What's Hot: Still stunning looking, great quality, sharp and colorful display, excellent camera, a fingerprint scanner that's actually easy to use. What's Not: A 4" display on a flagship smartphone in ...
Samsung's making phones that capitalize on good looks--who'd have predicted that 2 years ago. That company known for its feature rich (sometimes too rich) plastic Android smartphones with uninspired ...
What's Hot: Attractive, watch-like design and stainless steel casing. Sapphire glass protects the display. WiFi extends usable range, supports both Android and iOS. What's Not: Pricey, though you do ...
What's hot: Large display and native PDF support. What's not: Doesn't support as many formats natively as Sony Readers. Editor's note, July 2010: Read our review of the Kindle DX Graphite with an ...
Editor's Update, Oct. 2016: Check out our review of the updated model: 2016 HP Spectre x360. Editor's Update, April 2016: like the x360 but want it in a 15" size. Check out our review of the 15" HP ...
Despite murmurings and stark declarations, the dedicated digital camera like the laptop, is far from dead. Rather good camera phones, just like tablets, have helped elevate the camera and PC: we ...
What's hot: 1GHz Snapdragon CPU, GSM world roaming. What's not: Vanilla Windows Mobile is dated, dull and not terribly finger-friendly. Since this is bare naked Windows Mobile, you will need a stylus ...
The iPhone 5c is that “other” iPhone that launched on September 20, alongside the flagship iPhone 5s. While the higher end 5s might’ve garnered more attention among the press, the iPhone 5c may end up ...
Sony has done some amazing things with digital cameras in the past five years, from the groundbreaking NEX-5 mirrorless ILC (interchangeable lens camera) that was barely bigger than a point and shoot, ...
The Samsung Eternity II (a597) comes almost 2 years after the original Eternity (a867)’s release, oddly not as an upgrade device despite the hint of a sequel in the name. The Samsung Eternity II has ...
What if your Kindle Fire was your TV's best buddy? That's the idea behind Fire TV, which runs the Android-based Amazon Fire OS from the Kindle Fire HDX on the same sort of quad core CPU you'd find in ...