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Reviews Around The Web
Choose Web Reviews from this Maker:
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Monday, November 26, 2007
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When I heard that Razer were releasing a new mouse, I knew it would be something special. Considering my last insight into a Razer mouse - the Death Adder - left me with a near-perfect gaming mouse, it's not too much to expect something even better to come from the doors of Razer. The Lachesis returns to using a laser to track your movements rather than the previously much-hyped 3G infra-red sensor the Death Adder uses. With more buttons and increased DPI lets see how Razer's latest model performs.
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Wednesday, November 14, 2007
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The Razer Lachesis is the first mouse to feature a third generation laser sensor which operates at a maximum of 4000 DPI. The new technology looks good on paper, but how does it perform in real world scenarios. In this review we will put this new technology to the test and see if it lives up to the expectations.
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007
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Today we are looking at the Razer Pro|Solutions Pro|Click Mobile notebook mouse. This mouse has the highest sensitivity you will find on a notebook mouse of 1200dpi. The test mouse I was sent is the white version, which looks just right next to my white MacBook. Most of the notebook mice I have seen use 800 dpi sensors.
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Tuesday, October 23, 2007
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People who have used Razer products rarely have ambiguous opinions about them. Nobody ever picked up a Diamondback in 2004 and said, "As far as input devices go, it has buttons, and wiggles a cursor." Reactions are completely polar, and users either say they're ready to settle down and have kids with the thing, or that they wouldn't touch it if it was cut from tangible enlightenment.
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Thursday, October 11, 2007
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Razer has delivered a mouse pad that does exactly what it's supposed to do - improve the PC gaming experience. I have been loyal to hard surface mouse pads for some time, but the Razer Mantis has changed all that. After testing out both of the expertly engineered surfaces I can honestly say this is the best cloth mouse pad I've used and Razer was smart to offer two versions to satisfy those with different sensitivity preferences.
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Wednesday, October 10, 2007
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Three years after the launch of the original Razer Diamondback, Razer has finally given the Diamondback a well-deserved overhaul by giving it a 3G infrared sensor and naming it as the Razer Diamondback 3G.
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Tuesday, October 9, 2007
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Razer's Taranchula gaming keyboard is easily one of the PC gamer's favorite gaming peripherals, and Razer has built on this success with the new Lycossa Gaming Keyboard. The previous Taranchula was unique in that it offered backlighting on the keys that gamers use most: the standard WASD keys used for movement. This new keyboard has a nice blue backlight on every single one of its keys, making gaming (or computing) in the dark much easier. In addition, Lycosa's keytops have a rubberized coating, which not only gives the keyboard a more comforable feel, but helps keep your sweaty fingertips securely on the buttons.
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Razer's new Piranha gaming headset is the successor to their popular Barracuda headphones. The Piranha focuses on high-fidelity rather than Barracuda's surround technology, so this new headset is stereo only. The Piranha features in-line controls to adjust the headset volume, and there is a button to mute the microphone. The headphones have a frequency range of 18 - 22,000 Hz with an impedance of 32 ohms. The headphones are not a complete around-the-ear, but the foam pads so seal your ears to eliminate most background noise.
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Razer's Lachesis is probably the most advanced and precise gaming mouse ever devised. It uses the brand new 3G Laser Sensor, which brings true 4000dpi precision to your desktop or games by enabling movement speeds of up to 5 times that of a typical gaming mouse (at 800dpi). Additionally, all nine of Lachesis' buttons are programmable and has 32KB of onboard memory. It also features 1000Hz Ultrapolling for a 1ms response time. The mouse also features on-the-fly sensitivity adjustment, so you can vary the actual dpi setting (in 125dpi increments). The mouse also has nice professional touches like Zero-Acoustic Ultraslick Teflon feet and a gold-plated USB plug.
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Wednesday, October 3, 2007
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Today we take a look at two of Razer's most newest and recent products� Presenting the Razer DeathAdder and Razer Mantis Control duo. Are these two entities combined in one a force to be reckoned with? Read on to find out.
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Friday, September 28, 2007
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After a long wait the Razer Diamondback Mouse is back on the market. The new version is dubbed Diamondback 3G and features Razer's famous 3G infrared sensor for bargain price of $49.99. Other than the sensor there are only a few changes to the design, so can it live up to the expectations?
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Monday, September 17, 2007
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The Pro|Click Mobile is Razer's first go at designing a cordless laptop mouse. Being cordless and a laptop mouse seems to be some feat, but has Razer been able to make a good performing mouse that avoids all of the obvious pitfalls associated with cordless laptop mice?
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Thursday, September 13, 2007
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Last November at Phoronix we had featured a preview of the Razer Barracuda AC-1 sound card and after taking off its EMI shield we had found that this card depended upon the C-Media Oxygen HD CMI8788 audio processor, which at the time was not supported under Linux. Though support had come in the Open Sound System (OSS) version 4.0 for this CMI8788 APU. Well, now finally in ALSA 1.0.15 the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture will support this C-Media audio chip. ALSA 1.0.15-rc1 was released recently and contains the initial CMI8788 audio driver. In this article we will be taking a quick look at where this driver stands today for the Razer Barracuda AC-1 under Linux.
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Tuesday, August 7, 2007
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The Tarantula is the perfect partner for your gaming mouse as this keyboard from Razer has tons of features designed for the hardcore gamer.
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Thursday, August 2, 2007
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The Razer Death Adder Gamer Mouse arrived Technic3D. The �Speedy Gonzales� in the World of Gamer Mouse? See you in the following Review from Technic3D.
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