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Here a roundup of today's reviews and articles:

ASUS Republic of Gamers Claymore Keyboard Review
Context Menu Tuner Review
Corsair MM800 RGB Polaris Mousing Surface Review
How to Install GNOME Shell Extensions with Firefox
Kingston SSDNow DC400 480GB SSD Review
Samsung Reveals Root Cause of Galaxy Note7 Battery Fires
Synology Router RT2600ac Review
The Ideal Smartphone for 2017



ASUS Republic of Gamers Claymore Keyboard Review

Here at KitGuru we get through a lot of keyboard reviews. It is with some excitement, then, that we can announce today’s keyboard is the most expensive to ever grace the KitGuru labs. Enter the ASUS ROG Claymore – a keyboard billed as the world’s first mechanical RGB board to feature a detachable numeric keypad. The price? A whopping £199.99…

Read full article @ KitGuru

Context Menu Tuner Review

Context Menu Tuner is a free program for Microsoft Windows that enables you to add various functions to the right-click context menu on Windows. Many companies that produce software seem to have a Wild West mentality when it comes to adding items to the context menu on Windows.

Read full article @ gHacks

Corsair MM800 RGB Polaris Mousing Surface Review

The Corsair MM800 RGB Polaris is an eye-catching mousing surface, and with some adjustments, it will be a mainstay to light up your desk.

Read full article @ APH Networks

How to Install GNOME Shell Extensions with Firefox

GNOME Extensions are one of the real selling points of the GNOME desktop environment. With a quick click you can extend, change and add features to the desktop directly from the web through the Firefox browser But installing these nifty feature extenders is shortly to become a touch more difficult.

Read full article @ OMG! Ubuntu!

Kingston SSDNow DC400 480GB SSD Review

The latest SSDNow DC400 480GB by Kingston is not only among the fastest models in our charts but it also sports some of the highest endurance numbers possible for a SATA III based solid state drive.

Read full article @ Nikktech

Samsung Reveals Root Cause of Galaxy Note7 Battery Fires

Samsung held a press conference today detailing the results of its investigation into the battery fires that plagued its Galaxy Note7. Reports of phones catching fire appeared soon after it went on sale August 19, 2016. After an initial investigation identified faulty batteries from one of its suppliers as the root cause, later identified by the US Consumer Product Safety Commission as Samsung SDI, Samsung announced a global exchange program on September 2, where phones containing the faulty battery would be replaced by ones using a battery from a second supplier; however, after this new batch of phones continued to catch fire, it became clear that the Note7’s battery problem was more complicated. Without a solution in hand, the company was forced to cease production and suspend sales of the Note7 on October 11. To date, Samsung said 96% of the roughly 3 million phones sold to customers around the world have been recovered.

Read full article @ Anandtech

Synology Router RT2600ac Review

Bigger and better than last year's RT1900ac?

Read full article @ Hexus

The Ideal Smartphone for 2017

My quest for the perfect handset continues. Some phones came close - I loved the Google Pixel XL and the Galaxy S7 was pretty good - but nothing was without fault. In this article, I'll be exploring the perfect smartphone; the flagship phone I want to see in 2017.

Read full article @ TechSpot