albtechportal

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg
Showing posts with label Cameras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cameras. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 December 2013

The Last Days of the DSLR

Posted on 11:37 by Unknown
The Last Days of the DSLR
The DLSR is everywhere. You see it around the necks of tourists, against the faces of pro photographers. Since Canon introduced the Digital Rebel in 2003, the DSLR has come to dominate photography outright. That ubiquity is about to come to an end so abrupt, you might not even have time to notice it.
No, this isn't another smartphone screed. Yes, they're popular, but they're still not anywhere near winning over the enthusiast demand for more expensive, higher quality devices like DSLRs and mirrorless cameras. This is about a turning point in photography, and the relegation of one of its most popular formats into a purely niche product for pros. It's already begun.

Back in the DSLR

Digital SLR has become such a common acronym that most people confuse it for any camera that has interchangeable lenses. It's actually a very specific type of camera, with one very specific mechanism: the single lens reflex. That SLR mechanism dates back almost a century, and it has dictated many iconic camera attributes such as size, shape, and some aspects of performance.
The SLR accounts for what you see when you look through your camera's viewfinder. When light enters through the camera's lens, it strikes a little reflex mirror that bounces it up into a prism, then onto ground glass, which is what you look at when you bring the camera up to your eye. When you finally press the shutter button, the mirror swings out of the way so that the light can strike the digital sensor (or film) that sits behind it.
That's where the single lens part comes in; it merely distinguishes SLRs from older twin-lens reflex cameras, which feature an entirely separate lens solely for delivering light to a viewfinder. The SLR became popular simply because it was the best way to frame your shots—letting you see exactly what the lens saw. This was only possible by physically bouncing the light from the lens into your eye, by way of the reflex mirror.

Room With a Viewfinder

In the last couple of years a new type of camera has appeared, one that has interchangeable lenses but ditches the SLR part. These have come to be known as mirrorless cameras (for want of a snappier name). They include the Sony NEX, Olympus PEN, and FujiFilm X cameras, among others. In place of the SLR, these devices make use of a large LCD you hold away from your face, and/or a tiny LCD you hold up to your eye—the electronic viewfinder.
Many enthusiasts love the compact sizes and throwback feel of mirrorless cameras, but they haven't yet found broad appeal. They're too unfamiliar and they can seem expensive to a marketplace that equates "quality" with "big and bulky." Simply put, DSLRs look more professional. They let the world know that you are doing Serious Photography.
But despite the sluggish dissemination of mirrorless cameras, changes in technology are taking place that will threaten the dominance of the DSLR with brute force, whether the public even knows it or not.
The Last Days of the DSLRExpand
Electronic viewfinders are starting to rival or exceed the quality of experience in optical viewfinders. Where EVFs were once pixelated and laggy, they are now big, bright, and accurate. Using a great EVF means having access to features just not possible on a DSLR. Being able to preview exactly how your photo will be exposed before pressing the shutter is invaluable. Manual focus aids like image magnification and peaking, where edges of in-focus objects are highlighted, make it easier to use vintage lenses successfully.
Focus systems are also evolving rapidly. The reigning champ of focus systems, phase-detection, was once dependent on a reflex mirror to bounce light into a separate sensor in charge of calculating focus. Now, on-sensor phase detection is replacing the need for mirrors, and contrast-detection auto focus is improving as well.
The result is a new breed of high-performance interchangeable lens cameras that are smaller, lighter, and more durable.

The New Regime

The final step for mirrorless hegemony is tackling the high end. Sony will soon ship its milestone A7 series, two compact mirrorless bodies with full-frame sensors, the lynchpin of top-tier camera bodies and the harbingers of the DSLR's doom. They are, simply put, the best of both worlds.
The 24-megapixel A7 and the 36-megapixel A7r feature these high-performance sensors, eliminating the gap in image quality between mirrorless cams and pro DSLRs. The A7 series is priced at $1700 and $2300 respectively (body-only). That's on par with entry-level full-frame DSLRs like the Nikon D600 and Canon 6D. But what you get in return are cameras that are much easier to carry around and that are less intimidating to subjects, while not sacrificing anything when it comes to the ability capture pristine images. They aren't anywhere near perfect cameras, but they are different cameras.
The Last Days of the DSLR 

More and more manufacturers are throwing their weight behind mirrorless cameras, but it's the big guys, Canon and Nikon, playing catch-up. That makes sense; they profit heavily from DSLR sales, and have failed to capitalize on the turning of the tide. Both brands have introduced limited mirrorless offerings that have failed to live up to the competition from the likes of Sony, Olympus, Panasonic, and Fujifilm. It's a sign that they are unwilling to invest heavily in this new product category, hoping the storm will pass. Nikon just announced the Df, a slightly smaller full-frame DSLR that borrows the retro stylings of the most popular mirrorless cameras, but is stubbornly conservative in its insistence on retaining the mirror and pentaprism.
DSLRs aren't going to disappear entirely; they still reign supreme in areas like continuous autofocus, where tracking moving subjects requires the robustness of traditional phase-detection. And they still are better suited to carry humongous telephoto lenses. There will always be studio pros, sports photographers, and others, who have no concern for size and weight, who just want the most heavy-duty, reliable, speediest beast they can find. And they will soon make up the brunt of DSLR owners.
But for most people, there's little reason to own one now. We have mirrorless cameras that can match or exceed the DSLR in user experience, image quality, and handling. Why strap an extra pound of glass and metal around your neck for no reason?
Lighter and smaller means easier to have with you at all times, and for many shooters like myself who take pictures on the streets and while traveling, that is hugely important. Yes, DSLRs will continue to provide niche benefits. But when it comes to the vast majority of camera users, the hobbyists, amateurs, and first-timers, the moniker and mechanics that have been a mainstay of photography for decades—the single lens reflex—is likely to fade away.

Source

Read More
Posted in Cameras, TechNews | No comments

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Nikon Df is a modern full frame DSLR in a classic body

Posted on 06:23 by Unknown
Nikon has announced a new member of their high-end FX format DSLRs. The Nikon Df straddles the line between a classic Nikon camera designed around the lines of the old Nikon ‘F’ series of 35mm film cameras and a modern day DSLR.

On the outside, the Df is all retro. The body is made out of magnesium alloy and leather. On the top sits a roof mounted pentaprism with a hotshoe. The camera comes with a smattering of mechanical dials to adjust everything, from ISO to exposure compensation, release mode and exposure mode and a body mounted shutter button with threaded release port. The Df is being released with the AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G Special Edition lens that is designed to match the look of the camera.

On the inside, the Df is basically the previously launched Nikon D4. It has the same 16.2 megapixel full-frame FX format CMOS sensor with an ISO range of 100 to 12,800, expandable up to 204,800. The 39-point auto-focus system, however, has been borrowed from the Nikon D610. The Df also has a high resolution 921k dot 3.2-inch LCD on the back. One thing missing from the Df, however, is a video recording mode.
The Nikon Df will be available in black and silver for $2,749.95 (body only) and for $2,999.95 with the AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8G Special Edition lens later this month.
Source
Read More
Posted in Cameras, TechNews | No comments

Nikon announces D5300, company’s first DSLR with built-in Wi-Fi

Posted on 06:21 by Unknown
Nikon has announced the D5300, a new mid-range model in the company’s DSLR range. It has a 24.2 megapixel CMOS sensor that covers an ISO range of 100-12800 (expandable up to 25600) and is powered by the new EXPEED 4 image processor. The D5300 doesn’t have an optical low pass filter, which improves image sharpness and detail at the expense of anti-aliasing.

Other features include a 39-point auto-focus system, Scene Recognition System, 1080p60 video recording, 5 fps burst mode and a 3.2-inch articulating LCD.
But the main feature here is the built-in Wi-Fi support. While this might not sound much these days, the D5300 is the first Nikon DSLR to have this feature built-in. It lets you pair the camera with Nikon’s Wireless Mobile Utility app for iOS and Android to transfer your photos wirelessly. There is also built-in GPS for geo-tagging your photos.

The Nikon D5300 will be on sale this month in black, red or gray for $799.95 body-only or $1399.95 with the new 18-140 F3.5-5.6G lens.
Source
Read More
Posted in Cameras, TechNews | No comments

First Nokia Refocus samples are interactive, impressive

Posted on 06:21 by Unknown
Nokia is doing some very interesting things for mobile photography and I don’t just mean the PureView hardware – software like the recent Refocus app creates impressive results. You know how you can zoom in and reframe photos on the Lumia 1020 after the fact? Nokia Refocus lets you do that with focus.

Nokia published the first samples from Refocus that you can play with in your browser.
Easy sharing is vital – Samsung’s Sound & shot feature sounded interesting too, but even we were stumped when it came to sharing those shots. Good thing is Nokia made sure not to repeat that mistake and enabled posting of Refocus images on Facebook and embed them in web pages.
Anyway, here are the sample images for you to play with – just click anywhere and that part of the image will magically come into focus. You can also hit the button in the lower right corner to have the whole image in focus.




The all in focus option is interesting. While bokeh is a great way to simulate a large sensor camera, sometimes you want the whole image to be in focus, but you can’t do that, especially for close-ups.
The way refocus works is snap several photos, with the focus set between the closest and furthest settings. After processing, you get 8 images (so 8 possible focus points), plus an all in focus image. This does raise the question of how long it takes to snap all the necessary photos and process them, but with Snapdragon 800 already joining the WP8 fun this shouldn’t be an issue.
There’s also a color-pop that makes the image black and white except for the part that’s in focus. That doesn’t seem to work with the current web-based viewer though.
Nokia Refocus will be available for the flagship Lumia phones (920, 925, 928, 1020) and the Lumia 1520 phablet in the coming weeks.
Source
Read More
Posted in Cameras, Nokia, Smartphone, TechNews, Windows Phone | No comments

Sony announces new A7, A7R and RX10 cameras

Posted on 06:20 by Unknown
Sony has announced three new cameras, two of which are particularly exciting. Those are the A7 and A7R that have been doing the rounds of the internet the past few days in the form of leaked images. The third is the RX10, which is essentially the RX100 II with high-zoom lens.

