Sunday, March 6, 2011

Nikon Coolpix P100


  The Nikon P100 is a great all round camera that is perfect for all situations. The massive 26x optical zoom is incredibly useful for distances shots and the resultant image quality is superb.
To use the zoom you use buttons for zooming in and out and this works fine. It’s actually quite standard but I do prefer the barrel zoom style of the Fuji HS10 (which also has a greater zoom at 30x). The camera feels nice to hold and is very well balanced. It’s a good weight as Nikon use their own battery and this keeps the weight down (compare to the Fuji’s 4 AA battery requirement). The screen is also nice and bright and of a good quality. You feel like you have an expensive camera in your hand.


Nikon Coolpix L110


Why I brought this camera?

I brought the Nikon coolpix L110 from buyacamera.co.uk earlier this month.I brought the stunning red version for my wife so that we could take pictures of our daughter. It takes fantastically professional pictures. The reason I brought it was because our previous camera was taking pictures which were not that clear.

About this Camera

I brought the camera for the reasonably affordable price of £154.99 including vat. The camera also has a free two year gurantee but I am not sure whether the extra year is provided by buyacamera.co.uk or the supplier Nikon. The camera weighs approximately 406 grams with the battery and memory card included.


Nikon Coolpix L22


Although my main interest when it comes to digital cameras is in the cheaper end of the market, especially if there are second-hand bargains to be had, that doesn't mean that I am uninterested in the newer and/or more advanced models. In any case, sometimes I want to play about with more settings or options than many of those more basic cameras can manage! So I was interested to see not so long ago that Nikon had brought out two new compacts in its long-running Coolpix range, the eight-megapixel L21 and the camera I actually got hold of, and am testing here, the 12-megapixel L22. A lot of people will be attracted by the enduring cachet of the Nikon brand, so this camera may well sell pretty well.


Garmin nuvi 1340


  I finally gave in a traded my AA route finder notes (which always got me from A to B) for a Garmin nuvi 1340. I have to admit that these things annoy me so much, shouting directions at you every 5 seconds, but I thought I ought to at least try to get with the 21st century, plus everyone I know as one, so they can’t be that bad can they?
I managed to pick mine up for £139 from Pixmania, which was a bargain, as I’d seen one in my local Halford store whilst shopping for oil again! (but that’s another story) for £179! Just proving its worth shopping around.


HP Pavilion dv6


This HP Pavilion dv6000 I bought off a customer because she was upgrading to a HP dv9000. The z key missing and the right hozzle was crack, but it was nothing that a little dab of epoxy wouldn't hurt. I have had HP products in the past, like desktops and printers, this is my first laptop from them. When she offered it to me for a $100.00 I couldn't pass this up. First things that I did was clean her registry and unwanted files and programs. I checked the hard drive for skips and when it came up totally clean, I was a very happy man.
The 15.4 glossy widescreen lcd display made everything crystal clear and jump out straight at you. Granted this machine is 3 years old. The average life span for a good laptop is roughly 2 years or a tad more if your careful with them. The 1.3mp web cam on this model brings out every digital aspect of your surroundings. With the dual holed microphone on the top of the LCD display your voice or sound is recorded in a stereo process making it crisp and clear. (The new photo on my profile is a snapshot from the web cam on board this laptop)


Acer Aspire One D260


I purchased one of these after researching and using many different makes of netbooks. I also carry out computer repairs, so it was easy for me to know which brands were more reliable than others. For £229 I got myself one of these little beauties in black. Pictures don't do this netbook any justice, it looks much better in the flesh, just visit a store that has them on display to see what I mean.


Dell Inspiron 15R

I bought this laptop from currys edge lane in liverpoolfor £599, in november 2010, three weeks ago I started to notice the the connection on the laptop that connects to the charger was becoming lose and that the charger started to fall out, I thought no problem shall take it back to currys and get it fixed, currys said, yes its a common fault we will have to send it back to DELL to get it fixed, but i have to speak to them first, I was given a premium rate number to ring at £1.50 a minute to speak to dell (money makin scheme),


HP Pavilion Dv7



Introduction

During the Christmas sales one can usually pick up a nice pair of three year old shoes that have been collecting dust for the past months as they were a dingy colour no one in their right mind wanted. Last Christmas I bought no such products that disappoint you after the first six minutes of usage - I bought the HP Pavilion DV7.

First Impressions

First impressions of the product were positive; it was from a reputable brand - Hewlett-Packard- that has years of experience in the I.T world, the price was attractive for the technology that was on offer (important to note that similar to other models this laptop also has the Beats Audio system - which provides top class audio performance with videos, music and most importantly for me games) and finally most probably my favourite aspect; the aesthetics. It looks sleek, slim-line and luscious - It would quite easily suit a dashing red two piece; it is gorgeous.


