Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro Tablet: You can easily watch movies and shows on the go using the Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro, which features an 8.4" touch screen that's large enough to ensure clear media viewing and small enough to facilitate transport. The 16GB storage offers room to house pictures, videos, music and other important files. Plus, you can connect to the Web to check your e-mail and access social media.
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I've been slightly underwhelmed by this tablet. I love the screen, form factor, hardware specs, WiFi strength, SD card slot, and even the available accessories. I was formerly a Nexus 7 owner and got rid of it since well, I never used it! This tablet is starting to fall into that same issue (not using it) but I like it so much more than the nexus 7 when it comes to size. The nexus 7 was too small IMHO. With phones getting bigger and bigger 7" tablets make little to no sense in my mind. Too big to fit into your pocket, but too small to offer an advantage over a 5" phone. This is the sweet spot in my mind. 10" too big (go get a Yoga 2 or something instead), 8-9" about perfect. Small enough it doesn't make a big difference in a bag, but large enough browsing is enjoyable and a completely different experience than a large screen phone. This (and it's AMOLED brethren of the same size) is a great sized tablet.
Now the cons. Samsung takes crazy powerful hardware, and great components, then wraps them up together in a horrible software package. I've run stock Android too long, and I completely notice and hate the stutter associated with unoptimized third party touchwiz stuff. Some of it makes sense, but the lag when pulling down the status bar is unbelievable. I like some of the ideas (window view, etc) but these tacked on things feel tacked on, just like the OEM windows add-ons back in the Windows 95 era. Obviously this problems can be fixed if you don't care about your warranty, but I want to make sure I don't have a dud first.
It's hard coming from a Nexus device to a Samsung device when your a power user, but I believe in the long run this tablet was a good purchase. Once I get past my fear of tripping the warranty fuse, I'll probably enjoy this tablet a lot more. I got this device for an excellent price which colors my review much more positively than it would have been at the MSRP price.
This NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 4GB GDDR5 graphics card features multiple NVIDIA technologies, including CUDA and G-Sync, that ensure lush, realistic gaming visuals. NVIDIA SHIELD and GameStream allow you to stream portable and PC games.
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I've owned quite a few video cards in my day - many of them being Radeon cards. I've generally liked the price to performance of ATI/AMD over the years. This card, however, proves why Nvidia is leading PC gaming hardware in my view. The additional features that Nvidia offers (hardware accelerated video recording of a game, gamestream, etc Google GeForce Experience if you're interested) are of huge value. I have an Nvidia Shield, and game streaming is awesome - something I couldn't do until I got this card. Furthermore, the stock cooler, while may not be as efficient as third part coolers, is quiet and beautiful. The controversy surrounding this card and it's 3.5GB memory issue are disappointing from Nvidia to say the least, but its performance is still stellar at 1080p and 1440p. I think that 1440p will be a resolution skipped in the mainstream and I do fear for this card when 4k monitors become the standard someday. But at the end of the day, how future proof can you make a GPU purchase? This card is more than capable for everything today with every option turned on at almost any resolution. It's quiet, and efficient with power. What more can you ask for?
On the subject of power, I have a Corsair Gold certified PSU, and it pulls 380 watts from the wall (342w estimated equipment load) with both CPU and GPU on full synthetic loads, about 330 watts (300 estimated equipment load) in Bioshock Infinite benchmark. This is wonderfully efficient considering I'm pushing an 80w TDP E3-1231v3 CPU and a couple hard drives. A Radeon 290X can draw that much power ALONE while delivering similar results. I can power a full tilt gaming rig with a 450w power supply, that's amazing to me.
I used to overclock, but I honestly got out of it as it become too commercialized (pay more to overclock? - that's exactly what us old school overclockers didn't want to do!). I'd rather have solid quiet components that are power efficient these days and the GTX 970 is a great example. Stock clocks, perfect balance, quiet cool and dripping with performance. If I ever had/wanted to overclock, there's so much thermal headroom, it's laughable. I think I haven't seen the GPU hit over 65C and the fan's barely topped 30%.