The A7 and A7R are the world’s first compact full frame mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras. The only difference between the two is in the sensor used. The A7R has a 36.4 megapixel sensor, the highest for a Sony A series camera, but without an optical low pass filter. You lose the anti-aliasing capability of the filter but instead gain sharper, more detailed images. The A7, on the other hand, has the filter, along with a lower-resolution 24.3 megapixel sensor and a fast Hybrid AF sensor.

Other than that, both cameras have a new BIONZ X processor, 2.4 million dot XGA OLED electronic viewfinder, 3.0-inch tilting LCD, full manual control with front and back control dials, 1080p60 video recording, Wi-Fi and NFC support. Both have a magnesium alloy body and are dust and moisture resistant.
The Sony A7 will be priced at $1699 without a lens and at $1999 with the new 28-70 F3.5-5.6 OSS lens. The A7R will be sold in body-only configuration for $2299. Both will be on sale in December.

Then there is the RX10. It uses the same 1.0-type, 20.2 megapixel CMOS sensor from the excellent Sony RX100 II but pairs it with a 24-200 (35mm equivalent) lens with a constant F2.8 aperture. The increased zoom is great for telephoto shots but comes at the cost of smaller aperture, which is bound to affect the low light performance and depth of field, two things that were exceptional on the RX100 II thanks to its F1.8 aperture.

The RX10 packs the goodies in a spacious, DSLR like body, with a proper grip and manual control dial for exposure and two other user customizable dials. The ring on the lens can be used for zooming or for manual focus and there is a secondary display on top for showing info. The RX10 also has a hotshoe, an OLED viewfinder and a 3.0-inch White Magic tilting LCD on the back. The RX10 also supports Wi-Fi and NFC functionality.
The Sony RX10 will go on sale in November for $1300.
Source 1 • Source 2
Read More
Posted in Cameras, TechNews | No comments

Nikon announces D610 full-frame DSLR

Posted on 06:19 by Unknown
Last year Nikon launched the D600, a full-frame DSLR with a pricetag that didn’t require you to sell your kids to be able to afford it. Now, they have launched the new D610, that features some minor improvements over its predecessor.

One of the new features is a quiet, continuous shutter mode, that allows photographers to shoot discreetly at 3fps in burst mode. Nikon has also improved the white balance on the D610 over its predecessor and it now captures more natural colors than before. Lastly, the speed and performance has also been improved and the D610 is now faster, allowing it to capture at around 6fps in burst mode.
Other than that the D610 is similar to the D600, with the same 24 megapixel full-frame sensor, ISO 100 – 6400 range (can be boosted to 25,600), 39-point auto-focus system, 100 percent frame coverage, 3.2-inch, 921k dot LCD, 1080p30 video recording and dual SD card slots.
The D610 will be available in body-only configuration for $1,999.95 and with AF-S NIKKOR 24-85MM F/3.5-4.5G ED VR lens for $2,599.95 starting late October.
Source
Read More
Posted in Cameras, TechNews | No comments

Saturday, 16 November 2013

Samsung Galaxy NX review: an overpriced Android-powered mirrorless camera

Posted on 12:26 by Unknown


Samsung Galaxy NX review: an overpriced Android-powered mirrorless camera
Samsung's flagship interchangeable-lens camera, the NX300, is by far the company's most impressive shooter to date. It offers stellar hybrid-autofocus capabilities, excellent image quality and integrated WiFi, and it retails for a hair over $550. For all intents and purposes, it's a very competitive option, if not one of the best deals on the market today. It's frustrating, then, that Samsung opted to price the Galaxy NX -- an Android-powered camera based on the NX300 -- at an obscene $1,700, lens included. If you're not a deep-pocketed early adopter, it's absolutely a dealbreaker. But I still enjoyed my two-week test with the Galaxy NX, and if you manage to overlook the MSRP, you might just fall in love.

Hardware

DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
There are two systems to consider when evaluating the Galaxy NX's hardware: the 20.3-megapixel APS-C CMOS sensor and DRIMe IV image processor, and the 1.6GHz quad-core Pega-Q chipset that keeps the Jelly Bean (4.2.2) operating system purring at an entirely usable pace. The NX is first and foremost a camera, and it's a powerful one at that, and smartphone chips, like WiFi, LTE and HSPA+ radios, and a virtually unlimited array of apps, transform this otherwise ordinary mirrorless model into a robust connected beast.
Shape and size aside, the NX is aesthetically more akin to a smartphone or tablet. There are far fewer buttons and dials than you'd expect to find on a camera -- instead, all settings are adjusted from within the Android camera app, which you'll access through the 4.8-inch, 720p, touch-enabled LCD. There's also a 0.46-inch SVGA electronic viewfinder, which outputs a more traditional preview screen, with information like aperture, shutter speed and ISO.
From the front, the Galaxy NX looks like any other EVF-equipped mirrorless camera. It's taller, wider and heavier than most similarly specced models on the market today, but not uncomfortably so. There's a lens release and focus-assist light flanking the 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 kit optic around front, then a pop-up flash (with release), hot shoe, microphone, power button, control dial, video record button and shutter release up top. On the left side, you'll find a standard headphone jack, a micro-USB port (which you'll use to charge the camera) and an HDMI port. The bottom contains a tripod mount and a large door covering the micro-SIM, microSD and battery compartments. All three components, including the relatively massive 4,360mAh cell, slide in behind the large extended grip.

Software and user interface

DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
You've got the full power of Android at your disposal, which means thousands of compatible photo apps to play with. You can install applications to add funky effects to your photos, organize stills and video clips or share your shots with friends. And if you're considering the NX as a newsgathering tool, it is theoretically possible to instantly upload full-res frames directly to the cloud from anywhere in the world. And unlike other Android-powered cameras, like the Galaxy S4 Zoom, the NX features a manual zoom lens, so you can zoom in and focus in any app.
I shot exclusively with the Galaxy NX during a two-week journey around the world. I lugged the camera through Zurich, Tokyo, Taipei and Shanghai every day of the trip, staying online with an unlimited global SIM from KeepGo. That latter bit of technology enabled flawless connectivity everywhere I traveled, letting me use the device dangling around my neck to navigate city streets, respond to email and, of course, share dozens of high-quality photos and videos on Instagram seconds after they were shot. Most of the time I left my smartphone at the hotel, relying on the NX and its fantastic battery to help me navigate each city as I uploaded photos in real time and kept in touch with the office while 8,000 miles from home.
But the moment I returned to New York, the Galaxy NX went into a drawer and didn't re-emerge until I began working on this review. While the NX was a great fit for that two-week tour, it's just not very practical at home. And that makes sense. Snapping a casual photo every other day was much easier to accomplish with a traditional smartphone, and if I'm not exploring a new city, there's really no need to capture images with a fantastic camera.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
Worse yet, however, is the fact that Android ultimately serves to complicate the shooting process here. There's a hardware dial up top, but you need to unlock the NX and launch the camera app to tweak any settings. The interface is nearly identical to what you'll find on the GS4 Zoom, and it's not great. You can select from "expert" options like aperture and shutter priority, or a full manual mode, but the process of tweaking ISO and exposure is far more cumbersome than on a traditional mirrorless camera or DSLR, where dedicated dials and immediately accessible options make on-the-fly adjustments more straightforward.
Of course, if you're shooting through a third-party app, you'll need to depend on that UI for any exposure adjustments. Generally you'll be limited to automatic mode, without an option to change ISO or take advantage of any of the "Smart" options, like Rich Tone or Action Freeze. You can theoretically shoot from the native camera application, save images to the gallery and access them later through another app like Twitter or Instagram, but a bug in the software version I reviewed made sharing full-res images from the gallery impossible. Samsung is looking into the issue, however, and I imagine a fix is in the works. As a workaround, I used a generic Android app called "Images easy resizer" to scale down images and save a copy, at which point I was able to access them through Instagram and Gmail.

Performance and battery life

DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
Settings adjustments aside, the Galaxy NX did a fantastic job in camera mode. It was also very reliable when it came to accessing email, uploading and viewing images, sharing social media updates and even helping me wake up in the morning (there's a speaker and vibration mechanism, which pair nicely with the alarm clock app, just like on a smartphone). It served me well during this vacation, but to take full advantage of Android, you'll need to use the camera daily, even at home. After having it powered off for a couple days, I returned to find dozens of Twitter, Instagram, Hangouts and Google Voice notifications. While they're easy enough to dismiss, it's still a process that I'd prefer to avoid.
Of course, one of the biggest issues with using a camera that runs Android is a delayed start-up. When it's completely powered down, the NX takes a reasonable 28 seconds to boot up before you're ready to snap your first shot. Fortunately, a short press of the power button simply turns off the display, just as it would on a phone, and launching back into the camera from standby takes less than five seconds. In this regard, it's certainly not as speedy as a traditional ILC, but depending on your subject, it should do the trick. You can also configure the NX to jump right into the camera app whenever you press the shutter button, so if you see something you'd like to shoot, but you're currently sending an email or reading a webpage, it's easy enough to switch modes for a moment.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
Just like the NX300, the Galaxy can snap continuous shots at eight frames per second. It also sports an identical hybrid-autofocus system, and adjustments there are consistently speedy and accurate, even in low light. Nighttime shooters will also be pleased to know that the NX can snap stills with a sensitivity of ISO 25,600 -- we'll speak to those results a bit more in the section below, but it's definitely a possibility, especially when you're capturing images to share on the web. You can also shoot stills in RAW. On the video front, expect 1080p video at 30 frames per second or 720p at 60 fps, with generally solid audio capture, too.
Battery life is phenomenal. After deplorable performance with last year's Galaxy Camera, I was definitely concerned about the NX making it through a full day. In practice, however, I had nothing to worry about, as long as I charged the battery overnight. While shooting on Halloween, I spent the day exploring Shanghai, returning to the hotel nine hours later with a 32 percent charge remaining. When you factor in the Google Maps browsing, emailing, Instagram sharing, Foursquare check-ins, 128 photos and nearly three minutes of 1080p video I was able to capture along the way, that's solid performance. Of course, I'd expect nothing less from a 4,360mAh battery pack, but it's great to see that Samsung planned ahead here.

