News (18)

  • DMCA axes sites discussing Mac OS for PCs

    Apple Computer appears to have invoked the Digital Millenium Copyright Act to stop the dissemination of methods allowing Mac OS X to run on chips from Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.

  • Google 'intelligence' fills in the blanks

    Google has expanded its search capabilities to include wildcard entries so Web surfers can look for specific pieces of information easier and faster.

  • Australia to watch Diebold hyperlinking case

    The legality of hyperlinks is back under the spotlight again, and Australia will be watching for the decision of a US federal judge who is considering whether to issue an injunction to prevent a company issuing cease-and-desist letters in relation to hyperlinks.

  • Wireless broadband set to i-Burst into Australia

    The i-Burst venture is on track to deliver planned wireless broadband services at prices competitive with existing DSL offerings after securing new investments totalling AU$14 million.

  • Another tool for Xbox mod squad

    Another "mod chip" that allows Xbox video game consoles to play copied games has entered the market, despite legal efforts to thwart such chips.

Features and Case Studies (1)

  • Why open source is bad for Australia

    Open source is actually anti-industry, and protecting it is not in Australia's interests, says one industry observer. Additional reading: Why one Norwegian city switched to Linux

Reviews (5)

  • Kicking Microsoft out of the office: 4 alternative suites tested

    Microsoft Office may be the standard, but there are a variety of competitors--old and new--that look like giving it a decent run for its money.

  • Wireless broadband set to i-Burst into Australia

    The i-Burst venture is on track to deliver planned wireless broadband services at prices competitive with existing DSL offerings after securing new investments totalling AU$14 million.

  • Sub-2K PCs

    In this feature we looked at 16 Budget PCs. And, in the process, we had our first look at the all new AMD Duron processor. We also received Celeron-, Cyrix-, Pentium III- and Athlon-based machines.

  • Crusoe gives life to Fujitsu ultra-portable

    A complete Windows PC no larger than a thick diary, to look at the P-1000 coupled to its external CD-ROM drive gives you the same sense of disproportion that you get watching a small child walking a large dog. However if it ever turns up in conversation, its ultra-portable size probably won't be the key issue up for discussion. The P-1000 is one of the first sub-notebooks designed around Transmeta's low power x86 compatible, Crusoe CPU architecture.

  • Matrox G550: two heads better than one?

    When Matrox launched the first single-chip dual-display product (the G400) it defeated scepticism regarding the value of the feature. Now Matrox is doing it again with the Millennium G550, only this time the sceptics may not be so easily convinced.

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