Results for can
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2.5" Hard Drive Charts
Tom's Interactive 2.5" Hard Drive Charts compare notebook hard drives. Here you will find 2.5" UltraATA and Serial ATA hard drives manufactured by Fujitsu, Hitachi, Samsung, Seagate, Toshiba and Western Digital.
The charts include all popular capacities starting at 40 GB as well as listing hard drives running at 4,200, 5,400 or 7,200 RPM. 15 benchmarks help to determine application perforrmance and low-level performance, giving you all the throughput, access time, interface and I/O performance results.
The 2.5" HDD Charts also include the Cost per Gigabyte calculation and our Price/Performance Index, which helps you to find the best bang for the buck. In addition, we measured power consumption of most the notebook hard drives, so you can see which models are energy efficient and which ones aren't.
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Enterprise Hard Drive Charts
Tom's Interactive Enterprise Hard Drive Charts compare high-end server/workstation hard drives used in enterprise-class systems. The 15 benchmarks we used as a testing platform are the same as the ones featured in the other HDD Charts, but the interpretation of the data is different in the enterprise segment: Servers often depend on maximum I/O performance rather than on raw throughput. Of course, you can also check various other criteria: read and write throughput, sorted by average, minimum and maximum, access time, interface performance and four I/O benchmark patterns.
You will find most of the popular enterprise hard drives made by Fujitsu, Hitachi and Seagate; all using either Ultra320 SCSI or SAS interfaces. Then there is the price/performance index which helps you select a particular drive, as it relates performance and capacity to cost of drive. If your company requires a large number of hard drives, this feature will enable you to make an informed and budget friendly decision.
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Dual & Quad VGA Charts 2008
For users who want the highest graphics performance a system can provide they need to add more cards in dual and quad configurations. In these charts we test the best configurations of AMD's CrossFire and Nvidia's SLI. We wanted to take all the guesswork out of who is best in what game. This is the ultimate graphics resource tool for hardcore gamers and power users. Each configuration is run them through a battery of eight intensive tests including 7 real world gaming applications and one synthetic benchmark.
* Battlefield 2142
* Dark Messiah of Might and Magic
* Doom 3
* Microsoft Flight Simulator X
* Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
* Prey
* Warhammer: Mark of Chaos
* 3DMark06
Our charts are interactive and regularly updated to enable you to make informed buying decisions. By clicking on a particular graphics card's performance bar you will see the test configuration. These charts are the answer to what a user needs: the best multi-video card configuration available for a particular price and application!
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Can "Foxton" solve server heat issues?
Tuesday 8 February 2005 – 11:49
Intel is set to unveil a new technology which could change the way companies have to deal with heat issues in densely-packed server environments. -
If You Can't Beat'em, Sue'em: Lamentations On The Grokster Decision
Tuesday 28 June 2005 – 06:00
The Supreme Court has handed down its decision in the Grokster case, and you, the consumer, are on the losing end. -
P2Pers: We can make file-sharing secure and outsell iTunes
Thursday 22 July 2004 – 04:50
In a bid to persuade the music industry that P2P networks can encourage legal file-sharing, P2P companies today claimed that more people have bought tracks from Heart's new album, 'Jupiter's Darling', via the likes of Grokster, Morpheus and Kazaa than through Apple's iTunes Music Store. -
Scientists demonstrate magnets that can control the colour of a liquid
Friday 6 July 2007 – 12:33
An iron oxide water-based solution has been discovered which changes color under varying magnetic field strengths -
FTC wants to tweak CAN-SPAM Act
Thursday 19 May 2005 – 08:43
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is consulting on proposed changes to the CAN-SPAM Act.
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Can 19" LCDs Pass the Frag Test?*
Monday 10 January 2005 – 06:00
LCD vendors claim their new crop of 19" displays are up to par with their 17" wares. But our past tests show that OEM claims in this space aren't always worth too much. We put four of BenQ, NEC, Philips and Xerox' 19" finest to the test. -
Can't Touch This! A Comparison of 46 CPU Coolers*
Monday 21 May 2001 – 07:00
The most extensive comparative test of all time pits the new generation of CPU coolers against the older competition. Complex designs and precious materials set the coolers apart from the pack. -
Can Ageia's PhysX Card Bring Real-World Physics to Games?*
Monday 19 June 2006 – 12:12
Ageia says its new physics processing device and engine will do nothing less than revolutionize PC gaming. We gauge just how well Ageia's PPU (physics processing unit) can handle flying debris and shrapnel in Ghost Recon Advanced War Fighter - which you can also see for yourself by downloading our video.
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Can TomTom's Go 700 GPS Save a Marriage? Part I*
Friday 31 March 2006 – 06:42
For Barry Gerber it was either buy a GPS or get divorced by his wife. He chose the GPS. But, what to buy? Join Gerber, a long time GPS owner wannabe, as he tests what he hopes will be the GPS that saves his marriage.
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Can Gigabyte's i-RAM Replace Existing Hard Drives?*
Wednesday 7 September 2005 – 07:00
Connected via serial ATA and equipped with up to 4 GB of DDR memory, the i-RAM plug-in module from Gigabyte is supposed to open up the way to undreamt-of hard disk performance.