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With the XPC Barebone SD39P2 Shuttle produced “the most powerful and configurable small-form-factor barebone system to date,“write the editors of the British technology webside ZDNET.co.uk. The editors are sure: Shuttle's performance mini PC was made "almost foolproof," and supports "the best components on the market."
Enough for them to give "this impressive package" an overall score of 8.0 – "excellent."
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"It handles Intel quad core, a trio of hard disks, and a super fast 8800 GTX graphics with ease," the editors of the British online magazine explain after having tested the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2. Shuttle's "flagship machine" which is "compact, stylish, quiet and powerful" and "worth the extra over standard cases" managed to convince the editors completely winning their coveted "Trusted Reviews Recommended" award.
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2007 will soon be over - time for the UK's leading source of news and reviews from across the IT world to announce this year's best products
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"High-quality finish, quiet, compact." Key words that match Shuttle XPCs perfectly. This time the editors of the British computer magazine PC World commend the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2 dedicated to gamers which can "still accommodate some of the highest quality components."
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"A winner" had the editors of the Dutch computer magazine in their labs. A combination of "high performance, good stability and low-noise level" characterizes the small form factor PC which managed the breath-taking result of a full score - five out of five stars. What else could the editors be talking about than Shuttle's powerhouse XPC Barebone SD39P2?
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"It's hard to think what else Shuttle could have fitted in," realize the editors of the British computer magazine PC Advisor after having tested the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2 which is "far more than a potential media centre system." To find out what else convinced the editors besides "sleek looks," "good sounds" and support of the "very finest of Intel's latest crop of processors," just read on.
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"The motherboard inside the SD39P2 might be small, but this doesn't mean that it should be any slower than a full-sized ATX board," the editors of the British hardware magazine Custom PC rule out the rumor that small has to mean slow. The SD39P2's benchmark scores "are similar to those of 975X-based motherboards." Providing "solid performance" and "great build quality," the SD39P2 also impressed the editors thanks to its "good-looking" and "quiet" P2 chassis.
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This is the conclusion the editors of the British computer magazine Computer Shopper drew from the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2 - the first small form factor PC to support quad-core processors. Especially convincing was the "very good" performance and its low noise level which let this high-end gaming rig run "mercifully quiet."
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"Why would you want a barebone SFF PC compared to a regular desktop PC?", that is the question the editors of the British IT website BIOS Magazine easily found the quite obvious answer to: "You get the latest technology in the smallest space possible (excluding a laptop), thus saving valuable desk or floor space and also allowing you to transport the machine more easily." Such a machine is the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2 which is "one of the highest-performing barebone PCs we’ve tested," state the editors. Being impressed by its "top-notch engineering" and the "excellent processor and memory support," the Shuttle XPC Barebone SD39P2 is "a cool piece of kit that packs a punch while consuming minimal desk space."
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