Image quality

IQ-wise, the Galaxy NX is an NX300 through and through. That means image quality is top-notch, and more than adequate for the casual shooting you'll probably be doing. In fact, if the interface wasn't so cumbersome and the camera body so large, I wouldn't hesitate to switch to the NX for all of my important shoots at trade shows and launch events. It's really that great. Let's take a look at some samples.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
This shot of the Grand Hotel in Taipei was captured just before landing at Songshan Airport. The camera was set to auto mode, and opted for a perfect exposure of 1/250 second at f/6.3 and a sensitivity of ISO 100. The image looks perfectly sharp until you zoom all the way in, as you can tell from the 100 percent view in the top-right corner. Even so, while perfectionists may have opted for a higher-quality lens in order to capture even more detail, this frame is perfectly adequate for prints or sharing on the web.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
Food can always present a challenge for even the most capable camera, but the Galaxy NX did a fair job exposing for the uneven lighting on this EVA Air flight between Tokyo and Taipei. Colors and sharpness look great in this 1/50-second, f/4 shot, captured with a sensitivity of ISO 400.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
It was a rainy day in Zurich, but the NX didn't seem to mind. Colors are vibrant and details are fantastically sharp in this 1/80-second, f/5.6 exposure at ISO 800. There is some mild blooming around the text in the 100-percent inset, but you'll only notice it with a 1:1-pixel view on a computer monitor.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
The Galaxy NX had quite a night in Tokyo, as you'll probably gather from the slideshow below (and the full-res samples at the source link way down at the bottom). This group shot was captured at 1/50 second with an aperture of f/3.5 and a sensitivity of ISO 3200, but it looks fantastic, even when viewed at 100 percent.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
Judging from the 100-percent inset, ISO 25,600 presented some challenges for the Galaxy NX, but even the most capable of smartphones wouldn't have been able to snap a shot with this level of sharpness and detail. A 1/30-second exposure at f/3.5 helped to minimize blur, and all things considered, this is a perfectly respectable performance.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
I opted for the NX's "Rich Tone" (HDR) mode when photographing the Shanghai skyline. There was plenty of haze in Pudong, but the camera still did a decent job capturing detail. You can even make out some hotel names in the distance, such as Kempinski in the inset above. Since this was an auto-HDR shot, we don't have exposure information to share, but the NX performed well given the circumstances.
DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
One advantage of shooting with a touchscreen-equipped camera is that you can take full advantage of Samsung's "Beauty Face" mode, which blurs skin and shrinks heads to make your subject CoverGirl-ready. It struggled a bit with my unshaven face, but it's still a fun tool to play with -- especially when you've put on a few pounds after a week of street noodles and buffet breakfasts in Asia.

The competition

DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC
It's safe to say that there's no other Android-powered interchangeable-lens camera, so if that's what you're after, you can look no further than the Samsung Galaxy NX. On that note, if you're here for Android, but you're concerned about the NX's size, you might consider the Galaxy S4 Zoom. But be warned: The Zoom is based on a sluggish chipset, so if you're planning to multitask and use that device as your daily driver, it's not a fantastic fit, either.
On the traditional mirrorless-camera front, you can do a heck of a lot better for only $300 more. Sony's brand-new Alpha 7 packs a full-frame sensor and a decent kit lens, and it's shipping soon for $2,000. Of course, Samsung's NX300 is an obvious pick, too, and at just $550 with a 20-50mm lens, you'll have enough cash left over to pick up just about any smartphone on the market, without a two-year contract, and treat your family to a night on the town to celebrate your fiscal responsibility. Or you can use the leftover dough to fund a flight to China for you and your brand-new (and reasonably priced) ILC.

Wrap-up

DNP Samsung Galaxy NX review a devastatingly pricey Androidpowered ILC

For a first-generation product, Samsung's Galaxy NX really isn't half bad. It's an excellent photo- and video-capture machine, and it even works well as a portable Android device. Sadly, it misses the mark when it comes to integration -- even if sharing photos between apps worked as advertised, it's ultimately nothing you can't do with a WiFi-enabled ILC or point-and-shoot, or even an add-on lens camera like Sony's compact and cheap QX10. If you're curious about the Galaxy NX, head over to a camera store and try one out for yourself, but we can't in good faith recommend that you spend $1,700 on this overpriced hybrid, even if you have the cash to spare

Source: ENGADGET
Read More
Posted in Cameras, Review | No comments

The Best Products of 2013

Posted on 03:10 by Unknown
Best Of The Year 2013 Homepage 

Merriam-Webster's dictionary defines the word "best" as "better than all others in quality or value." That's something we see a lot of at PCMag: every year our analysts review and rate over 2,000 products. They look at computer systems, cameras, mobile devices, software, games, networks, and much more. And every year products improve on the previous year's offerings, both in quality and value. That's why we share with you an annual list of the greatest products.
Of course, you can always consult specific product categories and check our Editors' Choices, and sometimes one category will have many excellent offerings. But oftentimes that's not good enough. You want things narrowed down; you want the winner amongst the winners. That's why we badger the analysts to pick one and only one device in every category for this list.
You won't see just the same old categories as previous years either. We've got several new types of products this year as we keep up with changing technology. For example, 2013 is the first time we're including wearables because smartwatches and digital health/fitness devices (and apps) have come a long way. We also include a high-end toy that's fun for mature children and playful adults alike. The cloud is also making a huge impact on daily life, so we've added our first cloud storage product to the list. We were sure to include everyone—even nascent 3D printers make the cut this year.
One category sadly missing is game consoles. The current crop of consoles is long in the tooth and the new generation—specifically PlayStation 4 and Xbox One—were not available for testing as we published this list. But check back on PCMag in the coming days for full coverage and reviews.
In our list you'll find 100 products in 99 categories. We had one tie, and the products were so great we decided to include both. Of those products, 95 earned our Editors' Choice seal of approval. What's more, 10 of the products earned a perfect score of five stars: Apple MacBook Air 13-Inch, Grand Theft Auto V, Lego Mindstorms EV3, Spaceteam for Android, ifttt, Photoshop, Flipboard for iPad, Synology Diskstation DS1812+ NAS, a Leica camera lens, and the amazing Olympus OM-D mirrorless camera. Those are all products our testers consider flawless in their current incarnations—and they're only likely to get better. The remaining products in this list all boast an impressive 4-star rating at least.
To be eligible for consideration the product had to be reviewed by analysts in our Labs between November 1, 2012 and November 1, 2013. Our experts use industry-standard benchmarks and several tests developed in-house to get quantifiable, reliable, and reproducible results. Only products that are put through the paces and come out on top make it into "The Best Products of 2013."
And now, we proudly present PCMag's list of the Best Products of 2013. Drumroll please! 

 
DESKTOPS
BUDGET DESKTOP
Gateway DX4870-UB2B
  
$499.99
$539.99 at Amazon
The Gateway DX4870-UB2B is a basic tower desktop PC that checks all the boxes you need from a new desktop, particularly if you already have an LCD display you're carrying over. It's speedy for its segment, has spacious storage, will let you keep many documents open simultaneously, and is relatively inexpensive. It's also expandable so it can grow with your family. A great bang for the buck, it's a solid choice.—Joel Santo Domingo


MAINSTREAM CONSUMER DESKTOP
Velocity Micro Vector Z25
  
$999.99
$759.00 at Velocity Micro
The Velocity Vector Z25 is an old-school midtower desktop. It has multimedia and 3D gaming chops, all for a sub-$1,000 price tag. It's the kind of PC you would've paid $2,500 for back in the day, and for multimedia users it comes highly recommended; it has the power to quickly complete tasks with photos and video, while keeping a little in reserve for moderate to hardcore gaming.—JSD


ALL-IN-ONE/TOUCH-SCREEN DESKTOP
Vizio 27-Inch All-in-One Touch PC (CA27T-B1)
  
$1,549
With its great features and performance, the Vizio 27-inch All-in-One Touch PC (CA27T-B1) delivers on the promises made by its futuristic design. A touch screen, hybrid drive setup, quad core processor, and improved trackpad help elevate the system to our highest honors.—JSD


GAMING DESKTOP
Falcon Northwest Fragbox (GeForce GTX 780 SLI)
  
$4,499
High-end gaming rigs like the Falcon Northwest Fragbox (GeForce GTX 780) are made to play premier AAA gaming titles at the highest resolution possible with the highest-quality settings. The Fragbox is certainly capable of that, and it's semi-portable to boot. The latest Fragbox gives users a high-powered fourth-generation Intel Core i7 plus a pair of Nvidia's latest GTX 780 graphics cards. It's smooth as butter on the gaming benchmark tests.—JSD


COMPACT/SLIM DESKTOP
Polywell B8500
  
$499.99
The Polywell B8500 small form factor desktop provides time-critical control and business info, and with its size goes where plain business desktops would fear to tread. It's a good choice for the factory control desk, prepress proof desk, or the broker's workspace.—JSD


BUSINESS/WORKSTATION DESKTOP
HP Z230 SFF Workstation
  
$2,045
$1,601.50 at Amazon
When you buy a workstation PC, you're buying more than just a desktop equipped with powerful components; you're also getting better reliability, tested and certified compatibility with professional software, and a design that lets you fix things quickly and minimize downtime. The HP Z230 SFF Workstation does all of that, and in a notably compact package, giving you a full-featured single-processor workstation you can actually fit on your desk with room to spare.—JSD
 
LAPTOPS
BUDGET LAPTOP
Acer C7 Chromebook (C710-2055)
  
$279.99
£240.00 at Amazon Marketplace
Google's Chromebooks have long promised affordability and simplicity, and the Acer C7 Chromebook (C710-2055) delivers in spades. It's faster, better, and lasts longer than other Chromebooks on the market, plus it offers a host of online and offline tools with a healthy mix of local and cloud storage.—Brian Westover


BUSINESS LAPTOP
Dell Latitude 6430u
  
$1,328
$1,199.75 at Dell Small Business
Road warriors who prefer travelling with a light footprint will dig the Dell Latitude 6430u, a Windows 8-equipped business ultrabook that deftly blends style and performance. With its slick design, excellent keyboard, and great battery life, it's an easy choice for those who want productivity for work without having to settle for a drab, utilitarian business ultrabook.—BW


