X
Trending
Apple Vision Pro review: Fascinating, flawed, and needs to fix 5 things
I've tried the top XR headsets. Here's the one most people should buy
ChatGPT vs. ChatGPT Plus: Is the subscription fee worth it?
Have 10 hours? IBM will train you in AI fundamentals - for free
How to upgrade Windows Home edition to Pro
7 useful things to do with your Flipper Zero
The Apple Watch to buy this year
Meta's $299 Ray-Ban smart glasses may be the most useful gadget I've tested all year
iPhone 15 Pro review: Who this upgrade will wow
Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra review: One of the best smartphones of the year
Sonos Era 300 review: Close to a perfect smart speaker
Do you need antivirus on Linux?
Best laptops
Best VPNs
Best TVs
Best Headphones
Best robot vacuums
ZDNET Recommends
Tech
Gaming
Headphones
Laptops
Mobile Accessories
Networking
PCs
Printers
Smartphones
Smart Watches
Speakers
Streaming Devices
Streaming Services
Tablets
TVs
Wearables
Kitchen & Household
Office Furniture
Office Hardware & Appliances
Smart Home
Smart Lighting
Yard & Outdoors
Innovation
Artificial Intelligence
AR + VR
Cloud
Digital Transformation
Energy
Robotics
Sustainability
Transportation
Work Life
Accelerate your tech game
Paid Content
How the New Space Race Will Drive Innovation
How the metaverse will change the future of work and society
Managing the Multicloud
The Future of the Internet
The New Rules of Work
The Tech Trends to Watch in 2023
Business
See all Business
Amazon
Apple
Developer
E-Commerce
Edge Computing
Enterprise Software
Executive
Google
Microsoft
Professional Development
Social Media
SMB
Windows
Digital transformation: Trends and insights for success
Software development: Emerging trends and changing roles
Security
See all Security
Cyber Threats
Password Manager
Ransomware
VPN
Cybersecurity: Let's get tactical
Securing the Cloud
Advice
Deals
How-to
Product Comparisons
Product Spotlights
Reviews
Buying Guides
See all Buying Guides
Best all-in-one computers
Best budget TVs
Best gaming CPUs
Best gaming laptops
Best gaming PCs
Best headphones
Best iPads
Best iPhones
Best laptops
Best large tablets
Best OLED TVs
Best robot vacuum mops
Best rugged tablets
Best Samsung phones
Best smart rings
Best smartphones
Best smartwatches
Best speakers
Best tablets
Best travel VPNs
Best TVs
Best VPNs
Best Coupons
tomorrow
belongs to those who embrace it
today
ZDNET France
ZDNET Germany
ZDNET Korea
ZDNET Japan
Go
Most Popular
See all Topics
Finance
Education
Health
Special Features
ZDNET In Depth
ZDNET Recommends
Newsletters
Videos
Editorial Guidelines
Trending
Apple Vision Pro review: Fascinating, flawed, and needs to fix 5 things
I've tried the top XR headsets. Here's the one most people should buy
ChatGPT vs. ChatGPT Plus: Is the subscription fee worth it?
Have 10 hours? IBM will train you in AI fundamentals - for free
How to upgrade Windows Home edition to Pro
7 useful things to do with your Flipper Zero
The Apple Watch to buy this year
Meta's $299 Ray-Ban smart glasses may be the most useful gadget I've tested all year
iPhone 15 Pro review: Who this upgrade will wow
Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra review: One of the best smartphones of the year
Sonos Era 300 review: Close to a perfect smart speaker
Do you need antivirus on Linux?
