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Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

Aerocool Project 7 P7 650W Platinum Power Supply Review
Asus ROG Zenith Extreme (Ryzen Threadripper) Motherboard Review
ASUS ZenFone AR Review: Google Tango And Daydream VR Take Center Stage
BitFenix Nova TG PC Case Review
Corsair TX-850M 850W PSU Review
Drevo Calibur 71-Key Mechanical Keyboard Review
FSP Windale 4
Game Max Iceberg 240mm Liquid Cooler Review
Team Group Delta RGB DDR4-3000 16GB Review
TP-Link Archer C5400v2 Wireless Router Review



Aerocool Project 7 P7 650W Platinum Power Supply Review

Today we take a look at one of the latest power supplies from Aerocool – their Platinum Grade Project 7, in a 650W capacity. Highly regarded tech publication Techpowerup (https://www.techpowerup.com/) were heavily involved in the production of this unit putting it through weeks of beta testing while offering advice before it went into production. It is a fully modular supply shrouded with a perforated mesh style surround offering RGB fan support. Its expensive, but competitively priced when looking at similar offerings from market leaders.

Read full article @ KitGuru

Asus ROG Zenith Extreme (Ryzen Threadripper) Motherboard Review

Today, we’ll be taking a look at the Asus ROG Zenith Extreme Motherboard. It utilizes the latest X399 chipset from AMD for their new TR4 platform, and is suitable for all Ryzen Threadripper processors. It’s designed for the extreme high-end enthusiast and content creators who require high multi-core/multi-thread performance. It comes absolutely packed with features which includes their Areion 10G card, Supreme FX audio, LiveDash OLED, 2 x USB 3.1, 8 x USB 3.0, 6 x SATA ports, 1 x U.2, Gigbit LAN, onboard wifi, onboard power and reset buttons, DIMM.2 slot for M.2/PCIE SSDs and much much more!

Furthermore, it also supports NVIDIA 4-Way SLI, AMD 4-Way CrossFireX, as well as DDR4 memory in quad channel up to 3600+(OC).

Read full article @ FunkyKit

ASUS ZenFone AR Review: Google Tango And Daydream VR Take Center Stage

Owners of the ASUS ZenFone AR may be tempted to ask their friends and co-workers, "Do you even AR, bro?". Asking that question is a surefire way to solicit puzzled (and perhaps annoyed) looks, but once they see what the ZenFone AR is capable of, those dirty glances and quizzical faces will quickly morph into ones of excited curiosity, and maybe even jealously. That's because this whole augmented reality business is rather new, and the ZenFone AR is one of only two smartphones to support Google's Tango (formerly Project Tango) AR platform.

The ZenFone AR also supports Daydream, Google's mobile virtual reality play. Being Daydream-ready is not quite as exclusive as club Tango, though it is hardly a crowded one, with less than a dozen handsets meeting the requirements for Daydream. That said, the ZenFone AR is the only smartphone out there to support both...

Read full article @ HotHardware

BitFenix Nova TG PC Case Review

BitFenix released the Nova TG, that classic looking Nova now comes with a black design and red accent as well as a white edition with subtle black accents. It will house house ATX motherboards and even has improved looks with a nice tempered glass side-panel. It's a simply straight forward chassis that can be spotted in the value segment.

Read full article @ Guru3D

Corsair TX-850M 850W PSU Review

Getting on towards Platinum quality. One key challenge facing power-supply unit (PSU) manufacturers is how to differentiate between a number of supplies that all vastly exceed the lax minimum standards laid down by the ATX specification.

It is difficult to find a PSU that doesn't score well when pushed and probed by specialist equipment, so manufacturers tend to decide between the competing factors of quality, connectors, modular cabling, semi-passive running and take account of all these with due reference to price. It also helps that the 80 PLUS organisation provides an at-a-peek reference to a supply's internal quality.

With all this in mind, Corsair has consolidated its PSU offerings into seven model ranges. Slap bang in the middle is the ATX-sized TX-M-series, and 2017 sees serious revamp of its performance credentials.

Read full article @ Hexus

Drevo Calibur 71-Key Mechanical Keyboard Review

Recently a company by the name Drevo contacted us to take a look at a few of their products, starting with the Calibur keyboard. This keyboard has a rather interesting design as it is even smaller than a Tenkeyless keyboard with only 71 keys. This small design will definitely appeal to people who do not want a large keyboard and keyboard purists. On top of that this is a true mechanical keyboard with RGB backlighting. The really cool thing about this keyboard is that it can be used as a wireless keyboard (via Bluetooth) or wired like any other keyboard. This is definitely going to be an interesting keyboard to take a look at so let’s jump in!

Read full article @ ThinkComputers.org

FSP Windale 4

FSP looks to break into the entry level cooling market with the Windale 4. This simple tower cooler may appear bland, but don't let it fool you: It packs a huge punch in terms of price to performance.

Read full article @ techPowerUp

Game Max Iceberg 240mm Liquid Cooler Review

While we have seen plenty of cases from Game Max over the last few months, the Iceberg 240 marks the first time we have seen a CPU cooler from the company – be it of the liquid or air variety. What makes the Iceberg 240 so appealing is definitely the price, as at £59.99 this is the cheapest 240mm liquid cooler I have reviewed in the last three years.

Read full article @ KitGuru

Team Group Delta RGB DDR4-3000 16GB Review

Delta modules expand Team Group’s RGB line in time for Asus’ Aura update. Does the DRAM underneath those fancy lights live up to the T-Force performance label?

Read full article @ Toms Hardware

TP-Link Archer C5400v2 Wireless Router Review

TP-Link recently launched its Homecare firmware platform for the C2300, C3150, and C5400. With the launch of this new firmware, the C3150 and C5400 went through a hardware revision, and today we are going to check out the V2 of the Archer C5400. HomeCare offers built-in antivirus control from Trend Micro along with parental controls and integration with Amazon Alexa. The Archer C5400 uses the same hardware as many AC5400 class platforms. At its heart is the Broadcom BCM4709 operating at 1.4GHz across two cores, and is paired up with 256MB of memory and 128MB of NAND flash. Further, we have the BCM4366; one for each 5GHz band and a third on the 2.4GHz band. Hardware switching is done in the BCM4709 while expansion is available with two USB ports.

Read full article @ TweakTown