Gaming desktops with dedicated graphics cards start at around $500. You can find complete mini PCs for very light work and display-signage tasks for under $300, and perfectly serviceable small towers for $300 to $600. Instead of buying a $700 laptop with a competent Intel Core i5 processor, you can get a $700 desktop with a more powerful Core i7 CPU in it, and maybe even squeeze in a dedicated graphics card. ![]() Your money simply goes further with desktop PCs and their components. One of the desktop's most alluring promises is the value it delivers. Let's dive into these, and a bunch of other important factors, as you prepare to buy your next desktop. While desktops don't come in as many distinct form factors as laptops, there's great variation in computing power and room for upgrades and expansion. ![]() Impressive variety and capability, right? We don't deny that a laptop or tablet is a better pick for people who depend on business travel or whose computing consists mostly of basic surfing and typing from the living-room couch, but for small offices, families, creative pros, gamers, and tech tinkerers, desktops are often the best choice and the best value. Intel NUC13RNGi9 NUC 13 Extreme Barebone Kit - Core i9-13900K 13th Gen – A$2,289 (was $2,899, save $610)Ĭheck out more Australian tech deals here.Mwave KATANA V3 Gaming PC - AMD Ryzen 5 & Radeon RX 6600 Edition – A$1,399 (was $1,699, save $300).Mwave SUMMERUN Gaming PC - AMD Ryzen 5 & GeForce GTX 1650 – A$1,199 (was $1,399, 17% off).Lenovo IdeaCentre Gaming 5 Desktop, AMD R5 5600G, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Super 4GB GDDR6, 8GB 512GB – A$1,251.94 (was $1,499, 16% off).OMEN by HP 45L Gaming Desktop PC, 12th Gen Intel Core i7, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Ti, 32GB DDR4, 1TB SSD – A$2,999 (was $4,999, 40% off).If you press the Control key before clicking on something in the Recent submenu, you’ll copy the item to the clipboard instead press Command when choosing a transferred file, and it’ll be revealed in the Finder.- The Best Aussie Desktop Deals Available Now Choose a URL from the menu, and that URL opens in your default browser. From there, you can opt to send the item to a specific app or save it to a particular destination. ![]() When you choose a file, photo, or clipboard from that list, a preview of the item opens in DeskConnect’s built-in file viewer. Sending a URL from your iOS browser is a bit more complicated, as it requires the installation and configuration of a special bookmarklet in my testing, once that little hurdle was crossed, sharing worked well.Īfter you’ve sent something from an iOS device, it should show up in the Mac app’s Recent list in the systemwide menu. Sharing data works just as easily the other way: Open the iOS app on your iPhone or iPad, and you can choose to send a photo (selected from any album in Photos), a document from a compatible app (DeskConnect installs an Open in DeskConnect option in the iOS Share sheet), or send the contents of the iOS clipboard. And DeskConnect has some Automator and AppleScript support for for more advanced uses. You can also select a phone number in your Mac’s Contacts app and use DeskConnect to send it directly to your iPhone’s phone app. For example, if you have a map open in your desktop browser, sending that URL to an iOS device results in the map opening in your iOS mapping app of choice (Maps, Google Maps, or Waze). The DeskConnect apps are smart enough to handle special URLs, too. The URL automatically opens on that device in the browser you’ve designated. Similarly, if you want to share a URL that’s open in your desktop browser, just make sure your browser is frontmost and then choose a device from the DeskConnect menu. You can also select text in a Mac app, and then choose a destination device in the DeskConnect menu the selection is sent to the DeskConnect app on that device, where you can choose to open the text in Messages, Mail, Twitter, Facebook, a text editor, and so on. DeskConnect 1.1.1 fixed the problem.) You receive-almost immediately-a push notification on the destination device that the file has been received. (Note that DeskConnect’s file-dragging feature was initially broken when Apple released OS X 10.9.2. ![]() On the Mac, you can simply drag a file from the Finder to the DeckConnect icon in the menubar that opens a menu from which you can choose the iOS device to which you want to send the item. DeskConnect for Mac’s menu shows you the iOS devices you can send to. Once you install the free DeskConnect apps for Mac (Īpp Store link) on your various devices, and set up a free account, you can share photos, webpages, document files, and clipboard contents between the two platforms using DeskConnect clients for OS X and iOS. That’s the problem that DeskConnect seeks to solve, and by and large, it does a good job.
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