More Peoples Visited Gadget Websites 2016
A venerable tech site, CNET has grown to become a reliable source of
gadget previews and reviews. It includes comprehensive discussions
offered in podcast or video format that are able to demonstrate whether a
new phone is trash or treasure like no written review could.
While devoted to the Internet and Web services and applications,
TechCrunch has become a destination for gadgets that are linked to the
Web or can browse the Internet (which is increasingly everything).
For the Geek who likes a little of everything, here you'll find video
game news mixed with reviews about new gadgets and rumors about coming
technologies. Visitors welcomed by the round-faced geek with the
spinning beanie cap will smile.
You can't talk gadgets without saying Apple. This site devoted to
iPhone, iPods, and various Macs offers news, rumors and a destination
for Steve Jobs' game-changing keynotes.
After blogging took off, video soon followed. This Week in Tech has
evolved into a full-featured Web video network with 13 other shows and
the podcast, Radio Leo. So not only do you get the eponymous show
featuring tech gurus Leo Laporte, Patrick Norton, and John C. Dvorak,
but you also get Jumping Monkeys, a show that talks about parenting in
the digital age.
This video site is brought to you by magazine publisher Ziff-Davis and
is devoted to computers and its related gear. The show's hosts even take
questions from readers and help them solve such daunting concerns as
LAN set-ups and PC power-supplies.
From online video networks Revision 3, this weekly video show is all
about modifying gadgets, upgrading tech, and other do-it-yourself
projects. Who wouldn't want to build their own android?
Probably the most popular gadget blog on the Web, it has become the head
of the class and excels at accessing leaked and exclusive images of
unreleased gear or breaking news — just ignore the hundreds of other
blog sites it promotes.
The first popular site devoted to gadgets on the Web is still one of the
most read. Its founder eventually left the site to found Engadget. Like
Engadget, Gizmodo thrives on rumors, reviews and leaks, but it features
a fun and snarky tone whereas Engadget's comes across as stoic
professionalism.
The tag line for the site is Geek is Chic, and with that in mind
GeekSugar focuses on delivering gadget-focused content to a female
audience. Its obvious female-centric design isn't over the top or
cloying (I'm looking at you Shiny Shiny).
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