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CNET UK Editors' Choice

Go to: Crave : Reviews

Editors' Choice winners

The best bits of kit our Editors have reviewed receive a coveted CNET UK Editors' Choice award, and here we've collected together all the winners. It's a best of the best listing!

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reviews

  • Samsung BD-P3600 review thumbnail

    Samsung BD-P3600 review

    The fantastic BD-P3600 is the fastest-loading Blu-ray player we've seen so far. It's also easy on the eye, with a sleek, curved design and excellent image quality. Its media-playback capability is a slight letdown, but the BD-P3600 would be a worthwhile addition to your home cinema

  • Fujifilm FinePix F200EXR review thumbnail

    Fujifilm FinePix F200EXR review

    The FinePix F200EXR is a great camera, but it's Fujifilm's new EXR sensor that's the star of the show, capturing a level of detail that can't be matched by rivals. The controls can be confusing and you might notice some barrel distortion, but overall, the F200EXR sets new standards for compact-camera performance

  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ6 review thumbnail

    Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ6 review

    The 10.1-megapixel Lumix DMC-TZ6, with a super-wideangle 12x zoom, is a really rather special compact camera. Other cameras may be smaller, cheaper or offer more manual control, but excellent picture quality, a superb build and finish, and fantastic versatility mean the TZ6 is difficult to beat

  • Samsung UE40B7000WW review thumbnail

    Samsung UE40B7000WW review

    The 40-inch, 1080p UE40B7000WW with LED edge lights is a truly magnificent TV. Not only does it boast a remarkably thin design and wonderful picture quality but it's got good online functionality and impressive built-in speakers. We were also delighted to see it can play MKV files -- a real boon

  • HDX 1000 review thumbnail

    HDX 1000 review

    The HDX 1000 is a brilliant media streamer that's capable of playing 1080p video and offers support for virtually every video format under the sun. It also offers fantastic picture quality and punchy sound. If you can manage to get hold of one, we doubt you'll be disappointed

  • Alienware M17 review thumbnail

    Alienware M17 review

    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

  • Canon EOS 5D Mark II review thumbnail

    Canon EOS 5D Mark II review

    The 21-megapixel EOS 5D Mark II digital SLR will prove a must-have, zippier upgrade for many users of the original 5D. Delivering the fluid shooting experience and high-quality photos you'd expect from a professional camera, the Mark II also offers excellent video-capture capabilities

  • Humax Foxsat-HDR review thumbnail

    Humax Foxsat-HDR review

    The brilliant Foxsat-HDR is certainly the best freesat personal video recorder on the market at the moment. It's as well designed as it is easy to use, sounds great and has an excellent picture quality that we can't really fault, although the built-in storage could have been bigger

  • Klipsch Image X5 earphones review thumbnail

    Klipsch Image X5 earphones review

    Superbly compact, extremely comfortable and delivering excellent all-round audio quality, we prefer the sound-isolating X5s to their more costly X10 predecessors. Although rivals can offer even deeper bass, these are some of Klipsch's best earphones to date

  • Sony BDP-S350 review thumbnail

    Sony BDP-S350 review

    Fairly priced and feature-packed, the Sony BDP-S350 has overtaken the PlayStation 3 as the cheapest and most competent Blu-ray player on the market. Besides the fact that Sony took so long to get it on the market, we don't really have any complaints about this player at all

  • Asus G71V review thumbnail

    Asus G71V review

    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

  • Pioneer Kuro KRP-500A review thumbnail

    Pioneer Kuro KRP-500A review

    In spite of the embarrassing acronym, the Pioneer Kuro KRP-500A is a very high-end TV, aimed squarely at the home-cinema enthusiast. With all its inputs and media gubbins in a separate box, it's incredibly thin for such a large panel -- and its picture is magnificent, as you'd expect for such a high price

  • Asus N10 review thumbnail

    Asus N10 review

    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

  • Canon HG21 review thumbnail

    Canon HG21 review

    Our main issue with the HG21, Canon's high-class, high-definition camcorder, is that it may be too good for its own good. Now that should tell you something. The HG21 comes with a whopping 120GB hard drive, a vast array of high-end features and produces video that is absolutely breathtaking. If you think you can make use of it all, this one's a winner

  • Sennheiser IE 8 sound-isolating earphones review thumbnail

    Sennheiser IE 8 sound-isolating earphones review

    We loved the way the Sennheiser IE 8 sound-isolating earphones added warmth and depth to our broad music collection. With the added bonus of being able to manually adjust the bass, these earphones are more than worthy competitors to the Shure SE530s. Be prepared to have your music rocked

  • Sony Vaio TT review thumbnail

    Sony Vaio TT review

    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

  • Sony Ericsson C905 review thumbnail

    Sony Ericsson C905 review

    Sony Ericsson has always produced good camera phones but the C905 outdoes them all. The high-resolution camera with xenon flash produces sharp shots even in low light and we were impressed by all the extras, such as GPS and Wi-Fi. If you're looking for a serious camera phone that could replace your camera, this is it