I'll be honest, I built in a Corsair Air 240 case - a great case btw, but I broke down and put a blue LED strip inside the window, and the GeForce GTX logo lit up looks absolutely awesome under it's glow (almost fluorescent). The logo can adjust brightness based on some algorithms which is a cool effect. I thought I sworn off the computer bling in my adulthood, but I got to admit it looks nice.
Lastly, I don't know how supported this card will be compared to an EVGA or MSI. Nvidia no longer has an official overclocking tool (although EVGA and MSI's tools work for this card). I'm unsure if bios updates will be available (but rarely needed for video adapters anyways), but at least the drivers will always be reference.
I don't even know why I was allured by the reference GTX 970, but I will say it's quiet the card. I feel like it's not overdone compared to many of the crazy heatpipe designs found on third part cards, and in my cramped Air 240 case I didn't have to worry about either length or most importantly height (as it's standard riser height). I highly recommend this card.
Soleus GO! Fitness Band: Measure your fitness progress with this band, which measures calories burned, distance traveled, pace, sleep quality, speed and steps taken and reports data to your iOS device via Bluetooth 4.0 technology.
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There are some pros and con's with this fitness band, however if its on sale, its great. The software is rudimentary, and I don't know how committed Soleus is to maintain updates. It does work well as a watch replacement and give notification s for calls and texts, which means I can peak without taking my big phone out of my pocket. Step count is pretty accurate, and while running its in the right ball park (although I use a GPS watch as my primary - this always under reports). The battery meter is crazy! Goes from 100% to 90% in an hour. Then lasts for an easy week till it drops to 15%, at which point it stops working and gets confused. All in all a good device with quirks. It does what it promises.
iPad® mini 2 has a stunning 7.9-inch Retina display with over 3.1 million pixels. It also comes with the A7 chip with 64-bit architecture, ultrafast wireless, iSight and FaceTime HD cameras, powerful apps, and up to 10 hours of battery life.1 Yet it still fits easily in one hand.
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Coming from the Android world - my wife kept suggesting that I get an iPad as she loves her iPad Air. I don't like the size of the Air, but the iPad Mini is just the ticket. I was an iPhone 4 user when it came out, and I finally left the Apple ecosystem after becoming disillusioned with features and progress. I went Google Nexus for my phones and haven't looked back (it's been a rocky road for sure, but Apple was at times too). I've owned a Samsung tablet, and Nexus 7 before, but always found I never really used them for much.
Anyways, now that you have my background, let's talk iPad Mini Retina! First of all physical size - this is perfect, like a small book. 4:3 aspect ratio is just perfect for a small tablet, as it leaves it feeling like a book. The screen is a wonderful pixel density, and the default DPI settings of the OS never leave controls feeling too big or small. You can adjust text size and quite a bit more in the accessibility menus than you could back in the iOS 4/5 days. The cameras are more than adequate for a tablet, and I find myself occasionally snapping shots of the pets when they're being cute. The physical home button is a bit of a throwback for me (have used software buttons since 2011), but it's tactile and feels nice (while increasing the bezel size unnecessarily). Battery life amazes me. I thought my Android tablets did well - the iPad appears to decimate them when it comes to standby - which is perfect since I use the tablet in spurts.
iOS 7.1.2 was pretty stable - and I jailbroke it. Once jailbroken, I realized that on a tablet, there were just a few tweaks that were worth it, but software piracy was the main scene. So when iOS 8 came out, I simple backed up and did a full restore - which turned out pretty good. I've found that WiFi appears to be not nearly as solid as it should be. At home, I run OpenWRT on WNDR3700's and it works much better than when I'm at random locations out and about. iOS 7 seemed to do a better job with random wifi, so a bit of a ding there (although I'm certain it will be addressed by Apple).
