PC Magazine - 22 May 2007

Language: English
Paperback: 106 pages
Format: PDF
Size: 9 Mb

PC Magazine, the most important technology publication in the world, delivers authoritative, labs-based comparative reviews of computing and Internet products to more than 6.6 million highly engaged technology buyers. PC Magazine defines technology for e-business and is the only magazine with in-depth reviews and accurate, repeatable testing from PC Magazine Labs placed in the unique context of today's business technology landscape. To meet its readers needs for buying information that is as current as it is comprehensive, PC Magazine publishes 22 times a year in print and continuously on the Web.

CONTENT:

First Looks
Cambridge SoundWorks Radio CD 745i
Netgear Digital Entertainer HD EVA8000
LG Super Blu Player (BH100)
BufferZone Pro 2
Toshiba HD-XA2
Site of the Week: Terapad
ACT! by Sage Premium for Workgroups 2007
Corel WordPerfect Lightning (beta)
CardScan Executive
DriveSentry 2.1
Micro Electronics PowerSpec V300
Sony VAIO VGC-LS25E
Spyware Doctor with AntiVirus 5.0
ViewSonic VX2245wm ViewDock
Canon imageClass MF4150
HP Color LaserJet CM1015 MFP
Acer Aspire 9300-5005
Dell XPS 710 H2C
Site of the Week: Ancestry.com
Canon PowerShot A550
Casio Exilim EX-S770
Samsung SCH-U740
Motorola RAZR V3xx
Acer Aspire L310
Geocache Navigator
Toshiba Satellite A135-S4467

Wikipedia's Opponent. Wikipedia's central tenet, that users can always trust the masses to be wise, has been rocked to its core by two recent high-profile snafus. In the first, prolific contributor and editor Essjay turned out to be just a 24-year-old college grad, instead of a tenured professor. And in the second, a newspaper editor was falsely implicated in the John F. Kennedy assassination. That is why Larry Sanger, who was with Wikipedia at its inception in 2001, has launched Citizendium. The site follows the Wikipedia model but submits certain articles for expert review.

"The world needs a better, more authoritative, more reliable free encyclopedia," Sanger says.

Windows' Words of Doom. When using Microsoft Windows, there are three words I dread to hear: Preparing To Copy. You see, these three little words are wrapped up in a mess that's been around pretty much since the first versions of Windows, and although I haven't used Vista enough to know for sure, the ongoing copy chaos seems like some sick joke that must be absolutely hilarious to Microsoft insiders. This column is an homage to the Big Seven—the seven idiotic Windows glitches that make it so difficult to move files from point A to point B. Golly, all these have been fixed with Vista, right? Uh, right? Hello?

The First Personal Submarine. Dutch company Uboatworx has begun producing the first commercial recreational submarine, called the C-Quester. It can operate for 2.5 hours and dive up to 150 feet underwater. The pressurized cabin has a filtration system that recycles air, adding oxygen to maintain air quality, and the boat is powered by three electric motors that can plug in to charge. It now comes as a one-seater; a two-seater is due in June.

more inside ....

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