Dell Inspiron 1545 Laptop



The Dell Inspiron 1545 was bought for me from PC World as a Christmas present, however due to the fact that mobility problems were preventing me from being able to sit at the computer desk, I was actually given it a good month before Christmas and have been using it for a couple of months now. Although the Inspiron 1545 can be customised on Dell’s own website, this was bought as a standard model, with only the choice being which colour the top was, but it did work out a lot cheaper than buying the equivalent from Dell direct at only £399 including free delivery.
The Styling
The 1545 is one shiny laptop, every surface (bar the screen) has a high gloss finish, which acts as a positive magnet to dust, fingerprints and smears. It is, however, easy enough to clean with keyboard wipes. The top of the outer casing comes in a range of 5 different colours, I personally chose cherry red, and it does look very smart. Other colours available include pink, blue and ice-white.
The screen of my particular model is a 15.6 inch ‘True-Life’ LCD widescreen display, which is crystal clear, whether I’m browsing the internet, viewing photos or watching DVDs.
Setting Up
As with most computers (whether Desktop or Laptop), there was a small amount of set-up required before the first use. Obviously the battery needed charging, which was simply a case of plugging into the wall, but the set-up could still be continued while plugged into the mains. Set-up was simple enough, a few details needed to be entered during the final installation of the operating system, but it took no more than 20 minutes before I was ready to start customising the settings to my own personal tastes. The final part of the set-up involved going to the Dell website to register the computer as belonging to myself.

The Operating System
My Inspiron came with Windows 7 installed, now I don’t mind saying that I was very apprehensive at the idea of using such a recently released operating system, especially considering my bad experience of using Windows ME and Vista. I know my way round (and like) Windows XP and so started using Windows 7 from a very biased point of view. It was, however, easy to start using Windows 7, and I’m actually starting to come round to the new layout. Start-up appears to be much quicker than XP and so far I’ve had few problems with compatibility issues. Those issues I’ve had, have been easily remedied by using the backward compatibility function, which is painless and has allowed all my programs to run without issue. I can’t say I’ve had any problems with installing any of my peripherals either, although I did have to download new drivers for my mobile broadband dongle. All in all, I’m pretty impressed with Windows 7, it appears to run smoothly and quickly with none of the teething troubles usually associated with a newly released version of Windows.
Basic Use
The keyboard is of a fairly standard layout, and reasonably ergonomic, I have no problems typing out documents. There isn’t a numeric keypad though, which does slow me down a little when entering numbers. I also had a bit of difficulty finding the ‘del’ key for those times when I needed to use the ubiquitous Ctrl, Alt, Del combination, but if I’d used my brains I’d have realised it was simply labelled delete. There are a number of shortcut keys along the top of the keyboard, which are handy for such things as volume control, switching the wi-fi on and off and switching between the screen and an external monitor. The touchpad, is fairly easy to use, but can be a little over-sensitive, I do sometimes find myself opening web-pages that I hadn’t intended to or highlighting areas on documents that didn’t need highlighting. It does, however, respond well to the gentlest of double taps. The lap-top came supplied with various programs, the majority of which are trial versions. There’s a month trial of McAfee anti-virus that does a reasonable job, but was quickly replaced with AVG. Along with the full version of Works, there is a trial version of Microsoft Office that I’ve not even bothered opening, Works does everything I need. The included Roxio DVD burning software is extremely simple, and I’ve only used it a couple of times, it does work, but there’s very little that can be customised. Windows DVD maker, though, is pretty good, if again a little basic.
DVDs can be viewed using either Windows media player, or PowerDVD and in both cases they are played faultlessly. Audio Cds are also played without problems, ripping is quick and simple using WMP as is burning compilation discs. I wouldn’t say the inbuilt speakers are necessarily the best, but for me they are perfectly adequate, music sounds fine but if I wanted to blast my ear drums I would burn a disc and use my CD player. Similarly it’s perfectly adequate to watch and listen to DVDs, but if I want cinema style sound then I’d use my surround sound and television.

