Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Tips and Tweaks
Consumer Advocate
Daily Downloads
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides

Your Guide to the Top Rated Products

Have questions about our reviews? We have answers.

Tuesday, October 25, 2005 1:00 AM PDT
Recommend this story?

How do the charts work? Each month we test the latest desktop and notebook PCs, plus products from a rotating selection of other categories such as digital cameras, hard drives, graphics boards, monitors, PDAs, printers, rewritable DVD drives, and audio players.

We run each new candidate through a battery of performance tests in the PC World Test Center, and then we pass it along to an experienced reviewer who appraises its ease of use, design quality, and usefulness. Our next step is to compare these results directly with those of previously reviewed products in the same product category--for example, we compare results for a 17-inch LCD monitor with results for other 17-inch LCDs. A product's final overall PC World Rating reflects results from our hands-on evaluation and lab-based performance tests, the price, the product's breadth of features, and the vendor's support policies. The PC World Rating also determines the product's rank in our Top-Rated Products chart.

As new versions of products are released, we remove older ones from the Top-Rated Products chart, though the original review can be reached via our All Products charts. Product configurations listed in the charts reflect the products as tested; vendors may change components subsequently, so the performance you get with a like product may not match our published results.

What does the WorldBench 5 score mean? It's a measure of how fast a particular desktop or notebook PC can run a mix of common business applications as compared with our baseline machine--a high-end PC with a 2.2-GHz Athlon 64 FX-51 processor, 1GB of RAM, and an nVidia GeForce FX 5950 Ultra graphics card with 256MB of RAM. For example, a PC that scores 150 is 50 percent faster than the baseline system. See our WorldBench 5 page for more information.

Where do the scores for reliability, support quality, and support policies come from? Reliability and support-quality scores for PCs are based on surveys of PC World readers, compiled for our annual feature on reliability and service. The policies score is based on the support policies that the vendor offers, including the length of the warranty and the hours of technical support provided.


Recommend this story?
Related Searches: top-rated productsworldbench 5

Comments
Latest News
This week our readers engage on a wide range of topics, from software piracy to capitalism. 15-May-2008
Merger and acquisition news this week from Hewlett-Packard, EDS, Comcast, Plaxo, CBS and CNET -- along with Carl Icahn's... 15-May-2008
The industry momentum for data portability brotherhood hit a bump on Thursday when Facebook blocked Google's Friend Connect... 15-May-2008
The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) has voted to investigate complaints by two U.S. companies that 18 other... 15-May-2008
A Missouri woman whose online taunting was blamed in the 2006 suicide of her 13-year-old neighbor now faces criminal charges. 15-May-2008
AT&T has begun restricting its sales of Apple's iPhone to one device per customer, according to employees at AT&T... 15-May-2008
Marware on Thursday introduces a new case for the MacBook Air called the CEO Envi. It costs US$89.99. 15-May-2008
On Europe's roomy, comfortable long-distance trains, I feel so at home that the low, rhythmic rumbling along the track often... 15-May-2008
Sprint Nextel and a smaller WiMax hopeful, Covad Wireless, each moved closer to offering commercial service on Thursday. 15-May-2008
The site, already useful for tracking savings, checking and credit card accounts, will soon start a private beta that pulls in investment accounts as well. 15-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)