite different from each other. This model is a direct continuation of last year's Qosmio look, with textured horizontal lines carved into it and a red-to-silvery-gray lid and interior.
It's clearly meant to be more of a "gamer" look, with chrome plastic speaker grilles above the keyboard, which we previously said looked like pimp-my-ride rims on last year's model (a reference nearly as dated as this design). Red LED lights on the touch pad and the strip of media control buttons add to the Alienware-lite effect. The entire thing looks and feels like overly glossy plastic, and is a sharp break from the current trends in laptop aesthetics toward better materials, one-piece construction, and sophisticated, crossover-friendly designs. As we pointed out about the last X775 laptop we reviewed, this glossy plastic veneer may turn off people looking for higher-quality materials and construction.
The raised island-style keys are similar to what we've seen on other Toshiba laptops, with large Shift, Ctrl, and other important keys, and separate Page Up, Page Down, and other navigation keys. In my hands-on experience, this specific Toshiba keyboard design works better in bigger laptops than smaller ones (such as the Portege Z835 ultrabook). There's room for a full number pad on the right-hand side, which is helpful for some types of strategy gaming.
The medium-sized touch pad leaves plenty of dead wrist-rest space, but is responsive enough, with a pleasant matte finish that doesn't have too much finger drag. A red LED strip along the pad's top edge turns itself off once you hit a small button above it, which also deactivates the pad itself for those times when you're using a mouse.
Previous X775 laptops we've reviewed have had full 1,920x1,080-pixel screens, but this more midprice version has a 1,600x900-pixel display. That's what we'd expect to see in a $1,000-plus 13- or 14-inch laptop. On a 17-inch screen, it just doesn't look right, especially as this isn't inexpensive enough to really be a budget laptop. Screen quality is, as usual for Qosmio laptops, excellent, and the audio from the Harman Kardon speakers (yes, the ones under the ugly chrome-finish plastic grilles) is also impressive.


Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170 Average for category [desktop replacement]
Video VGA plus HDMI VGA plus HDMI or DisplayPort
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks. Stereo speakers with subwoofer, headphone/microphone jacks.
Data 3 USB 2.0, 1 USB 3.0, SD card reader 2 USB 2.0, 2 USB 3.0, SD card reader, eSATA
Networking Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical drive DVD burner DVD burner, optional Blu-ray player
One of the things I like about reviewing desktop replacement laptops is the chance to luxuriate in a generous selection of ports and connections. Too many smaller laptops have turned toward minimalism, cutting out video and data connections in an effort to slim down.
The Qosmio X775 does OK in this category, but doesn't go overboard. There are four USB ports, including one USB 3.0 (which includes sleep-and-charge, allowing accessories to charge even when the laptop is off), but no eSATA. HDMI, VGA, and an Ethernet jack are all things we'd expect to see on just about any laptop, but they're starting to vanish on some of the slimmest ultrabooks, so don't take them for granted.
For a machine that is at least partially targeted at gamers, one might be a little concerned that this model only has a dual-core Intel Core i5 CPU, not one of the more powerful quad-core Core i7 processors found in many high-end gaming systems. For most tasks, even games, however, the hardware included here is perfectly fine, especially as it's backed up by a high-end Nvidia GeForce GTX 560M GPU, clearly the highlight of this laptop.
The GPU provides the muscle needed to play most PC games at decent detail levels with good frame rates, especially as the resolution is capped at 1,600x900 pixels (which itself is not ideal for serious gaming). In the very challenging Metro 2033 at 1,600x900 pixels, the system ran at 15.7 frames per second (which is actually pretty decent), or 23.7 frames per second at 1,366x768 pixels. An anecdotal test of Skyrim found that the game ran very smoothly at 1,600x900 pixels, with graphics options set to "ultra." The X775 will give you a good-to-very-good gaming experience, if you don't mind the lower screen resolution.

Annual power consumption cost
Toshiba Qosmio X775-Q7170
$9.01 
Razer Blade
$17.22 

Review HP Envy 15

Saturday 9 June 2012 | 0 comments




CNET Editors' Rating

4.0 stars Excellent
Review Date:

Average User Rating

4.0 stars 8 user reviews
The good: The updated HP Envy 15 has premium design and performance for a decent price, plus swanky extras such as a backlit keyboard and physical volume control wheel.
The bad: Despite the big touch pad, multitouch gestures are still finicky, and the new look is so MacBook-like, it's like HP isn't even trying to pretend otherwise.
The bottom line: HP's Envy line has always been a reliable high-end PC laptop line, and this new redesign adds some useful features, such as a volume wheel, while keeping the upscale look and feel.

One of the few consistent high-end Windows laptop lines, HP's Envy series has always impressed with its sharp design, high-end components, and (aside from the too-expensive very first models) reasonable prices. With this new revision, the Envy has finally gotten its first serious makeover since the original.
Inside our 15-inch test unit was a standard set of components, weighted toward multimedia and midlevel gaming: an Intel Core i5 2430M CPU, 6GB of RAM, a 500GB HDD, and an AMD Radeon 7690M GPU. The series starts at $1,099 for essentially the same configuration, but this unit had its 15.6-inch display upgraded to 1,920x1,080 pixels, a $150 add-on. Intel Core i7 CPUs, SSD storage, and more RAM are all available, but drive up the price considerably.