Advanced Use
As well as bog-standard web browsing and word-processing, I also use my Inspiron to work with video editing software, creating DVDs from AVI files and DVDs created on DVD recorders. With this sort of work there are several components in the computer that can speed this process up (or slow it down). The model I own has a dual core Intel Pentium processor running at 2.10Ghz along with 3GB RAM, and this combination allows me to convert video in a little under real time, while still being able to browse the web, play simple games or write a review. I’ve never had a problem with anything overheating either, I have had this problem occasionally with other desktops and laptops, especially when spending a few hours converting video. So far the longest batch job of converting lasted for over 8 hours and although the table the laptop was sitting on became a little warm, the laptop itself had none of the usual problems associated with overheating, such as hanging or switching itself off.
The 16x DVD burner does a reasonable job, I’ve had no compatibility issues when using DVD-R or +R, but not once has it recognised my discs to be 16x and has only burnt them at 8x which takes about quarter of an hour. Cds, however, are burnt exceptionally quickly, taking less than 5 minutes.
The hard drive is advertised as being 250GB, but this is partitioned into two, with one of these partitions being taken up by the recovery data. This leaves a reasonable 218GB that is formatted with the more efficient NTFS, which allows files greater than 4GB to be saved. This space does get eaten up quite quickly though, I’ve always found that the larger the hard drive the quicker I fill it, and as all computers work faster if the hard drive is not cluttered, I have supplemented this with a 1.5TB external drive. I do find that transfer to the internal hard drive from memory cards is almost instantaneous.
This particular laptop also comes with a 1.3MP webcam, which is fairly simple to use and does a reasonable if not spectacular job. As long as the light is good photos and videos are perfectly viewable, and there are a number of special effects and frames that can be used. When used to video chat it does the job a lot better than web cams I’ve owned previously with both video and audio being perfectly acceptable.
I do not use this laptop for playing any games, let alone those that are resource hungry when it comes to graphics, but as this version of the 1545 has an integrated graphics card I would imagine it’s not really going be the best to play these games on. Perfect for watching DVDs, but nothing much more taxing than that.

Connectivity
My 1545 has a number of options for connectivity the most obvious of which is WLAN (wireless card). This is easily switched on and off and even though I’m not using it at the moment (I have mobile broadband through a dongle) it does pick up networks very quickly and is easy to configure using Microsoft’s connection manager. If you prefer to be ‘hard-wired’ to the internet there is also an Ethernet connection available. The number of available USB connections is a little disappointing at a measly three, I already find that I have to swap connections around, due to the fact that one is permanently occupied by my dongle. They are all the standard high speed version though. There is also a handy memory card reader which offers a high speed transfer of files both to and from my digital camera’s SD HC card. Finally there is VGA port for connection to an external display that I’ve never used and therefore can’t really comment on.
Although it’s not on my computer Bluetooth is also available as an option when purchasing from Dell direct. But I will say that I have used a Bluetooth dongle on this and it was automatically installed (without a CD) and works perfectly well.

Portability
The 1545 is quite a hefty machine, weighing in at 2.64kg, it does cause a dent in my shoulder when carried around in a laptop bag. The battery-life is also not particularly brilliant, advertised as up to 2hours, I’m lucky to get 1.5 hours out of it even when switching the wireless off, not having the dongle connected and playing around with all the power settings. Turning the wireless on drastically reduces this to just under an hour as does watching DVDs. I very rarely run this on battery power as I find with what I want to use it for the battery just wouldn’t last.
Durability
While, for obvious reasons, I’ve been very careful with this laptop (it’s certainly not been dropped), it has been moved from room to room and gone on the occasional trip in a laptop bag and it’s suffered no harm. Although it does seem to positively attract fingerprints and dust, it hasn’t acquired any scratches and appears pretty robust. It has had extensive use of the last couple of months, being switched on for, on average, 10 hours a day, spending a high percentage of that time doing very processor intensive video editing. And it hasn’t suffered a single problem or issue, and by that I mean, I haven’t had a single program crashing, it has never overheating or even slowed. Finally after a quick wipe it still looks as good as new, the lettering on the keypad hasn’t faded at all, the keys are all exactly where they should be and it looks all glossy and shiny.

Conclusion
My Inspiron 1545 was bought for me as a present from PC World for a very reasonable £399 and as such was not customisable. If it had been purchased from Dell direct then I could have changed and improved many of the specifications, but this would have cost considerably more. However, the specifications on this actually suited my purpose almost exactly, so I’m more than happy with my Christmas present, it does exactly what I want, looks nice and seems to be problem-free. While not the highest specification possible, it’s perfect for browsing the web, viewing and editing photos, creating Cds and DVDs, and word-processing. In fact, it’s perfect for most family use, possibly only falling down when it comes to graphic intensive games and battery-life. Taking up far less room than a conventional desk-top and yet as powerful as many desktops of a similar price. Although the price has now increased to £439.97 it’s still well worth the price for what it can do.
Specs of this Machine at PC World
Operating System : Windows 7 Home Premium
Processor Type : Intel Pentium Dual Core T4300
Processor Speed : 2.10Ghz, IMB Cache
Memory Size : 3GB
Memory Type : ddr2 800mhz
Hard drive Capacity : 250 GB
Optical Drive : DVD+-RW
Screen Size : 15.6 inches
Graphics Card : Intel 4 Series Integrated
Graphics Memory : Shared
TV Out : No
Sound Type : 2 Integrated
Wireless Enabled : Yes
No. USB Ports : 3
Other Interfaces : Card Reader, VGA
Battery Type : 4 Cell
Battery Life (Up to) : 2 hours
Weight : 2.64kg
Width : 374mm