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Equiinet NetPilot Plus
Swindon-based Equiinet is one of the longest established of the server appliance vendors with NetPilot products to suit a range of small to medium sized companies. These provide the usual file sharing, email and Web server facilities but the emphasis these days is more on network security, with additional antivirus, anti-spam and content filtering applications now also included as standard.
19 years ago
by
Alan Stevens
in
Networking
EmergeCore IT-100
Described as 'IT in a box', the IT-100 from <a href="http://www.emergecore.com/">EmergeCore</a> is designed to provide just about everything needed on a small business server. That includes not just file, email and Web servers, but a full set of gateway security services, including anti-virus scanning, spam blocking and VPN remote access. Browser-based mail access is also provided, added to which the appliance hosts EmergeCore’s own CRM (Customer Relationship Management) application.
19 years ago
by
Alan Stevens
in
Networking
Axentra Net-Box H-85
Axentra’s Net-Box H-85 is a remarkably affordable server appliance, aimed primarily at the home networking market. It could also be used by a small business, although the company offers more powerful OfficeSeries products, starting at £699 (ex. VAT), that might be more suitable.
19 years ago
by
Alan Stevens
in
Networking
GhostSurf 2005 Platinum
The Internet is no longer a safe place to be. Spam email and Internet-related crime is rife because unscrupulous people are making a living out of exploiting users' unprotected surfing habits, email addresses and data stored on hard disk drives. <a href="http://www.tenebril.com">Tenebril's</a> GhostSurf 2005 Platinum helps to keep your personal information safe while you browse the Internet and helps to reduce the risk of being hacked or targeted with unwanted email.
19 years ago
by
Chrstian Harris
in
Security
Contribute 3.0
Web publishing isn't for everyone -- it’s generally time consuming and you need to know the basics of HTML. Depending on your job role, you probably don't even have permission to alter information on your company’s Web site. Macromedia’s Contribute can alter all that, allowing authorised users to create, edit and publish Web pages to an existing Web site or intranet without knowing the first thing about HTML and FTP.
19 years ago
by
Christian Harris
in
Developer
Defrag Manager 3.0
Hard disk drives are lousy at housekeeping. When files are created, deleted or modified it's a certainty they will become fragmented. This reduces their performance and reliability, as their drive heads have to search for all the pieces of data in different locations. Defragmenting a hard disks helps to reorganise non-contiguous files into contiguous files and optimise their placement on the hard disk for increased reliability and performance.
19 years ago
by
Christian Harris
in
Reviews
Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard
For some users, a handheld and a keyboard can be a realistic substitute for a notebook system. Although lacking processing power, storage capacity, screen size and so on, such a solution is incredibly portable. There are many portable keyboards to choose from, but unless you go for the futuristic laser-based <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/inputdevices/0,39023910,39165419,00.htm">I.TECH Virtual Keyboard</a>, they mostly interact with your handheld using a physical connector or via infrared. <a href="http://www.thinkoutside.com">ThinkOutside</a> recently introduced its Stowaway Universal Bluetooth Keyboard, which takes the wireless connection concept to the next level.
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Hardware
Orange SPV C500
As far as Windows Mobile-based smartphones are concerned, Orange leads the field. The company's <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,10002142,00.htm">SPV</a> was the first of its kind in the UK, and Orange remained the only player in this market until Motorola came along with its clamshell <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,39118603,00.htm">MPx200</a> late last year. The SPV C500 is Orange’s fourth SPV (Sound, Pictures, Video) device, and it's a significant improvement on what’s gone before.
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
T-Mobile 3G Communication Centre
T-Mobile is the third UK network operator to release a 3G datacard, following similar mobile data solutions from <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/networking/0,39023970,39152563,00.htm">Vodafone</a> and <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/networking/0,39023970,39163417,00.htm">Orange</a> earlier this year. To differentiate its product (the PC Card hardware, the <a href="http://www.lucent.com/press/0203/030218.nsa.html">Merlin U530</a>, is the same one distributed with the Orange package), T-Mobile offers a flat-rate tariff and bundles connectivity to its network of Wi-Fi hot-spots (a move recently matched by Vodafone).
