By Brad Wardell (Stardock) and Ron Burke (GamingTrend)
During both of our PC gaming lifetimes, we’ve always built our own machines. As putting together computers has consistently become simpler
There hasn’t been a lot of innovation in the peripheral input device market beyond higher DPI mice. Sure, we had trackballs, gun-shaped mice, the Novint Falcon, and the SpaceOrb
I always thought that a mousepad was a pretty simple thing, nothing to be concerned with in the whole scope of the computer unit. Boy was I wrong. Even though
Micron is one of the oldest names in the business. Formed in 1978, they were one of the “founding fathers” of the computing age. Their consumer-facing arm, Crucial, has been
It’s hard to quantify and define the experience of virtual reality to an outside party. Words like “presence” and “immersion” come to mind, but don’t capture the effect
I’ve helped more than a few of our readers with their DIY PC-building efforts in the past. As I went through another refresh cycle it dawned on me that
I’ve been taking apart, tinkering inside of, and building PCs since the Commodore-64 days. In the transition to the x86, I started building them bit by bit, and that
As you know from my review for it, I selected an MSI Z170A Gaming M7 motherboard for my most recent upgrade. One of the most attractive options was the bleeding-edge
If you are like most people, you understand the first few words of a product description like “Kingston Technology HyperX FURY 2666MHz DDR4 Non-ECC CL15 DIMM 16 DDR4 2400 MT/
We got a personal tour of the Kingston booth at PAX South and two headsets caught our eyes (or more accurately, our ears). The first one was the HyperX Cloud