Best laptops
Best VPNs
Best TVs
Best Headphones
Best robot vacuums
ZDNET Recommends
Tech
Gaming
Headphones
Laptops
Mobile Accessories
Networking
PCs
Printers
Smartphones
Smart Watches
Speakers
Streaming Devices
Streaming Services
Tablets
TVs
Wearables
Kitchen & Household
Office Furniture
Office Hardware & Appliances
Smart Home
Smart Lighting
Yard & Outdoors
Innovation
Artificial Intelligence
AR + VR
Cloud
Digital Transformation
Energy
Robotics
Sustainability
Transportation
Work Life
Accelerate your tech game
Paid Content
How the New Space Race Will Drive Innovation
How the metaverse will change the future of work and society
Managing the Multicloud
The Future of the Internet
The New Rules of Work
The Tech Trends to Watch in 2023
Business
See all Business
Amazon
Apple
Developer
E-Commerce
Edge Computing
Enterprise Software
Executive
Google
Microsoft
Professional Development
Social Media
SMB
Windows
Digital transformation: Trends and insights for success
Software development: Emerging trends and changing roles
Security
See all Security
Cyber Threats
Password Manager
Ransomware
VPN
Cybersecurity: Let's get tactical
Securing the Cloud
Advice
Deals
How-to
Product Comparisons
Product Spotlights
Reviews
Buying Guides
See all Buying Guides
Best all-in-one computers
Best budget TVs
Best gaming CPUs
Best gaming laptops
Best gaming PCs
Best headphones
Best iPads
Best iPhones
Best laptops
Best large tablets
Best OLED TVs
Best robot vacuum mops
Best rugged tablets
Best Samsung phones
Best smart rings
Best smartphones
Best smartwatches
Best speakers
Best tablets
Best travel VPNs
Best TVs
Best VPNs
Best Coupons
More
See all Topics
Finance
Education
Health
Special Features
ZDNET In Depth
ZDNET Recommends
Newsletters
Videos
Editorial Guidelines
photo galleries
photo galleries
Eten P300
Microsoft OS fans seeking a connected device face a dilemma. Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Phone Edition caters for more than just data and voice telephony, and can provide all the portable computing that some users require. But the hardware is relatively bulky, and it can be tricky to use for voice calls. Windows Mobile 2003 for Pocket PC Smartphone edition, on the other hand, is limited in terms of features, but more phone-like in portability. On paper, the £351.33 (inc. VAT) P300 handheld/phone combo from Eten looks like a good compromise between the two extremes.
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Smartphones
Microsoft Wireless Optical Desktop Pro
Microsoft's Wireless Optical Desktop Pro is very similar to the <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/inputdevices/0,39023910,39118060,00.htm">Desktop Elite</A>, but features the natural keyboard design which some people may find more comfortable to type on. Although this helps with the ergonomics of the desktop, there are also some points that detract from the comfort of using this desktop set.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
Dell Latitude D505
Dell's Latitude D505 range is aimed at cost-conscious business buyers, with systems starting at just £699 (ex. VAT). The D505 is a straightforward two-spindle notebook that isn't especially thin (3.31cm) or light (2.3kg), despite Dell's classification, and which bears a close family resemblance to the <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/notebooks/0,39023985,39145636,00.htm">Inspiron 510m</A> that we recently reviewed. Because this is a 'business' notebook, the D505 is soberly clad in silver-grey plastic, and runs Windows XP Professional rather than Home. Although it's available in a range of Pentium M-based configurations, our review sample gave us the chance to evaluate the new Celeron M processor, which is a cut-down version of Intel's flagship mobile CPU.
20 years ago
by
Charles McLellan
in
Laptops
Vodafone Power Handheld
Mobile professionals are forever seeking the Holy Grail of portable computing: always-on, high-speed data connection; a screen big enough and with high enough resolution to allow serious data viewing; and a keyboard capable of proper data entry. All this, crucially, needs to be packed into a pocketable device. So does Vodafone’s Power Handheld, the latest offering to target all these goals, hit the back of the net?
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
IdeaFisher Pro
Writing can be a drag. You know what you want to deliver, just not quite how to get it across. You have ideas, thoughts, themes running through your head, but when they turn up on paper the words don’t convey precisely what you mean. The sentences look clumsy, unsophisticated and imprecise. IdeaFisher is a tool designed to help you get the words on the pages and the thoughts in your head to match up, and to help you have those thoughts in the first place.