Even with some upgrades, that's a lot less than a comparable 15-inch MacBook Pro. And, the inclusion of a physical volume control wheel is truly inspired, giving the Envy 15 an edge over the other big-brand premium 15-inch, Dell's XPS 15z, which is thinner, and starts at only $999, but lacks the big click pad and Beats Audio features of the Envy 15.
The biggest downside is HP's just-announced Envy Spectre 14-inch from CES. With an entirely new glass-covered design beyond that of the Envy 15, it's already got this model beaten on looks before even hitting stores.

Price as reviewed / starting price $1,249 / $1,099
Processor 2.4GHz Intel Core i5 2430M
Memory 6GB, 1,333MHz DDR3
Hard drive 500GB 7,200rpm
Chipset Intel HM65
Graphics AMD Radeon HD 7690M/Intel HD 3000
Operating System Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit)
Dimensions (WD) 14.9 x 9.6 inches
Height 1.1 inches
Screen size (diagonal) 15.6 inches
System weight / Weight with AC adapter 5.8/7.1 pounds
Category Midsize
The new look is quite a departure from that of previous Envys. Made of aluminum and magnesium, in a dark gunmetal gray with a black base, the original Envy laptops had a subtle pattern of imprinted squares covering the wrist rest and the back of the lid, creating an overall unique signature. The new version has more of a two-tone design, with a black lid and keyboard contrasted against a silver tray. The most unusual visual feature is a subtle red stripe around the inner edge of the sunken keyboard--a touch of retro-futurism, perhaps.
As a fan of the original Envy design, I have to admit I'm not quite as sold on this new look just yet. It certainly isn't ugly, but it also doesn't feel as sophisticated as HP's even newer Envy Spectre laptop, spotted at CES 2012 and coming soon in a 14-inch version. If anything, the new look of the Envy hews much closer to the MacBook Pro than before. While open, it's nearly indistinguishable from a MacBook Pro at first glance. Only the sunken keyboard and red accents give it away.
The keyboard felt familiar--this flat-topped island-style setup has been used on many HP laptops before (and it's found in slightly different variations on laptops from Apple, Dell, Sony, and others). The individual keys are large and easy to hit, but the up and down arrow keys get unfairly shrunken down. Shift, Caps Lock, Tab, and other important keys are full-size, however, and the four corner keys lose a little surface area to create a rounded-edge look, but it doesn't hinder typing.
Backlit keyboards are a great extra for any multimedia or gaming laptop, and really should be standard by now in all but the least expensive systems. The model included here is something HP calls the Radiance Backlit keyboard, and it uses individual LEDs under each key. Hit the F5 button, and the keys light up row by row, which is a nice visual flourish, but has no practical impact.
The click-pad-style touch pad was large--slightly longer and squatter than you'd find on a MacBook. Basic multitouch gestures are supported, but still not as smooth as the finger-control action in OS X. Particularly frustrating is the two-finger scroll, as basic a touch-pad move if there ever was one. Few, if any, Windows laptops do this well, but the Envy line has always been especially stuttery with that gesture.
The biggest improvement in the new Envy 15 is the inclusion of a physical volume control wheel. Real-world volume controls are very rare. Occasionally, you'll get a couple of tiny volume-up/volume-down buttons above the keyboard, or a few years ago, capacitive touch strips were popular (but never responsive enough to use). Most of the time, you're stuck fumbling with alternative functions of the Fn keys for volume and muting.
This is an actual wheel, built into the right edge of the system. It's small, but just the right size for flicking with a finger while playing a game or video. A separate mute button sites right below it (and could perhaps be a bit larger). The top of the volume wheel clicks as well, but that command brings up the Beats Audio menu, with access to input and output levels for different devices, EQ settings, and even the ability to flip the volume wheel control direction between clockwise and counterclockwise.
Audio quality is excellent for a laptop, and the speakers get incredibly loud, but the front-firing speakers still lack bass, a problem more of the physics of small laptop speakers than anything else.
The 15.6-inch display has a native resolution of 1,920x1,080 pixels, but note that this is an upgraded display on our review unit. The base model has a 1,366x768-pixel screen--fine for most uses, but less than one would expect from a $1,000-plus laptop. Put another way, if you're considering the Envy 15, the higher-resolution display, which is an extra $150, is a must-have add-on.


HP Envy 15 Average for category [midsize]
Video HMDI plus DisplayPort VGA plus HDMI or DisplayPort
Audio Stereo speakers, headphone (x2)/microphone jacks Stereo speakers, headphone/microphone jacks
Data 2 USB 3.0, SD card reader 2 USB 2.0, 2 USB 3.0, SD card reader, eSATA
Networking Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth Ethernet, 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, optional mobile broadband
Optical drive DVD burner DVD burner
Despite being a full-size 15-inch laptop, the ports and connections on the Envy 15 are limited. Only two USB ports are offered, along with an SD card slot--no eSATA, as found on previous Envy laptops. The twin headphone jacks are a nice extra, but usually more useful on a smaller laptop, for example to share video playback while flying. Adding a Blu-ray drive, instead of the standard DVD burner is $75 more.
While our test unit had the base CPU and RAM (actually, according to HP's Web site, you now start with an Intel Core i5 2450M, instead of our 2430M), both are upgradable, up to a quad-core Core i7-2860QM for $450 and 16GB of RAM for $460 (with several steps in-between for both). A wide variety of HDD/SSD combos are available as well, topping out at $500 for a 128GB SSD plus two 1TB 5,400rpm drives.
 
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