DESKTOP REPLACEMENT
Apple MacBook Pro 15-Inch (2013)
  
$1,999
$1,994.00 at Amazon
The Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (2013) is the Retina display-equipped system that power users have been waiting for. It takes last year's excellent Retina display upgrade and thinner chassis and adds a powerful Intel Core i7 processor with integrated graphics that performs like discrete graphics. Plus the nine-hour battery life is more than adequate for a day's work. It's the pinnacle of laptops designed for uber-picky power users who need to take their time-sensitive projects with them.—BW


GAMING LAPTOP
Razer Blade (2013)
  
$1,999.99
$1,999.00 at Amazon
The oh-so-portable 14-inch Razer Blade has you covered when you want to take your gaming on the road, with six hours of battery, an Intel Haswell processor, and the latest Nvidia graphics.—BW


ULTRABOOK
Acer Aspire S7-392-6411
  
$1,449.99
$1,519.99 at Amazon
If you're looking for a svelte laptop to show off, yet still be able to do real work in Windows 8, the Acer Aspire S7-392-6411 is the ultrabook you want. It's the current pinnacle of the ultrabook trend and shows the brilliance PC makers can return under Intel's increasingly stringent standards for ultrabooks.—BW


ULTRAPORTABLE LAPTOP
Apple MacBook Air 13-Inch (Mid 2013)
  
$1,099
Best Price at Amazon
Equipped with a fourth-generation Intel Core i5 processor, the latest MacBook Air 13-inch shows decent performance gains. But it's the ultraportable's 15-plus hours of battery life that blows away the competition.—BW 
 
TABLETS & EBOOK READERS
LARGE-SCREEN TABLET
Apple iPad Air
  
$499 and up
$499.00 at Apple Store
Apple's iPad Air isn't a radical break from previous iPads, but it doesn't need to be. It's a well-built, slim, and light platform for a terrific range of tablet apps, with an unusually fast processor and a much lighter frame than last year's model, but no loss of battery life. As with previous iPads, it's close to a no-brainer.—Sascha Segan


SMALL-SCREEN TABLET
Google Nexus 7
  
$269.99
£209.99 at amazon.co.uk
The Nexus 7's $229 price is an amazing value. Its high-res screen is extremely sharp, the battery life is long, and the tablet's body is narrow enough to hold comfortably in one hand. This tablet makes a perfect e-reader or backseat entertainment gadget.—SS


EBOOK READER
Amazon Kindle Paperwhite
  
$119 (with Special Offers)
$119.00 at Amazon
Amazon rewrites the Kindle again to great effect. The revised Kindle Paperwhite is considerably faster and more refined than last year's model, with brighter edge lighting and a useful new Page Flip feature that makes it easier to locate your spot. It's comfortable to hold and lasts for weeks on a battery charge. Plus, Amazon's ebook store and overall app ecosystem remain the best in the business.—Jamie Lendino


IPAD ACCESSORY
Belkin Ultimate Keyboard Case
  
$99.99
$82.94 at Amazon
Keyboard cases for the iPad generally come in either traditional folio or thin-and-light cover styles, but both have their drawbacks. The Belkin Ultimate Keyboard Case splits the difference, combining great protection, sleek design, and a comfortable keyboard all in one great package.—Eugene Kim
 
MOBILE NETWORKS & DEVICES
BEST MOBILE NETWORK
Verizon Wireless 4G LTE
AT&T's network is the fastest, but Verizon's is the best. How'd that happen? The two big carriers weren't far apart in our Fastest Mobile Networks study, but the huge differential in our Reader's Choice study landed Verizon in a solid first place. As the only truly national LTE network, Verizon has you covered.—Sascha Segan



BEST PHONE (TIE)

Apple iPhone 5s
 
$199.99
The Apple iPhone 5s may be the same size as last year's iPhone but its more powerful hardware and software makes a major difference. This is the first 64-bit phone on the market, the first with a usable fingerprint reader, one of the two best camera phones out there, and of course, it runs Apple's unparalleled library of third-party apps.—SS
Samsung Galaxy S4
 
$199.99
Samsung's flagship smartphone is the Microsoft Office of mobile phones: it has something for everyone. Light and slim, the S4 is nonetheless laden with an amazing number of features, from a simplified Easy Mode to special camera modes that let you insert yourself into a shot, and erase photobombers.—SS


IPHONE ACCESSORY
Unu DX Protective Battery Case for iPhone 5
 
$79.95
$79.99 at Amazon
Find yourself scrambling for a charge by midday? Cast your worries away with the Unu DX battery case, which will more than double your iPhone's battery life without adding much bulk. It outperforms many more expensive options, making it excellent value.—Eugene Kim


BLUETOOTH HEADSET
Plantronics BackBeat Go 2
 
$79.99
£68.00 at Amazon
Plantronics stepped up its well-respected BackBeat stereo Bluetooth line this year with the BackBeat Go 2, delivering solid sound quality, a sweat-proof nano-coating, and a comfortable fit at an eminently reasonable price. While there are other solid choices at higher and lower price points, the BackBeat Go 2 hits the sweet spot.—SS


CELLULAR MODEM OR HOTSPOT
Verizon Jetpack 4G MHS291L
 
$49.99
$39.99 at Amazon
A hotspot should always be able to connect. Verizon's Jetpack 4G MHS291L made by Pantech has the longest battery life of any hotspot we've tested: more than 14 hours of solid LTE streaming on a charge. Combined with the nation's biggest LTE network, that means the MHS291L can keep you online almost anywhere.—SS


GPS NAVIGATION
Garmin nüvi 3597LMTHD
 
$379.99
$318.96 at Amazon
Garmin has been in the GPS navigation game for a long time and it shows with the top-end nüvi 3597LMTHD. This model includes a 5-inch glass capacitive display with a sharp (for a GPS) 800-by-480-pixel resolution. In a world of free smartphone GPS apps, the expensive nüvi 3597LMTHD really has to earn its keep—and it does, thanks to beautiful 3D terrain mapping, a brilliant magnetic mount, and improved natural-language voice prompts that are accurate and well-timed. Split-screen, photorealistic 3D lane assistance makes exiting complex highway interchanges a cinch.—Jamie Lendino


SMARTWATCH
Pebble
 
$150
$149.99 at Best Buy
Smartwatches are still in their infancy but the Pebble is the closest to realizing their potential. Its good looks, useful notification support, and growing list of features (thanks to third-party development) make it a far better choice than any other smartwatch currently available.—EK
 
PERIPHERALS & COMPONENTS
KEYBOARD
Microsoft Sculpt Ergonomic Desktop
  
$129.95
$70.00 at Amazon
The Microsoft Sculpt Ergonomic Desktop combines an excellent ergonomic layout with Windows 8 features to power-up your regular PC use in addition to making it more comfortable. Throw in the simplicity of wireless and a distinctive, stylish design and it's one of the best ergonomic wireless keyboards we've ever seen.—Brian Westover


MOUSE
Corsair Vengeance M65
  
$69.99
$59.99 at Amazon
The Corsair Vengeance M65 may be made for gaming, but with its contoured aluminum construction, adjustable 8200 DPI tracking, and rock solid design, it's also one of the best mice, period. Buy it whether you're gearing up for hours of FPS gaming or just want a well-built mouse for work and play.—BW


MONITOR
Acer B296CL
  
$599
$560.99 at Amazon
If you're tired of dealing with the clutter of multiple monitors and their associated cables and power bricks, the time is right to upgrade to an ultra-wide monitor such as the Acer B296CL. It's a reasonably priced 29-inch ultra-wide monitor offering a generous selection of ports, solid IPS color performance, and an ergonomic stand. The panel loses some luminance when viewed from an extreme vertical angle and the monitor does not have an auto-rotate feature, but these are trivial issues. —Laarni Almendrala Ragaza


PROCESSOR
Intel Core i7-4770K

  
$339
$338.98 at Amazon
The quad-core Intel Core i7-4770K is the company's new top-end chip based on its Haswell microarchitecture, and its second processor built on the 22nm process node. It's a 3.5GHz chip with a 3.9GHz Turbo speed and formal support for up to DDR3-1600. The CPU includes a number of new capabilities and enhancements and is a notable step forward in CPU efficiency.—LAR


VIDEO CARD
Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan
 
$999
$1,059.99 at Amazon
Nvidia's supercomputer-inspired GK110 comes to Nvidia's high-end consumer business as the Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan. This $1,000 single-GPU card packs seven billion transistors, 6GB of RAM, and 2,688 shader cores. This is the first time Nvidia has brought a specialized niche product over to the general consumer market. It supports supercomputer technologies like Hyper-Q, Dynamic Parallelism, and GPU virtualization, and is capable of executing any CUDA workload that the high-end Tesla K20/K20X chips support.—LAR 
 
STORAGE
HARD DRIVE
LaCie 5big
  
$2,199
£1,509.99 at Amazon
The LaCie 5big Thunderbolt Series desktop-class external drive gives you a huge 20TB of storage, available instantly. It's the drive to use when you need constant access to all your work or project data. It's also the drive to use if server-based storage is too slow, but you need the gargantuan capacities that a server would provide.— Joel Santo Domingo


SOLID-STATE DRIVE
SanDisk Extreme II 480GB SSD
  
$449
£309.99 at Amazon
The SanDisk Extreme II internal solid-state drive is a great opening volley into the high-end consumer market. It offers enthusiast-level performance from a historically OEM-focused company.—JSD


PORTABLE DRIVE
Seagate Wireless Plus
  
$199.99
Best Price at Amazon
Carrying your entire media library just became a bit easier with the Seagate Wireless Plus drive. It's a 1TB hard drive with a built-in battery, media server, and Wi-Fi router, so you can share videos, photos, and music on the road.—JSD


USB FLASH DRIVE
LaCie XtremKey USB 3.0 (32GB)
  
$84.99
£69.20 at Amazon
The LaCie XtremKey USB 3.0 (32GB) might be the roughest, toughest USB flash drive we've ever dealt with. The LaCie XtremKey USB 3.0 will survive insane amounts of abuse, it looks good, and it's a great flash drive as well.—JSD
 
