Friday 22 January 2016

Mini PC invasion: These radically tiny computers fit in the palm of your hand

Face-melting memory and cutting-edge storage: This week's powerful new PC hardware

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.

PCWorld

Best of PCWorld

Jan 22, 2016
Featured Image

Mini PC invasion: These radically tiny computers fit in the palm of your hand

Some of today's 'desktop' mini PCs make laptops seem downright bulky in comparison. Read More

Twitter Facebook LinkedIn

Your Must-Read Stories

Face-melting memory and cutting-edge storage: This week's powerful new PC hardware
HoloLens will run up to 5.5 hours on a single charge, Microsoft says
These are the 25 worst passwords of 2015
You will upgrade to Windows 10: Inside Microsoft's strong-arm upgrade tactics
A browser named Brave will speed up the Web by blocking all ads
Microsoft will recall Surface Pro power cords due to overheating fears
Asus ZenBook UX305 review: Still the best budget ultrabook around
Testing firm picks Kaspersky and Bitdefender as the best antivirus suites of 2015
Corsair's new Vengeance DDR4 RAM kits crank memory to blistering speeds
Windows 10 needed universal apps, and Dropbox made one, complete with Windows Hello
This old tech: TRS-80 MC-10 Micro Color Computer lives to play again
Thumbnail Image

Face-melting memory and cutting-edge storage: This week's powerful new PC hardware

The parade of killer new PC hardware didn't miss a beat, even with CES 2016 fading into the rear-view mirror. Read More

Thumbnail Image

HoloLens will run up to 5.5 hours on a single charge, Microsoft says

In addition, the HoloLens will be able to connect to any device over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth and run any universal Windows 10 app, according to a Microsoft rep. Read More

Thumbnail Image

These are the 25 worst passwords of 2015

SplashID recently published its round-up of the worst passwords of 2015. '123456' and 'password' still reign supreme Read More

Thumbnail Image

You will upgrade to Windows 10: Inside Microsoft's strong-arm upgrade tactics

Now that the carrots aren't luring new users to Windows 10, Microsoft's breaking out the sticks Read More

Thumbnail Image

A browser named Brave will speed up the Web by blocking all ads

Brendan Eich, co-founder of Mozilla and for an 11-day stint, its CEO, announced a new browser called "Brave," that blocks outside online ads and ad tracking. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Microsoft will recall Surface Pro power cords due to overheating fears

Microsoft plans to announce a voluntary recall in the coming days for the AC powercords for Surface Pro, Pro 2, and Pro 3 tablets. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Asus ZenBook UX305 review: Still the best budget ultrabook around

Asus ZenBook gets the Skylake treatment while keeping its low price. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Testing firm picks Kaspersky and Bitdefender as the best antivirus suites of 2015

AV-Comparatives' annual security roundup tested all the major suites on elements such as real-time protection, file detection, and malware removal. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Corsair's new Vengeance DDR4 RAM kits crank memory to blistering speeds

Corsair's new Vengeance DDR4 memory kits are more than twice as fast as the RAM in most people's computers. Read More

Thumbnail Image

Windows 10 needed universal apps, and Dropbox made one, complete with Windows Hello

Dropbox took advantage of many of Windows 10's most intriguing app features, including notifications, quick search, and even biometric logins using Windows Hello. Read More

Thumbnail Image

This old tech: TRS-80 MC-10 Micro Color Computer lives to play again

Introduced in 1983 by Radio Shack, the TRS-80 MC-10 was once the world's cheapest color-capable PC. Read More

Twitter Facebook Google+

You are currently subscribed to Best of PCWorld as messi1927@gmail.com.

Unsubscribe from this newsletter | Manage your subscriptions | Subscribe | Privacy Policy

Copyright (C) 2016 PCWorld, 501 2nd Street, San Francisco, CA 94107

Please do not reply to this message.
To contact someone directly, send an e-mail to online@pcworld.com.

No comments:

ads