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Developer
Dell Inspiron 510m
Observers of the notebook scene will have long concluded that Dell can make thoroughly worthy mid-range products, and the Inspiron 510m is further evidence of this. Of its kind, the 510m is notably well equipped. If you're happy to trade off size and weight for flexibility and connectivity, you might as well get the works -- and with parallel, serial, dual USB, IEEE 1394, infrared, SVGA, PC Card, modem and 10/100 Ethernet, there's not a lot you can't plug in except a PS/2 keyboard or mouse.
20 years ago
by
Rupert Goodwins
in
Laptops
Toshiba T61
If you need to give a presentation that includes ad hoc material, Toshiba's T61 could come in handy. As well as being a 1500 ANSI Lumens XGA LCD projector, it features a Visualiser unit, which can relay live images of printed documents or 3D objects. So, as well as being a data projector, the T61 can operate like a trusty old overhead projector.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
Nokia 6600
Nokia’s 6600, the company’s third Symbian smartphone, is based on the Series 60 platform. It succeeds the <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,10005394,00.htm">3650</A> with its quirky circular keypad, which in turn replaced the <A href="http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/hardware/mobilephones/0,39023925,10002733,00.htm">7650</A> -- Nokia’s first camera phone.
20 years ago
by
Andrew Swinton
in
Mobility
Pinnacle Studio 9
One of the problems facing the developers of non-linear editing (NLE) software at the consumer end of the market is improving the application’s capabilities without making it too complicated. Or, in Pinnacle’s case, stepping on the toes of the more advanced NLE software that they sell (Liquid Edition). With Studio 9, however, it has achieved this by leaving the already intuitive front end alone, and tucking the new features beneath the surface.
20 years ago
by
Laurence Grayson
in
Developer
Siemens SX1
Siemens’ SX1 was announced almost a year ago at the 3GSM World Congress in February 2003. At the time we expected to see it in the shops by summer. But summer came and went, as did autumn, and the SX1 failed to materialise. Now, almost a year after it was first mentioned, the SX1 is here, and Siemens at last has a phone with the Symbian operating system in its portfolio. Our first thought on receiving a review unit was that the SX1 -- which costs around £250 (inc. VAT) with a contract and £450 SIM-free -- may have lost ground on the competition during the hiatus between announcement and appearance. So has it?
20 years ago
by
Sandra Vogel
in
Mobility
Nokia SU-1B Digital Pen
Nokia’s SU-1B Digital Pen is the most compact design among the current crop of (somewhat hefty) Anoto-based digital pens. And size does matter, because great functions are secondary if you struggle to write with a digital pen.
20 years ago
by
Andrew Swinton
in
Hardware
Logitech Mobile Bluetooth Headset
The Mobile Bluetooth Headset's soft styling and neat carry case give it a more gentle appearance than many a competing device, but is there substance behind the pleasing design? That's debatable: battery life is good, certainly, but this isn't the cheapest headset we've examined, and it lacks extra functions.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
i.Tech Bluetooth Clip Headset
The i.Tech Bluetooth Clip headset aims to solve the problem of looking a bit silly through a different design. The main body of the headset is a clip which attaches to your jacket or other clothing, with a small ear bud used for sound output.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
Jabra BT200
Jabra is another company trying to make the headset look less like a growth on your ear. The BT200 is an inexpensive, unsophisticated headset that's suitable for less demanding users, and is designed to be less obvious in use.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
Sony Ericsson HBH-35
Sony Ericsson has designed a sleek and stylish headset that manages to be reasonably unobtrusive, despite having a boom microphone. Also, although it's at the heavier end of the range of headsets, its design means its still quite comfortable. It's also one of the highest-priced Bluetooth headsets we've seen.
20 years ago
by
Jonathan Bennett
in
Hardware
Load More