AUDIO
MP3 PLAYER
Apple iPod touch
  
$229
$292.22 at Cost Central
Smartphones are hogging the spotlight now, but there's still plenty of demand for dedicated music players. The Apple iPod touch (16GB) delivers much more than that. It's basically an iPhone stripped of its calling capability and GPS—meaning you can still run almost all of the 900,000-plus third-party apps and games in Apple's App Store. A dual-core A5 processor, 1,136-by-640-pixel 4-inch display, and excellent-sounding Apple EarPods help seal the deal. Oh, and it's great for playing music and watching TV shows and movies.—Jamie Lendino


HEADPHONES
Bowers & Wilkins P7 Mobile Hi-Fi Headphones
  
$399.99
$292.22 at Cost Central
Bowers & Wilkins, long known for its luxurious high-end audio speakers, takes its first shot at an over-the-ear (circumaural) headphone—and nails it. The P7 sounds exemplary with all kinds of music. Not only that, but the black leather and aluminum design exudes luxury, and is extremely comfortable to wear for long periods of time. The P7 isn't cheap by any means, but you get everything you pay for, and more.—JL


EARPHONES
Klipsch Image X7i
  
$199.99
$199.99 at Amazon
The Klipsch Image X7i delivers amazing audio quality for its price range, with tight bass, crisp highs, and a neutral, well-balanced timbre. It's one of the smallest in-canal earphone pairs we've tested, and it's extremely lightweight. The inline microphone and three-button remote control makes it perfect for your smartphone. Sonically, it's more of a flat-response pair than one for those who love boosted bass response; if that sounds good to you, the X7i is the set to get.—JL


PC SPEAKERS
KEF X300A
  
$799.99
Easily one of the most striking sets of stereo speakers we've tested, the KEF X300A is as close to perfect as we've heard in its price tier. It's an ideal pair of speakers for an apartment, office, or study, and its digital USB connection and 96kHz/24-bit digital-to-analog (D/A) converters ensure pristine sound when connected to a PC or Mac. A switch on the back panel lets you select between "desk" and "stand" (or free space) placement, and KEF throws in a pair of baffles in the box—use them to plug up the rear-facing ports for positioning the X300A system closer to a wall.—JL


WIRELESS SPEAKER
Bose SoundLink Bluetooth Mobile Speaker II
  
$299.95
$299.00 at Amazon
It's a modest evolution of the first version and that's fine, since the original was great to begin with. At just under three pounds, the Bose SoundLink Bluetooth Mobile Speaker II is compact and easy to tote. It folds up nicely with the attached cover which doubles as a power switch, and delivers smooth, balanced sound throughout the frequency spectrum. It also gets surprisingly loud and can easily fill a sizable room with music.—JL


PORTABLE WIRELESS SPEAKER
Bose SoundLink Mini
  
$199.95
$199.00 at Amazon
For a speaker that's only seven inches long, we won't blame you for thinking the Bose SoundLink Mini expensive. But of all the tiny portable Bluetooth speakers we've tested, it simply sounds the best, with surprisingly full, rich bass and a smooth midrange. The sturdy aluminum enclosure recalls the design of 1960s tabletop radios, yet sleeker and updated for today. It's ideal for a desk or nearby bookshelf, and thanks to the included charging cradle, the SoundLink Mini is easy to bring along for tunes on the go.—JL


SOUNDBAR
Sony HT-CT260 Home Theater Soundbar
  
$299.99
$199.00 at Amazon
The Sony HT-CT260 soundbar is one of the most well-rounded speaker systems we've tested. You get a lot for your money here, including stereo Bluetooth streaming, a blue LED status display, three sets of inputs, and a remote control. With powerful bass response and a warm overall sound signature, the HT-CT260 is an excellent buy and an easy upgrade for anyone looking to augment their HDTV in a small living room or den.—JL
 
CAMERAS & CAMCORDERS
POINT-AND-SHOOT CAMERA
Canon PowerShot Elph 330 HS
  
$229.99
Best Price at Amazon
The Canon PowerSHot Elph 330 HS is the camera to get if you're looking for something compact without breaking the bank. It's the best camera we saw this year for less than $250, thanks to sharp optics, impressive performance in low light, an 8x zoom lens, and built-in Wi-Fi.—Jim Fisher


BUDGET POINT-AND-SHOOT CAMERA
Canon PowerShot A1400
  
$109.99
£59.79 at Amazon
If you're looking to spend around $100 for a digital camera, the AA-powered Canon PowerShot A1400 is a solid choice. Like other CCD cameras it's not the best in low light, but it does pack a sharp 5x zoom lens, and it's one of the few compact cameras with an optical viewfinder.—JF


HIGH-END MIRRORLESS CAMERA
Olympus OM-D E-M1
  
$1,399.99, body only
$1,399.00 at Amazon
The OM-D E-M1 isn't a perfect camera, but it's about as close as it gets. The top-end Micro Four Thirds body is an all-weather shooter with an outstanding EVF, 5-axis image stabilization, fast autofocus, and impressive burst shooting. It does well in low light, and even packs Wi-Fi for remote camera control and easy image transfer to your smartphone. —JF


Samsung NX300MIRRORLESS CAMERA
Samsung NX300
  
$799.99 with 18-55mm lens
$697.99 at Amazon
The Samsung NX300 packs a big APS-C image sensor into a svelte body. Its image quality is impressive in all kinds of light, and the autofocus system is impressively quick. There's a sharp tilting rear display with touch input, and built-in Wi-Fi so you can transfer images to your phone or upload directly to social networks. The only thing missing from the NX300 is support for an add-on EVF—you'll need to go with a different camera if that's a must-have feature—JF


SUPERZOOM CAMERA
Canon PowerShot SX280 HS
  
$279.99
A$212.00 at CameraSky
Lots of folks are hooked on SLRs with image sensors and lenses to match. But if you want a lot of zoom in a form factor that can slide into your pocket, you'll need to look at a compact camera like the Canon PowerShot SX280 HS. Its 12-megapixel, 1/2.3-inch image sensor isn't the largest you'll find in a pocket camera, but you can still shoot at moderate sensitivity settings without significant detail loss. It's impressively small, especially when you consider that it houses a 20x zoom lens and packs built-in Wi-Fi and GPS. —JF


FULL-FRAME D-SLR CAMERA
Canon EOS 6D
  
$2,099, body only
$1,299.00 at RytherCamera
Full-frame cameras feature image sensors that match 35mm film in terms of size—that's roughly twice as big as the sensors in entry-level SLRs. They've long been the tools of pros, but the Canon EOS 6D brings full-frame to the masses at a price point that, while not cheap, is within reach of enthusiastic photographers. The huge image sensor does a great job in low light, and when paired with a wide-aperture lens delivers an impressively shallow depth of field. The 6D can shoot at 4.5fps and adds an integrated GPS and Wi-Fi—and its body is impressively compact, not that much bigger than top-end APS-C (Advanced Photo System type-C) SLRs. —JF


D-SLR CAMERA
Nikon D7100
  
$1,199.95, body only
£619.99 at eGlobaL Digital Store
Nikon's D7100 is everything a premium APS-C D-SLR should be. It's got a bright pentaprism viewfinder, a lightning-quick autofocus system, and loads of physical controls. Wildlife and sports shooters will appreciate the 6fps burst rate, and there's a vertical battery grip available for anyone who prefers a beefier camera. —JF


RUGGED POINT-AND-SHOOT CAMERA
Olympus Tough TG-2 iHS
  
$379.99
£215.99 at eGlobaL Digital Store
The TG-2 isn't that different from Olympus's first fast-lens rugged camera, the TG-1, but a few modest improvements and a lower price point make it a winner. The lens opens to f/2 at its widest angle, and the TG-2 is rated for use in up to 50 feet of water. It's also rated to survive 7-foot drops, operate in temperatures as low as 14°F, and to withstand external pressure of up to 220 pounds. This is the go-anywhere, survive-anything camera to get. —JF


LENS
Leica APO-Summicron-M 50mm f/2 ASPH.
  
$7,195
$7,350.00 at Amazon
I've shot with dozens of 50mm lenses over my life, and you simply won't find one better than the Leica APO-Summicron-M 50mm f/2 ASPH. It's absurdly sharp from edge-to-edge, shows no distortion or chromatic aberration, and is impressively compact. Yes, you'll have to pay for the privilege of using it. At close to $7,200 it's one of the most expensive lenses in Leica's catalog, and you'll need to pair it with a full-frame (or 35mm) rangefinder to get the most out of it—but it's worth it.—JF


PRIME-LENS COMPACT
Ricoh GR
  
$799.99
$754.89 at Amazon
The Ricoh GR puts a D-SLR-sized APS-C image sensor into the body of a camera which slides snugly into your jeans pocket. The prime lens doesn't zoom, instead giving you a fixed 28mm-equivalent field of view. It's an f/2.8 design that's sharp from edge-to-edge, with a 16-megapixel sensor that is impressive through ISO 3200. Couple that with an excellent set of physical controls and a sharp, bright rear LCD and you have a camera that will wow you, both with its size and the quality of the photos it captures.—JF


PREMIUM POINT-AND-SHOOT
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 II
  
$749.99
$748.00 at Amazon
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 II is an upgraded version of the RX100, which found itself in this spot last year. It still features a compact body with a 1-inch image sensor and 28-100mm f/1.8-4.9 Zeiss lens, but adds a titling rear display, a hot shoe, and Wi-Fi. The image sensor is still 20-megapixels, but its backside illuminated design showed a 1-stop advantage in low-light image quality in our lab tests. It's the best compact digital camera with a zoom lens we've seen, but you'll have to pay a premium for it.—JF


CAMCORDER
GoPro Hero3 Black Edition
  
$399.99
$329.98 at Gander Mountain
Adventurous outdoorsmen love GoPro cameras for good reason. They're tough yet small enough to mount on your body, or on a snowboard, surfboard, or skateboard. Add a waterproof housing and this camera can capture your extreme, possibly insane, hobby of choice. The Hero3 Black Edition ups the video quality and adds Wi-Fi. It's not without its issues, however—the Wi-Fi can be a little tricky to use, and while the Hero3 can record footage at 4K, it's limited to 15fps at that resolution.—JF