App selection is of course excellent, and a majority of the titles I desired were available. The whole iPhone/iPad native apps bugs me as an Android user. Frankly on Android it's much simpler, as all UI's are made to scale out. Some do it better than others, but on an iPad, the iPhone app scaling is just horrid. Really - this is the solution? To use 75% or 25% of the screen real estate and make it look like really sucky? Sorry, but that's just not being forward thinking in your OS design. Even the jailbroken community had better scaling solutions available.
The 16GB size, now that we're firmly planted in the middle of the teens years of the 21st century, feels quite tight. I immediately downloaded and installed the 'recommended apple apps', then I downloaded the few meager purchases I had made during my iPhone 4 stent. I proceeded to see the graphics prowess by downloading Asphault 8, and then all of a sudden, I had 200MB free, no photos, no videos, no music - just apps. 16GB was plenty back in 2009 (iPhone 4), but 5 years later, with larger textures, multiple formats, etc, apps have grown. It's time to just add that 1 or 2 dollars in parts and push the iPad up to 32GB minimum. Here that industry? We know flash is cheap!! We buy 32GB flash drives at best buy for $15 retail prices - give me a break!
The same goes for radios. Really - does cell hardware have to be so 'optional' and expensive? I went with the base model (probably like many people) because it's priced appropriately. You can do a lot with an iPad, and people might even do more if they could say add a SIM to it without a 2 year contract to make it affordable.
The CPU - which I was salivating to try - the A7! It's pretty good. At first glance, everything appears snappy. There's a lot to like about the CPU's speed. However I've become disappointed with the performance of certain activities, and I'm not sure if it's CPU, GPU, or RAM related. Apps like Chrome (I know - I should use Safari) shudder and lag horribly on large pages. Almost any modern ARM A8 or A15 based 32-bit CPU can easily smooth out Chrome on Android (even at high resolutions). First party apps fly with the best of them though - with Safari being very smooth. My biggest complaint is with the 1GB of RAM. I swear Apple knows that RAM is always the limiting factor when it comes to longevity of a device. My Nexus 4 had 2GB of RAM - 2 years after purchasing it, performance was more than adequate for any task. Where will the iPad be in 2-3 years time? I'm worried that 1GB of RAM will eventually catch up with developers and Apple. The fact that their new phones have 1GB of RAM just seems silly. OS's can be efficient, but the more you do, the more RAM you need - and for premium devices like this, I really want more.
Lastly - I almost brought this back. Between the 16GB limitation and the few OS bugs I ran into (that corrected themselves with iOS 8) I was frustrated. I had some horrible slow downs that I couldn't explain, and simply, the OS wouldn't tell me what was wrong. iOS 8 mostly fixed my problems, and I've found that I simple should just consume media via streaming on this, and avoid large apps. I mostly use it for reading and browsing - both which it does well. I bought it on sale, and at this point in it's lifecycle, I'd probably recommend waiting for the 'new' one that is sure to be due out soon. The iPad Mini Retina is a wonderful device in many ways, but Apple's starting to show it's age (and it's focus on high margins) in it's devices.
Expand the storage of your compatible device with this SanDisk Ultra Plus microSDHC memory card, which features a 32GB capacity to provide ample space for your media collection. The Class 10 UHS-1 speed enables high-fidelity video recording.
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Learn more about the New WindowsAcer Aspire Switch Tablet: Enjoy media and Web sites both indoors and outdoors using this tablet, which features a 10.1" multitouch display that offers a clear view in direct sunlight. You can use the Snap Hinge to transform the tablet into a multifunction device with laptop, tablet, tent and display modes.
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This is almost exactly like the old W510, except a faster quad CPU. It lacks a gyro, and several other niceities that the W510 had. Great form factor, and solid construction.
This collection of a half-dozen films that transpire in the universe of the X-Men includes X-Men, X2: X-Men United, X-Men The Last Stand, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, X-Men: First Class, and The Wolverine.
