Features
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HTC One: First impressions
Our first impressions of the HTC One, including what impressed us and what did not.
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Preview: HTC One
HTC has just unveiled its latest Android smartphone, the One.
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Motorola RAZR M unboxing and first look
We unbox and take a first look at the Motorola RAZR M.
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Review: Samsung Galaxy S III 4G
The Samsung Galaxy S III 4G offers fast data speeds but battery life is poor.
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Android vs. iOS vs. Windows Phone
The past year has been a remarkable one for smartphones, with the meteoric rise of Google's Android OS, the restart of Microsoft's mobile strategy with its much-ballyhooed release of Windows Phone 7 and the continuing success of Apple's iPhone, buoyed by its new availability to Verizon subscribers. Never has there been so much choice in the smartphone market. As a result, hype and overstatement have been the order of the day.
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Why there's no stopping the Android train
It's a rare week indeed that doesn't see the emergence of some fresh news of Android's ascendance, but lately the evidence has been coming particularly fast and furious, suggesting that there really is no stopping the mobile platform--at least not anytime soon.
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What’s life really like on the NBN? (Part II)
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Intel claims Haswell will offer 50 per cent more battery life in laptops
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AusCERT 2013: NBN users need security professionals’ help, says Google
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UPDATED: 4G in Australia: The state of the nation
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ASIC debacle: Conroy open to transparency over website blocks
Deploying Flash in the Enterprise
Flash is quickly emerging as the preferred way to overcome the nagging performance limitations of hard disk drives. However, because flash comes at a significant price premium, outright replacement of HDDs with flash only makes sense in situations in which capacity requirements are relatively small and performance requirements are high. Learn how deployment approaches-including hybrid storage arrays, server flash, and all-flash arrays-that combine the performance of flash with the capacity of HDDs can be cost effective for a broad range of performance requirements.
ASIC Optimises and Promotes Network Automation Using HP Software
Allianz Shared Infrastructure Services SE (ASIC) wanted to replace its current suite of management tools, some of which had been developed in-house, with a standard solution for the management of 600 network components in its data centre, in order to reduce costs and further improve quality. Find out what approach they took download today.
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