WEBCAM
Dropcam Pro
  
$199
$199.99 at Amazon
Dropcam's approach to the surveillance market is software first. Its CVR, or "cloud video recording," is proof of that, and the service costs you a few bucks per month to store a few days of footage. But the hardware also shines. The latest Dropcam improves on the old in every way with better optics, a wider-angle lens, and a slick-looking black paint job. You don't need to pan or tilt when you use a Dropcam Pro; the sensor is so big that even zooming digitally looks pretty amazing. Ease of use, PC-free setup, sharing video streams, and monitoring from anywhere make the Dropcam Pro a winner. You can buy one at the Apple Store, too.—Eric Griffith
 
HDTVs & HOME THEATER
BUDGET HDTV
Vizio M551D-A2R
  
$1,099.99
$1,048.00 at Amazon
You don't need to spend a lot of money for a great, 3D-capable HDTV. The Vizio M551D-A2R can be found for just over $1,000 and its 55-inch LED screen offers very good contrast and color accuracy for the price. It's a passive 3D screen and comes with four pairs of glasses so you can watch 3D movies and play 3D games with your friends and family right out of the box. Plus it's loaded with plenty of online services and apps.—Will Greenwald


HIGH-END HDTV
Samsung PN60F8500
  
$2,799.99
$2,465.00 at TVSuperStores.com
Plasma might be dwindling but that isn't stopping the technology from producing some amazing screens. Samsung's high-end PN60F8500 is a beautiful 60-inch plasma HDTV that gets very bright and very dark for a contrast ratio of 55,779:1, one of the best we've tested. It's loaded with features and stylish design aspects, including online media services, social network services, voice commands, a touchpad remote, and even a built-in camera for video chat.—WG


BLU-RAY PLAYER
Oppo BDP-103
  
$499
$499.00 at Amazon
Blu-ray players have become a perfunctory, everyday item not many people pay attention to, but there are still a few models targeted at high-end home theater enthusiasts. The Oppo BDP-103 is built like a tank, features 4K upscaling and 2D-to-3D conversion, and has both dual HDMI outputs and 7.1-channel analog audio outputs. If you want to integrate a Blu-ray player into your high-end surround sound system and projector, this is the one for you.—WG


MEDIA HUB
Roku 2
  
$79.99
$78.00 at Amazon
For less than $100, the Roku 2 offers more than 1,000 different content channels including big names like Netflix and Hulu Plus as well as niche services like Crunchyroll and Midnight Pulp. It doesn't have motion controls for playing Angry Birds like the Roku 3, but it does have an even better feature carried over from its higher-end version: a headphone jack in the remote so you can watch what you want without disturbing your significant other.—WG
 
PRINTERS
SMALL-OFFICE INKJET
HP Officejet Pro X551dw Printer
  
$599
£444.42 at Amazon Marketplace
A winning balance of speed, output quality, paper handling, low cost per page, and additional features such as mobile printing makes the HP Officejet Pro X551dw Printer a smart pick over its direct competition. The closest it comes to having a weakness is its print quality, but for most workplaces the HP Officejet Pro X551dw Printer hits all the right marks.—Tony Hoffman


PERSONAL MONO LASER
Samsung Xpress M2625D
  
$120
$139.99 at Office Depot
The Samsung Xpress M2625D printer offers unusually capable paper handling for personal use. In addition to an automatic duplexer, it includes a 250-sheet paper tray and a one-page manual feed slot so you don't have to swap out paper every time you want to print a page on a different paper stock. Its paper handling, solid scores for speed and output quality, and small size make a highly attractive printer for the price.—TH


SMALL OFFICE MONO LASER MFP
Samsung Multifunction Xpress M2875FW
  
$280
£209.99 at Amazon
The Samsung Multifunction Xpress M2875FW has lots of strong points and no notable weaknesses. Its particular balance of speed, output quality, paper handing, multifunction printer (MFP) basics, and small conveniences—like Wi-Fi Direct and the ability to copy single-sided originals to double-sided copies—adds up to the proverbial more-than-the-sum-of-its-parts. That's enough to make it an excellent fit for a micro or small office.—TH


SMALL OFFICE COLOR INKJET MFP
HP Officejet Pro X576dw
  
$799
$718.48 at Amazon
The HP Officejet Pro X576dw Multifunction Printer's mix of fast speed, high-quality output, excellent paper handling, and the convenience of a 4.3-inch touch screen, combined with a long list of MFP features put it way out in front of the pack. That's before considering its low cost per page. It's a laser-class inkjet: the X576dw looks like a laser, feeds paper like a laser, and performs like a laser.—TH


SMALL OFFICE COLOR TABLOID SIZE MFP
Brother MFC-J6920DW
  
$499.99
$229.99 at Amazon
If you need a tabloid-size (11-by-17 inch) multifunction printer that's both inexpensive and loaded with features, the Brother MFC-J6920DW may be what you're looking for. It's the flagship model of Brother's new Business Smart Pro series and is perfect for a micro or small office needing to print and scan at tabloid size. Its combination of duplex scanning, NFC, and large touch screen make it an appealing choice for users who need any or all of these features.—TH


3D PRINTER
Type A Machines Series 1
  
$1,695
The Type A Machines Series 1 is geared toward professionals and hobbyists. It's well-suited for that role, being relatively easy to set up and operate, versatile, and capable of printing good-quality 3D objects. It's able to print at a range of resolutions and has a large print area. There's a lot to like about the Type A Machines Series 1 and we encountered very few problems in testing it. All this is enough to make it the best 3D printer for designers, hobbyists, and makers.—TH
 
PROJECTORS
INTERACTIVE DATA PROJECTOR
Epson BrightLink 436Wi
  
$1,490
$1,490.00 at Epson
The Epson BrightLink 436Wi Interactive WXGA 3LCD Projector brings Epson's leading-edge interactive features to a more affordable projector. The 436Wi offers an attractive balance of image quality, brightness, and price. Unless you need 3D support, it's the short-throw, interactive projector you want. —TH


MOBILE PROJECTOR
NEC NP-M311W
  
$899
$1,490.00 at Epson
The LCD-based NEC NP-M311W projector delivers a bright image, WXGA (1,280-by-800) resolution, 1.7x zoom lens, long lamp life, near-excellent data image quality, and better video quality than most data projectors can offer; plus it is reasonably portable. Unless you require 3D capability or a short-throw lens, its long list of attractive features makes it a compelling choice for a WXGA projector. —TH


HOME ENTERTAINMENT PROJECTOR WITH 3D
Epson PowerLite Home Cinema 3020e
  
$1,899
$1,899.00 at Epson
The Epson Home Cinema 3020e offers high-quality 2D and 3D at full 1080p, both as a home theater projector and as a home entertainment projector that stands up to ambient light. It works directly with HDMI 1.4a devices like Blu-ray players and cable TVs. In most ways the Epson PowerLite Home Cinema 3020e is the 2D and 3D home entertainment projector we've been waiting for. It's an excellent low-cost 3D home theater projector as well.—TH


HOME THEATER PROJECTOR WITH 3D
Epson PowerLite Home Cinema 5020Ube
  
$2,899
$851.85 at Amazon
The Epson PowerLite Home Cinema 5020UBe is an impressive projector for the price. It delivers a high-quality image for both 2D and 3D and a wide range of brightness settings suitable for both theater-dark lighting and a family room with ambient light. Its advanced features include an unusually large zoom and lens shift, an auto-iris, frame interpolation, and super-resolution. Taken together, this constellation of features makes it a highly capable home theater projector for both 2D and 3D.—TH


SCANNERS
SMALL OFFICE DOCUMENT SCANNER
Xerox Documate 5445
  
$1,195
$762.99 at Amazon
The highly capable Xerox DocuMate 5445 desktop scanner delivers fast speed with duplex (two-sided) scanning, an assortment of world class software, and features such as a 75-sheet automatic document feeder (ADF). Its balance of speed, input capacity, duty cycle, and price, along with its well-chosen set of application programs and capable scan utility make the Xerox DocuMate 5445 an excellent choice for moderately heavy-duty use in a small office or workgroup.—TH


PERSONAL PORTABLE PHOTO SCANNER
Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner
  
$149.99
$149.99 at Amazon
The Flip-Pal mobile scanner offers an innovative design with PC-free scanning, a 4-by-6 flatbed, and a 2GB SD card. It has a neat trick for scanning originals that won't fit under the flatbed lid: take off the lid, turn the scanner over, and place the glass on top of the item to be scanned. It offers good scan quality and as a flatbed scanner it eliminates the risk of mangling photos or delicate documents possible with a sheet-fed scanner. Its 1.7-inch LCD lets you preview scans on the spot.—TH
 
NETWORKING
ROUTER
Buffalo AirStation Extreme AC 1750 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router
  
$189.99
$139.99 at Amazon
Buffalo's AirStation Extreme AC1750 Gigabit Dual Band Wireless Router offers good performance and the latest wireless networking standard, 802.11ac. An extremely well-designed and feature-rich user interface caps off this premium, dual-band router, which can also operate as an access point or wireless bridge. Takeaway features include Web filtering and parental controls, Quality-of-Service, scheduled Internet access, and Eco mode, an energy-savings option that allows you to turn off LED, wired LAN, or WLAN on a schedule. Buffalo Technologies stepped up its game since its debut 11ac router, delivering a more mature 11ac router complete with great new management software, good performance, and lots of cool features.—Samara Lynn


NAS (SOHO/PROSUMER)
Seagate Central
  
$159.99 to $219.99
$129.99 at Amazon
The Seagate Central is simply the best fixed, single-drive NAS devices we've tested. It ships in 2TB ($159.99 street), 3TB ($179.99 street), and 4TB ($219 street) models, and supports Windows XP (and later) and Mac OS X 10.4.9 (and later). Use it to share and stream files throughout your home network. Seagate also provides customers a complimentary remote access service; all that's required is setting up an online account for anywhere, anytime access to any data stored on your Central devices.—SL