19 years ago
by
Matt Loney
in
Hardware
CoPilot Live Smartphone
ALK's CoPilot navigation software for Windows Mobile handhelds has impressed us in the past, and now the company is the first to deliver a solution for Windows Mobile-based smartphones. The only other navigation application for smartphones -- <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,39162427,00.htm">Route 66 Mobile Britain 2005</a> --runs on the Symbian platform.
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
I.TECH Virtual Keyboard
Handheld computers with integrated keyboards used to be quite common. But Psion abandoned this market, and Microsoft has allowed its Handheld PC variant of Windows CE to wither on the vine. This leaves users with few options -- in the UK, you're basically stuck with grey imports or obsolete hardware. External keyboards for handhelds are therefore quite popular, and the best of them allow for touch typing at reasonable speeds. But even the smallest of these folding keyboards represents a significant addition to your travel kit, and they often feel cramped to use. I.TECH (part of the Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa group) has identified a gap in the market and come up with the Virtual Keyboard: this is a small unit that projects a keyboard onto any surface, and connects to a range of smartphones, handhelds and notebooks. It’s certainly innovative, but how well does it work?
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Hardware
Bluetake i-Phono BT420EX
Bluetooth add-ons are nothing new -- for example, notebooks and desktop computers have been able to use USB Bluetooth adapters for some time. But owners of portable audio devices -- such as non-Bluetooth mobile phones and digital music players -- have not had similar opportunities. Bluetake’s i-Phono BT420EX, which is available from <a href="http://www.eurosimm.com/sites/eurosimm.nsf/home.html">EuroSimm</a>, changes this, allowing you get wireless stereo sound from any audio device via its 3.5mm jack.
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Hardware
Fujitsu Siemens LifeBook P7010
Fujitsu Siemens’ P-series ultraportable notebooks tend to draw admiring comments -- even, as we found during this review, from seasoned technology reporters. P-series systems are comfortably small enough that when the person in front of you in economy class leans back, you don’t have to worry about the screen breaking. The latest in the line, the 1.1GHz ultra-low-voltage Pentium M-based P7010, has one of the sharpest, crispest LCD screens we’ve ever seen; it also packs an enormous amount into a very small space, including a CD-RW/DVD-ROM combo drive, slots for the three main types of flash memory cards, and 802.11b/g wireless networking. At £1,399 (ex. VAT) including upgrade options such as an 80GB hard disk and 512MB of RAM, the 1.3kg P7010 is extremely good value and gets a well-deserved Editors' Choice award.
19 years ago
by
Wendy M Grossman
in
Laptops
Orange 3G Mobile Office Card
Back in April, Vodafone stole a march on the competition by becoming the first UK mobile operator to launch a business-orientated 3G data device -- the <a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/networking/0,39023970,39152563,00.htm">Mobile Connect 3G/GPRS datacard</a>. Vodafone's 3G card has certainly widened the choice for mobile workers seeking a high-speed Internet connection on the move, but it’s not all roses: the pricing is high -- around £85 a month to download 500MB -- and the company's 3G coverage remains fairly patchy. Vodafone obviously needs a healthy dose of competition, and that has now arrived following the launch in July of Orange's 3G Mobile Office Card.
19 years ago
by
Andrew Donoghue
in
Hardware
Rock Tablet T200
<a href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/notebooks/0,39023985,39157115,00.htm">Tablet PCs</a> have not exactly set the mobile computing world on fire since they first appeared in 2002. Price is often cited as a reason for their relative lack of popularity -- whether you choose the swivel-hinged convertible notebook style or the keyboard-less slate style, there's a premium to pay for Windows XP Tablet PC Edition (TPCE).
19 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
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