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Here a roundup of todays reviews and articles:

Be Quiet! Shadow Rock Slim CPU Cooler Review
Building a New Dual Intel/AMD Triple 2560×1440 Display 5Ft High PC System
How to download Firefox add-ons manually from Mozilla
Speck DuraFolio for iPad Air Review
The AM1 Kabini Motherboard Preview: Analyzing the Hardware
Upgrade to Ubuntu 14.04 LTS from Ubuntu 12.04 LTS or Ubuntu 13.10 in few easy steps



Be Quiet! Shadow Rock Slim CPU Cooler Review

A few days back a good friend of mine decided to build a brand new system purely for HTPC use featuring one of the latest 4770k CPUs by Intel so when the time came for him to decide on a CPU Cooler we turned to me and the end result was him choosing the Antec Kuhler H2O 650 since he wanted good cooling with almost no noise at all (for that he has the fan switch to silent mode). That being said lately many of you out there have asked us to concentrate in doing more reviews about CPU Coolers and although there aren't that many new models in the market right now we will give it our best shot. Now since for the past 2 months or so we've been focusing in reviewing CPU Liquid Systems and high-end CPU Air Coolers we decided that in order to cover each and every single one of our readers our next few reviews should be about mid-end and HTPC low-profile CPU Coolers. The brand new Shadow Rock Slim by our friends at be quiet! is one such product and it has been on our test bench since Monday.

Read full article @ NikKTech

Building a New Dual Intel/AMD Triple 2560×1440 Display 5Ft High PC System

Occasionally at TSSDR, a number of things fall in place where we think that a new build might be best to highlight new hardware. Such is the case with our receipt and significant testing with the latest and greatest from ASRock, the ASRock Z87 Intel based Extreme11/ac and AM3 based Fatal1ty 990FX Killer AM3+/AM motherboards.

Read full article @ The SSD Review

How to download Firefox add-ons manually from Mozilla

It is usually not necessary to download Firefox add-ons manually from the Mozilla website. There are however situations where this may be your only course of action. Maybe you want to install an add-on on a device without direct Internet connection, a development machine for example.

Read full article @ gHacks

Speck DuraFolio for iPad Air Review

Speck has been making accessories for iPhones and iPads since the inception of those devices. During this time we at TestFreaks have had the opportunity to review many of their products. Today we will be looking at the DuraFolio for iPad Air which seems to be a fusion of numerous excellent ideas that Speck have implemented into an incredibly well designed folio style case.

If you are looking for protection then the military grade drop protection is just what the doctor ordered. This case is tested to meet or exceed MIL-810G-STD ratings.

Read full article @ TestFreaks

The AM1 Kabini Motherboard Preview: Analyzing the Hardware

Almost every end-user I converse with prefers naming consistency in technology products. There has to be a clear progression in naming structure showing the development of a platform over time and generations. There have been plenty of examples – AMD’s enthusiast chipset (580/690/790/890/990FX), both AMD and NVIDIA’s GPU lines, Intel’s chipsets (P35, X48, P55, P67, Z77, Z87). The issue arises when the naming scheme is non-contiguous. The naming of AMD’s three main processor and chipset lines are as follows:

The top end features the AM3+ socket, which came from AM3, AM2+ and AM2. The mid-range is the FM2+ socket, deriving from FM2 and FM1. The low-price segment is now being called the ‘AM1 platform’. It makes it sound like it should be a very old version of AM3, because at least colloquially it will just be called AM1.

Read full article @ Anandtech

Upgrade to Ubuntu 14.04 LTS from Ubuntu 12.04 LTS or Ubuntu 13.10 in few easy steps

The latest Ubuntu LTS is here with a lot of minor as well as major changes. When it comes to Ubuntu and most other common Linux flavours, upgrading an entire OS is as easy as upgrading an application. All it takes is a whole lot of extra bandwidth for additional packages needed for the upgrade. And when it comes to Ubuntu 12.04 LTS which was released almost two years ago, you can directly upgrade to the latest LTS, Ubuntu 14.04 ie, skipping all the non-LTS releases in between with no real issues. Here's how its done.

Read full article @ Tech Drive-In