NAS (SMB)
Synology DiskStation DS1812+
 
$1,000
$839.99 at Amazon
Synology's DiskStation DS1812+ is one of the select products in the annals of PCMag history to achieve a perfect 5 stars out of 5 score. With capacity of up to 32TB (expandable up to 72TB!), and great performance, particularly with write speeds, this box can take just about anything an SMB could think to throw at a NAS. The often-dreary task of storage management is brightened by Synology's Hybrid RAID technology and the ease of configuring its fault tolerance.—SL


NETWORK UTILITIES
WD My Cloud (for Android)
 
Free
The WD My Cloud app is a companion app to Western Digital's My Cloud NAS device. The app delivers a surprisingly robust level of data management as well as anywhere, anytime, remote access. It's a must-have software addition for users of the My Cloud NAS, especially as we ease into the post-PC era and need our mobile devices to interact seamlessly with our home networking devices. A well-designed interface makes managing the My Cloud from any smartphone a snap, letting you perform tasks such as uploading and downloading files, adding folders, sharing files with others, and more.— SL


NETWORK APPLIANCES
Kerio Operator 1210
 
$900
The Kerio Operator Box 1210 is a full-featured VoIP for small business in a compact box. Testing proved that Kerio paid attention to security, with features such as blocking an IP address after a specified number of incorrect SIP login attempts, and changing SIP passwords for specific extensions to block malicious activity. We also like that all call-related data is available for reports and all system activity is logged. VoIP administrators can also look at server health, review recorded calls, and look at information about how long customers are spending in call queues.—SL


NETWORK MANAGEMENT TOOLS
Network Toolbox (for iOS)
 
$5.99
The well-designed Network Toolbox for iOS turns an iOS device into a networking toolkit. It's a one-stop central console chockfull of networking utilities and tools such as SHODAN, FTP, Telnet, Ping, and more. It's so potentially powerful in fact, that upon install, the app flashes the warning: Not intended to assist with analyzing remote sites with the intention of breaking into or exploiting services on those sites. The warning makes sense: Network Toolbox provides just about every utility a would-be hacker needs to access a poorly secured network.—SL

DIGITAL HEALTH/FITNESS
HEALTH GADGET
Withings Pulse
  
$99.95
$99.00 at Amazon
The Withings Pulse takes everything you love about existing top-notch activity trackers and adds a nifty built-in heart rate sensor, giving you a more comprehensive picture of your overall health. Its elegant design, informative display, and wealth of features make it our new favorite activity tracker.—Eugene Kim


RuntasticHEALTH APP
Runtastic PRO (for Android)
  
$4.99
The Runtastic PRO app tracks running, cycling, hiking, and walking. It spits out incredible maps and graphs about your activities and routes accurately and consistently. The PRO version ensures you get auto-pause extra modes, and the ability to search new routes uploaded by other users.—Jill Duffy
 
MOBILE APPS
IPHONE APP
Evernote for iPhone
  
Free
When it comes to staying organized and keeping track of ideas and other information, Evernote for iPhone does the heavy lifting for you. Integrate it with one or two other apps and you can't do better. Its online synchronization is effortless and the search is outstanding; it'll even use OCR to search terms inside images, even with the free version. (A premium account with lots of extras is $5 a month or $45 a year.)—Jill Duffy


IPAD APP
Flipboard
  
Free
It's been years since Flipboard came out on the iPad and it's still the best aggregator of news, social networking, links, video, and images on the platform. Even the page swiping is impressively fast. In version 2, users can create and share personalized magazines—and recipients don't even need to have Flipboard installed to read them.—Eric Griffith


ANDROID APP
Swype
  
Free
The walled-garden of iOS has grown some amazing apps, but the open field of Android has invited incredible innovation at even the most basic level—such as Swype. This application lets you drag ("swype") your finger between letters to create words (no special hand gestures required), and even predicts your next word before you type or swype. Swype also supports gestures for actions like cut and paste and features several other input methods. It sounds simple but it's revolutionary and quickly makes thumb-typing feel antiquated.—Max Eddy
 


SECURITY
PASSWORDS
Dashlane 2.0
  
Free on a single device or $19.99
Dashlane manages and protects all of your passwords. Version 2.0 is better than ever, with automatic form field capture, security breach alerts, secure sharing of login credentials, and a new browser extension for Firefox and Chrome. It generates strong passwords, rates passwords as you type, helps you replace weak passwords, and even keeps a record of your online purchases. You can securely share logins with other Dashlane users and double-secure your data using Google Authenticator. New to Dashlane? It includes built-in training to walk you through all its password management features.—Neil J. Rubenking


SECURITY SUITE
Norton Internet Security (2014)
  
$79.99
$19.00 at Amazon
Norton's excellent blocking of malicious and fraudulent websites will keep you away from danger; it's the touchstone we measure other anti-phishing tools against. Its intelligent firewall sets permissions for known good programs and monitors unknowns for risky behaviors, without ever popping up a confusing query. Multi-layered antivirus protection fends off new threats and roots out those already present. It keeps almost all spam out of your inbox without discarding valid mail. All the components of this suite are top-notch and it does the job without trampling your system's performance.—NJR


STANDALONE ANTIVIRUS
Bitdefender Antivirus Plus (2014)
  
$39.95
Bitdefender's antivirus technology routinely takes top scores in tests by independent antivirus labs, and also scored well in PCMag's hands-on testing. It's one of a very few products that detects phishing sites better than Norton and it can optionally prevent transmission of private data out of your computer. The new Bitdefender Wallet stores passwords and personal data, the SafePay secure browser protects financial transactions, and Bitdefender SafeGo flags dangerous links in your Facebook profile. It even finds unpatched security vulnerabilities. There's definitely a reason for the "Plus" in this product's name.—NJR


PARENTAL CONTROL
OME-Kids
  
$9.95
Setting up OME-Kids email accounts for your children gives them access to spam-free email while enabling you to keep a watchful eye on their correspondence. Each OME-Kids account gets the same extremely accurate spam filtering as the Editors' Choice OnlyMyEmail Personal. In addition you can control your child's email activity at different levels. You can hold all incoming mail pending parental approval, review received mail, or get a BCC of all messages your child sends. As your child gets older you can step down the monitoring level and allow more privacy.—NJR


MOBILE SECURITY
Bitdefender Mobile Security and Antivirus 1.2.3 (for Android)
  
Free app; $9.99 per year
To fully protect your phone, a security app needs to bring together protection from malicious software as well as tools to keep your phone safe from loss and theft. Bitdefender for Android does both gracefully, and at a reasonable $9.99 per year—far less than many other big-name competitors. With it, you can also use SMS commands to take control of your phone when it's missing and evaluate how much of your private information each app accesses. It's lightweight and laser-focused on security.—Max Eddy         

 
SOFTWARE & INTERNET
CLOUD STORAGE & SYNC
Google Drive
  
Free
Part office suite and part file-syncing service, Google Drive retains all the best features and core functionality of its predecessor, Google Docs, while also upping the ante on how much collaboration it enables. That it takes on Dropbox and Skydrive so well to sync files between computers and the cloud is almost just icing on the cake. It is one sweet package.—Jill Duffy


PHOTOGRAPHY/DESIGN
Adobe Photoshop CC
  
$19.99 per month
The gold standard in digital image editing never ceases to amaze us with its ability to top the previous year's release. Not only is 2013's Photoshop CC the first version to be offered in subscription-only format for a reasonable $19.99 a month, but it offers exciting new imaging possibilities with the impressive Camera Shake Reduction feature, Smart Sharpen, Intelligent Up Sampling, and Camera Raw as a filter. Many of the new features target professional designers with more CSS support, automated asset slicing, and conditional actions. No longer are high-end tools restricted to Photoshop Extended edition; you get every Photoshop tool with the subscription, including 3D, video, and image analysis.—Michael Muchmore


OPERATING SYSTEM
Apple OS X 10.9 Mavericks
  
Free
Microsoft made some impressive strides this year with Windows 8.1, but OS X remains the smoothest, most reliable, most convenient, and most manageable consumer-level desktop operating system on the planet. Top-notch, unobtrusive security is a major plus; so is its tight integration with social media and the ability to run Windows applications through third-party apps. Mavericks is loaded with useful features and, best of all, it's completely free.—MM


UTILITY
VMWare Fusion 6
  
$49.99
There comes a time in every Mac user's life when they just have to access something on Windows. Okay, maybe not every Mac user, but more than enough to account for the proliferation of programs out there that allow you to run a full version of Windows (or Linux) virtually, right on your Mac. The smoothest-running and least obtrusive on the market is VMWare Fusion 6. It's compatible with hundreds of operating system "guests," so try them all.—Eric Griffith


VIDEO
CyberLink PowerDirector 12
  
$99.99
$84.99 at CyberLink
CyberLink PowerDirector is a longtime favorite among prosumer video editors. It offers impressive performance, an intuitive interface, and lots of editing goodies. The latest version now has multicam viewing (up to four angles), 3D and 4K editing and output, direct uploading to sharing sites, and can even author a Blu-Ray disc. Considering its price, even serious video editors should look no further.—EG


WEB BROWSER
Google Chrome 27
  
Free
Our speedy Editors' Choice browser made impressive strides in 2013, offering new support for WebRTC which lets the browser act like Skype, using your PC's camera and microphone for real-time communication. The search ad giant also added a new set of "app" capabilities, with new desktop widgets that actually run outside of the browser window. All this is added to the ever-increasing lead in HTML5 support, speed, and simplicity that distinguish Chrome.—Michael Muchmore


WEB APP
ifttt
  
Free
If This Then That, or ifttt, is all you need to remember because this amazingly simple yet powerful service can automate just about anything you do with other Web-based apps, from backing up your photos on Facebook to sending you text message reminders of upcoming appointments.—JD