  • Panasonic DMP-BD35 review thumbnail

    Panasonic DMP-BD35 review

    Quite simply, this is one of the most sensibly priced and best-performing Blu-ray players on the market. With the BD35, Panasonic is proving that stand-alone players can offer decent performance and other advantages such as lower power consumption, nearly silent operation and a much more sensible form factor

  • Asus Eee PC S101 review thumbnail

    Asus Eee PC S101 review

    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

  • Apple MacBook (aluminium 2008 edition) review thumbnail

    Apple MacBook (aluminium 2008 edition) review

    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

  • Samsung PS50A756 review thumbnail

    Samsung PS50A756 review

    Samsung has improved its plasma TV range this year -- a real achievement considering how good the previous range was. And this PS50A756 is a truly fantastic TV, with bright, beautiful colours, sharp detail and good sound quality. Then there are the infinite features, which put this TV at the top of its class

  • Nikon D90 review thumbnail

    Nikon D90 review

    The Nikon D90 is the first digital SLR camera with video recording, which is great, especially since it's shot in 1,280x720-pixel motion JPEG at 24fps, giving it a cinematic, high-definition look. You can also shoot video with any lens, which yields interesting effects

  • Pioneer Kuro PDP-LX5090 review thumbnail

    Pioneer Kuro PDP-LX5090 review

    If you have the money to burn, this TV is as good as it gets for home entertainment -- unless you want to go the projection route. Its blacks are unparalleled, especially in HD, and Blu-ray looks just as fantastic on the 1080p screen. Watch out for Pioneer's unusual approach to inputs, though

  • Apple iPod touch (2nd gen) review thumbnail

    Apple iPod touch (2nd gen) review

    Apple has given its second-generation iPod touch everything it's got. It's hard to imagine, but the design is even better and its features are responsive as ever -- all this despite a price cut. It's got podcast support, video playback, a Web browser, photo viewer and an email reader, to name a few

  • Samsung i8510 review thumbnail

    Samsung i8510 review

    With a solid design and more features than you can shake a moose at, the i8510 genuinely took us by surprise. We knew that the Samsung mobile team had it in them to make something great, but this is definitely the company's best phone yet

  • Popcorn Hour A-110 review thumbnail

    Popcorn Hour A-110 review

    We loved the Popcorn Hour A-100, because for around £150 you got a media streamer that can play virtually every video format under the Sun and has enormous flexibility. Now the company has tweaked the hardware and added some new features, including HDMI 1.3 and SATA support

  • Panasonic Viera TH-46PZ81 (freesat) review thumbnail

    Panasonic Viera TH-46PZ81 (freesat) review

    The Panasonic Viera TH-46PZ81 is the first TV to include a built-in freesat receiver. With Freeview and analogue tuners on board, this tri-tuner plasma is genuinely a landmark product. You'll find this well-specced screen also boasts the excellent picture quality you'd expect from a Panasonic

  • Apple iPhone 3G review thumbnail

    Apple iPhone 3G review

    Almost one year after the original Apple iPhone went on sale, the company has launched a 3G version of the device. The Apple iPhone 3G includes GPS and support for third-party applications and Microsoft Exchange Server. Is it now time to get off the fence and buy one?

  • Nokia E71 review thumbnail

    Nokia E71 review

    The Nokia E series continues its transformation from dreary email caterpillar into ultra-chic business-plus butterfly. If you're not bothered about your phone having a top-notch camera, the E71 does everything else brilliantly, from easy-to-use email and a fantastic Qwerty keyboard to sat-nav and YouTube

  • Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX500 review thumbnail

    Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX500 review

    You can't go wrong with the Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX500. This excellent compact features a 25mm wide-angle lens and a 5x optical zoom. Plus, it has myriad features, including the proven Mega OIS system, and you can tweak most of them, making this an excellent shooter

  • Logitech Squeezebox Duet review thumbnail

    Logitech Squeezebox Duet review

    If you can work an iPod, you can work the Logitech Squeezebox Duet. This multi-room audio streamer is easy to use and attractive, too. It supports a plethora of codecs and could be the best, most enjoyable way of setting your PC's music collection free

  • Sony Walkman NWZ-A828 review thumbnail

    Sony Walkman NWZ-A828 review

    Sony's players never fail to win style points, and we're definitely impressed by the classy look of the new Walkman NWZ-A828 music and video player. It blows us away with its stellar audio performance and vivid, bright screen quality, making it one of our favourites

  • Casio Exilim EX-F1 review thumbnail

    Casio Exilim EX-F1 review

    If you've ever missed a great photo waiting for automatic focus or a flash, you'll know the importance of high-speed shooting. Casio's Exilim EX-F1 takes it to the extreme, capable of capturing up to 60 full-resolution snaps -- or a mind-boggling 1,200 low-res pics -- in a single second

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