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I picked this up after seeing days of future past because I really enjoyed that movie. My wife and spent a weekend watching all these movies and we really enjoyed them. I had seen most of them, but not "The Wolverine" which is the one I ended up enjoy almost the most. There are some semi-dud movies here, but honestly, they're not that bad. I'd recommend the collection if it's on sale. You'll be glad you added it to your Blu-ray collection.
My Best Buy number: 0741131094
My Best Buy number: 0741131094
What's great about it: Great Select, Decent quality, Lots of entertainment
What's not so great: There is still more movies to buy
Great movie for it's day, and great action scenes. It is a bit dated when you watch it almost 20 years later. Some very classic moments, and the environmental overtones are muted and presented as opinion of one of the lead actors (instead being hammered into your head like so many of today's movies). A fun ride.
The disk I received wasn't visibly damaged, but my Sony BD-S590 had trouble reading it. I haven't tried it in another player, but some scenes had issues in the middle of the disk. Nothing horrible, and I'm sure it's an anomaly.
My Best Buy number: 0741131094
My Best Buy number: 0741131094
What's great about it: Batman!
What's not so great: Stutters and misses some scenes
This Hoover SteamVac features a SpinScrub multiple brush system for outstanding cleaning performance. The translucent tank makes it easy to view water levels.
This user is a My Best Buy® Elite Plus Member, who has spent $3,500 on eligible purchases and is now getting 1.25 points per dollar. They may have received My Best Buy® bonus points for submitting reviews. They may have also participated in an invitation-only program that provides My Best Buy® Elite Plus Members with manufacturer-supplied products for the purpose of writing honest, unbiased and usage-based reviews.
Work, game or browse with this HP Pavilion LED LCD monitor. The 32-inch display brings movies and video games to life, and the widescreen setup lets you view multiple windows simultaneously. Featuring an anti-glare screen, this HP Pavilion LED LCD screen offers crisp viewing quality in virtually any lighting conditions.
Will an AMD Radeon rx 480 graphics card be able to handle this 1440p monitor? Not necessarily for gaming, but to have multiple tabs open, programs running in the background, watching video in high quality, etc....
Yes. 1440p can be driven effectively by even Intel integrated graphics for the tasks you describe. The rx480 will have no issues
When building on a budget, the EVGA 600W 80 PLUS is a great choice at a low cost. Supporting 49A on a single +12V rail provides more options without having to reduce your component requirements. Save space with the 600W's compact design, wellplaced power switch and fully sleeved cables. The 600W offers the connections and protections needed for basic system builds. With a standard 3 year warranty and ultra quiet fan design the 600W will be a great asset for your next build on a budget.
my current motherboard has a 20 pin plug. my new power supply has a 24 pin plug. how do I get it to fit
This PSU has a removable 4 pin addition. If yours doesn't, the easy solution is to just plug it in (it's keyed) with the 4 pins unhooked. Baring that, you can google "20-Pin Male to 24-Pin Female ATX adapter".
When building on a budget, the EVGA 600W 80 PLUS is a great choice at a low cost. Supporting 49A on a single +12V rail provides more options without having to reduce your component requirements. Save space with the 600W's compact design, wellplaced power switch and fully sleeved cables. The 600W offers the connections and protections needed for basic system builds. With a standard 3 year warranty and ultra quiet fan design the 600W will be a great asset for your next build on a budget.
Can this fit in a Dell inspiration case?
With no specific model number, I can't tell you for sure, but there's a pretty high chance that it will. Every normal sized and mini tower Dell I've seen in the past 15 years has used a standard form factor ATX PSU.
When building on a budget, the EVGA 600W 80 PLUS is a great choice at a low cost. Supporting 49A on a single +12V rail provides more options without having to reduce your component requirements. Save space with the 600W's compact design, wellplaced power switch and fully sleeved cables. The 600W offers the connections and protections needed for basic system builds. With a standard 3 year warranty and ultra quiet fan design the 600W will be a great asset for your next build on a budget.