 
GAMES & TOYS
XBOX GAME
Grand Theft Auto V
  
$59.99
$54.95 at Amazon
GTA V represents the pinnacle of Rockstar Games' design talent. Neighborhoods, mini-games, animations, voice-overs, radio stations—anything you can think of—are wonderfully realized in the fictional city of Los Santos. GTA V even has multiple protagonists you can switch between at nearly any time—a first for the series. As always, Rockstar Games delivers a killer GTA soundtrack, one that contains a satisfying mix of pop, rock, rap, and other genres. Factor in a gang-centric online mode and Grand Theft Auto V becomes the ultimate crime caper of this console generation.—Jeffrey L. Wilson


Nintendo 2DSPORTABLE GAMING DEVICE
Nintendo 2DS
 
$129.99
$141.70 at Amazon
Nintendo's newest handheld is a scaled-back, kid-friendly version of the excellent 3DS and 3DS XL systems. It can't display 3D pictures, but it can play every game and run every app the 3DS can. Its lower price and hinge-free design makes it very tempting for gamers on a budget or parents who don't want to spend $170-$200 on a device their kids will throw around.—Will Greenwald


PC GAME
Bioshock Infinite
 
$39.99
$31.98 at Amazon
The third installment in Irrational Games' impressive saga exploring the devastating effects of isolation (and isolationism) on the human psyche, BioShock Infinite combines familiar gameplay elements with exciting new mechanics, an engrossing story, and stunning graphics that make it surprisingly complex and powerful even by the high standards of the BioShock series.—Matthew Murray


PLAYSTATION GAME
The Last of Us
 
$59.99
$58.32 at Amazon
Naughty Dog, the development house behind the Uncharted and Jax and Daxter series, has created what many have hailed as "the last great PlayStation 3 game." The Last of Us combines action and survival gameplay to tell a character-driven tale about a world destroyed by the Cordyceps fungus, a growth that transforms humanity into zombie-like monsters. (The fungus actually exists in the real world and has unusual effects on its hosts.) Moving and action-packed, The Last of Us deserves to be in all PlayStation 3 gamers' libraries.—JLW


3DS/VITA GAME
Fire Emblem: Awakening
 
$39.99
$39.48 at Amazon
The Nintendo 3DS' Fire Emblem: Awakening isn't radically different from the other games in the strategy RPG series, but there's a refinement on display that makes the title worth picking up. Awakening, like other Fire Emblem games before it, focuses on tactics more so than the grind-heavy gameplay of the Final Fantasy Tactics and Disgaea series. Combat units have their own unique classes, and almost every fighter in your squad has a name, unique art style, personality, and story. A big part of the Fire Emblem experience is perma-death; when your units die, they die for good, so don't get too attached to any one character.—JLW


ANDROID GAME
Spaceteam
 
Free
Originally an iPhone-only title, Spaceteam debuted this year on Android and simply blew away the competition with its sheer oddity. You play over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth with people in the same room, and the game centers around shouting things aloud to your teammates. Things like "jiggle emergency whittler!" or "set Shiftsanitizer to one!" It's a very silly game, and the lively nature of it makes it a joy to play. Bust it out any time you're around others with cell phones (i.e. all the time).— Max Eddy


IPHONE/IPOD TOUCH GAME
Year Walk
 
Free
Year Walk is not like most other mobile games. Instead of brief, almost disposable interactions, this Swedish horror game pulls you in and challenges you with devilish puzzles that require you to use your phone in unusual ways. With starkly beautiful cut-out graphics, the game does a great job establishing a moody atmosphere. It has a few cheap (though effective!) scares, but it feels like a self-conscious effort to make the game scarier. And don't forget to investigate the Year Walk Companion app.— ME


IPAD GAME
XCOM: Enemy Unknown


$19.99
XCOM: Enemy Unknown is a hit console game about a paramilitary organization tasked with defending Earth from an alien invasion. It made its mobile debut this year and it's as good as its bigger brother (minus the detailed graphics of course). You recruit new troops, discover new high-tech weaponry for vanquishing the enemy, and battle it out in randomly generated levels. A recent update added an asynchronous multiplayer mode for mixing it up with friends on the digital battlefield.—JLW


IPAD GAME
LEGO Mindstorms EV3

$349.99
$349.95 at Amazon
The newest version of LEGO's Mindstorms robotics kit is also the best, with a more powerful brain you can program to do anything. The sample robots start deceptively simple and become increasingly complex, and soon you'll find yourself (or your kids) building unique creations and programming them from the ground up. It's an excellent tech toy for adults and a fantastic science and learning toy for children.—WG


Source : PCMag
Read More
Posted in Audio, Cameras, Desktop, Game, Laptop, Mobile, Networking, PERIPHERALS & COMPONENTS, Printers, Projectors, Scanners, Security, Smartphone, Software, Storage, Tablets, TV | No comments
Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • ‘Strata’ for iOS and Android game review
    There are games that are fun. There are games that look great. And then there are games that do both. Strata is one such game that h...
  • Call of Duty: Ghosts Review
    Developer: Infinity Ward Publisher: Activision Platforms: PC, X360, PS3, PS4, Xbox One Price: £39.99 Reviewing a Call of Duty game is a ...
  • Review: Seagate 600 480GB SSD
    Seagate Joins the Fray It’s been quite an interesting turn of events over the past couple years in the storage industry. Whereas practical...
  • CCBoot - LAN Boot Software for Windows
    LAN Boot Solution Background LAN boot is a technology based on IP (Internet Protocol), UDP (User Datagram Protocol), DHCP (Dynamic ...
  • How To Splice Fiber Optic Cable - Mechanical Splice
    Instructions for splicing fiber optic cable with the AFL CS004162 mechanical splice kit. Watch quick overview video at bottom of post. 1.0 ...
  • Smart Power Strip now works with SmartThings WiFi hub to keep your home always connected
    If you couldn't tell by its name alone, the Smart Power Strip's a card-carrying member of the 'internet of things' or, for ...
  • Xbox One vs. PS4: How They Stack Up Today
    Two new gaming consoles. Both very powerful. Both very ambitious. Both about to meet head to head... and do battle for your time, money an...
  • ASUS R9 270X DirectCU II TOP 2 GB
    AMD's new Radeon R9 270X draws its lineage more from the Radeon HD 7800 series than any other. The R9 270X is, for all intents and purp...
  • Corsair Raptor M40 Review
    Manufacturer: Corsair UK price (as reviewed): £44.99 (inc VAT) US price (as reviewed): $59.99 (ex Tax) Along with the Raptor M30, Corsai...
  • Intel NUC DC53427RKE / HYE Review
    Manufacturer: Intel UK Price (as reviewed): £308.32 (inc VAT) US Price (as reviewed): $539.99 (ex TAX) Preferred Partner Price: £308.32...

Categories

  • Android
  • Apple
  • Audio
  • Blogger
  • C/C++
  • Cabling
  • Cameras
  • Cases
  • CISCO
  • Cooling
  • CPU
  • Desktop
  • DNS
  • Ebook
  • Fiber Optic
  • Gadgets
  • Game
  • Google
  • Graphic Card
  • Hardware
  • HDD
  • HTC
  • HTMLCSS
  • Hyper-V
  • Intel
  • iOS
  • iPad
  • Iphone
  • IT
  • jQuery
  • Laptop
  • Linux
  • Mac
  • MacTut
  • Microsoft
  • Mobile
  • Mouse
  • Networking
  • News
  • Nexus
  • Nokia
  • Nvidia
  • OS
  • PERIPHERALS & COMPONENTS
  • Photoshop
  • Printers
  • Programming
  • Projectors
  • PS4
  • Ram
  • RedHat
  • Review
  • Samsung
  • Scanners
  • Seagate
  • Security
  • Server2008
  • Server2012
  • Servers
  • Smartphone
  • Software
  • Sony
  • Storage
  • Tablets
  • TechNews
  • Template
  • Tutorials
  • TV
  • Ubuntu
  • Voip
  • Webdesign
  • Webiste
  • WebServer
  • Win7
  • Win8
  • Windows Phone
  • Wordpress
  • Workstation
  • XBOX

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (495)
    • ▼  December (35)
      • Smart Power Strip now works with SmartThings WiFi ...
      • The Last Days of the DSLR
      • Nokia Lumia 2520 has arrived, check out our hands-on
      • 2 Million Gmail, Facebook and Twitter Accounts Rep...
      • Fleksy predictive keyboard for Android exits beta,...
      • iPhone Anamorphic Lens Lets You Shoot Wider Than W...
      • Nokia Wins Ban on HTC One Mini in U.K.
      • Finally, USB 3.1 Will Feature Reversible Connectors
      • MSI Launches Small But Mighty Z87I Gaming AC and G...
      • Samsung Galaxy S5 benchmark reveals 2K screen
      • NVIDIA Fan in Bejing Builds a 6ft Replica GeForce ...
      • Are dual-booting phones the future of Android?
      • How to Block Websites in Windows 7/8 in Chrome and...
      • How to Control your Android Mobile from PC or Laptop
      • Resize Image without loosing Quality
      • AllCast for Android pushes media to Apple TV and R...
      • Alcatel Idol X+ to launch with smartwatch and smar...
      • The legend of the HTC HD2 continues; aged device r...
      • Amazon Prime Air drones revealed on 60 Minutes, ai...
      • Samsung to create 20 MP camera sensor for future f...
      • Oppo's swiveling N1 smartphone to be available wor...
      • FileMaker Pro 13 Prematurely Appears on Apple's On...
      • Sony Vaio Tap 11 Review
      • Dell preparing to squeeze 4K resolution onto a 24-...
      • Microsoft releases VideoLoops: A GIF creator tool ...
      • Pebble Smartwatch for Android and iOS Hit Amazon f...
      • 3D Printing Market Forecasted For Explosive Growth...
      • ASUS Transformer Book T100 review: a Windows table...
      • Xbox One's 500GB HDD swapped for bigger, faster dr...
      • U.S. Army Saved $130 Million by Stealing Software
      • Xbox One Scores Big on Black Friday Surpassing PS4...
      • Buying Guide: Find the best headphones
      • Sailfish OS will be available for Android users to...
      • Amazon Cyber Monday Is The Real Deal
      • Nvidia Calls PC "Far Superior" to Video Game Consoles
    • ►  November (332)
    • ►  October (12)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ►  August (2)
    • ►  July (10)
    • ►  June (42)
    • ►  May (35)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile