CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
Users:
4.5000 stars out of 5
There's no denying that the Ferrari One is the best netbook so far, offering a larger-than-usual, 11.6-inch screen, speedy performance, and a truly excellent keyboard. If you can live with a lid that may cause people to question the length of your reproductive appendage, you won't be disappointed Read more
£380
29 September 2009 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
Asus might not be the first name you think of when it comes to gaming laptops, but it has just sent us the fastest portable 3D graphics-pusher we've ever seen. With 6GB of RAM, a Blu-ray drive and a huge 18.4-inch screen, it’s an astonishing performer Read more
£2,228
18 May 2009 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Netbooks
Editors:
4.0 stars out of 5
Users:
4.5000 stars out of 5
Such is the beauty of the Eee PC 1008HA Seashell that it makes other netbooks look like they were cobbled together by blind goat herders. One of the thinnest and lightest netbooks on the market, it also boasts a truly excellent keyboard. We wish the battery was user-replaceable though Read more
£375
8 May 2009 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
With the 17-inch M17 gaming laptop, Alienware has created a gigantic, polygon-munching monster. Offering some of the best performance we've ever seen, it's insanely fast, has a multitude of high-end customisation options and is attractive to boot. Few rivals can really match it Read more
£1,050
24 February 2009 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
The Asus G71V is designed to be the ultimate desktop-replacement laptop. It uses the first quad-core processor designed for portable machines, has a whopping 1TB of disk space, a Blu-ray combo drive and a high-end graphics card. It's unnecessarily ugly, but brutally quick Read more
£1,696
17 December 2008 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Netbooks
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
Users:
3.0000 stars out of 5
We're quite smitten with the Asus N10. This ultraportable features an Nvidia GeForce 9300M graphics card and a healthy 2GB of RAM, as well as ample storage capacity. Yet the N10's size and price seem to indicate that it is in fact a netbook. Can this be? Read our review to see how the Asus N10 makes fusion magic Read more
£400
9 December 2008 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.5 stars out of 5
Users:
5.0000 stars out of 5
Sony's T series has always represented the ultimate in ultraportable computing and its latest incarnation, the TT epitomises everything the series stands for: it's attractive, has great connectivity and is highly portable. Netbooks offer similar functionality for a fraction of the price, but the Sony Vaio TT is the best money can buy Read more
£764
25 November 2008 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Netbooks
Editors:
4.0 stars out of 5
This 10-inch netbook is the best-looking thing we've ever seen, with its luxuriously glossy brown lid. The current Windows XP version will ship with a 1.6GHz Intel Atom N270 CPU and 1GB of DDR2 667MHz RAM -- the staple underpinnings of most netbooks. At £449, it's not cheap, but then again it doesn't look it, either Read more
£307
17 October 2008 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.0 stars out of 5
Users:
4.5000 stars out of 5
There's a new breed of MacBook in town, and it's more attractive, more powerful and more expensive than ever before. The new design has much in common with the aluminium-swathed MacBook Pro, but sports a smaller 13.3-inch screen and less graphical power Read more
£949
15 October 2008 by Rory Reid
CNET UK > Reviews > Computers > Laptops
Editors:
4.0 stars out of 5
Users:
2.0000 stars out of 5
This business-oriented laptop is built like a tank, using some pretty potent components so it's no surprise it boasts impressive performance. Not only that, it's also the first machine to come with an ultra-wideband chip Read more
£1,800
20 August 2007 by Rory Reid