Input Device Reviews

Sunday, 08 November 2009
Roccat-KovaQuote: "Roccat are well known at this stage for their impressive PC peripherals, introducing desktop spacial management along with massive ammounts of viral media. Today we're looking at a product form them that's definately in the Roccat vein. Known as the Kova, it's a 3200 DPI mouse, with a solid plastic shell, and an interesting driverless design. Sounds intriguing, let's check it out."

Article URL: http://www.xsreviews.co.uk/reviews/peripherals/roccat-kova/

 
Friday, 06 November 2009

Quote: "For a good example of the features a modern optical drive should have, look no further than the Lite-On iHAS424 DL-DVD burner. It's got everything you'd expect from a DVD-writer, including dual-layer DVD writing and reading, compatibility with both + and - formats, as well as support for lightscribe label burning if you have photosensitive media. Of course, it'll also read and write CD-Rs and CD-RWs."

Article URL: http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=2464


 
Sunday, 01 November 2009

Quote: "The Vidabox wireless HTPC media keyboard comes with everything we needed to get up and running in seconds, which was nice. Having a driverless setup is nice for a mainstream product like this. The build quality was also not bad, while this keyboard is certainly no Logitech DiNovo it by no means feels cheap. The wireless connection was very consistent and worked flawlessly up to the 26 to 28 foot range from our testing. The 2000 dpi laser trackball worked great and we couldn't imagine using anything other than this. This is clearly a better product than the original VidaBox keyboards that came with mechanical trackballs!  We also tried the keyboard out on our NVIDIA Ion powered mini-ITX HTPC that is running Windows 7 (shown above) and it worked flawlessly. Not too much more you can ask from a keyboard that costs just $67.77 plus shipping..."

Article URL: http://www.legitreviews.com/article/1115/1/


 
Friday, 30 October 2009
7gQuote: "We review a lot of peripherals here at XSR, and over the years we've noticed the growing trend of steadily increasing prices with gaming mice costing upwards of £50 now. Still though, they aren't the most expensive input accessory you can use with your PC, with specialised keyboards getting close to the £100 mark.

Today, we're reviewing just such a keyboard, this one from Steelseries. It's not packing a tonne of gaming macro buttons, but it does have full metal internals, and its endorsed by a multitude of gaming professionals around the world. On the surface it doesn't look like a gaming keyboard, but with all its accolades, there must be something interesting about it. Let's check it out."

Article URL: http://www.xsreviews.co.uk/reviews/peripherals/steelseries-7g/

 
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