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Macworld January 2001 Greg Knauss |
Good to the Last Drop High-tech workers, expensive electronic equipment, and over-caffeinated beverages are a dangerous combination. After your fifth or sixth triple espresso, you tend to start knocking cups over instead of picking them up. The Cyber-Drinkholder can help...  |
Macworld January 2001 Joseph Schorr |
Starving for Storage? Add a Second Hard Drive -- All It Takes Is One Screwdriver and Five Minutes...  |
Macworld January 2001 Franklin N. Tessler |
Back-UPS Pro 500 No matter where you live, power failures and brownouts are unavoidable. When the electricity stops, the Back-UPS Pro 500 lets you keep your Mac and as many as three peripherals going for 20 minutes, long enough to let you save your work and shut down safely...  |
Macworld January 2001 Ben Long |
Color Workgroup Laser Printers Latest Models Deliver Higher Speed, Better Image Quality at Reasonable Prices...  |
PC World December 12, 2000 Richard Jantz |
Shoot and Scan with Philips's Unique Video Camera More than just a Webcam, this little Philips video camera also scans objects and portions of documents...  |
AskMen.com December 12, 2000 Peter Richmond |
Product Review: 10 Must-Have Computer Accessories Buying a computer without a printer or scanner is like buying a car without wheels. With today's technology and software development, you can use a computer for much more than just Internet surfing or word processing. Make your experience more entertaining and interactive...  |
Fast Company January 2001 Amy Wilson Sheldon |
Mouse Beautiful Turn your mouse into a style statement...  |
Macworld December 2000 Janet Ashford |
Scan Anything Use Your Scanner to Capture Three-Dimensional Objects...  |
Macworld December 2000 Andrew Gore |
Apple Cinema Display Astounding Digital Flat Panel Is the Shape of Things to Come...  |
Macworld December 2000 Bruce Fraser |
Reviews of 9 USB Flatbed Scanners If someone had told me five years ago that I'd be really impressed by the output from a $200 flatbed scanner, I would have been skeptical. But technology sometimes progresses much faster than we expect, and flatbed scanners are a case in point.  |
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