Battery hassles are a thing of the past with the solar-powered Logitech Wireless Solar Keyboard K750. It charges itself whenever there's light, so you can say goodbye to batteries, power bricks and charging cables. With sleek lines and a thin profile, this stylish, streamlined keyboard adds style to your workspace. Combining the best of traditional keyboards, laptops and a Logitech-only concave key cap design, you'll enjoy faster, quieter, feel-good typing -hour after hour. Plus, you'll get wireless freedom thanks to the Logitech Unifying receiver.
Customer Rating
5
Superior keyboard in every way!
on March 18, 2011
Posted by: NDTechie
from Goffstown, NH
I keyboard all day long, 8-10 hours per day. The keys were wearing down on my Logitech Di Novo after 6 years of use and was looking for a new keyboard. Wanted one with less bulk, wireless, comfortable to type on like my di novo, and had an attached num pad - not two pieces like the di novo. I first tried the Logitech k800 Illuminated keyboard. Seemed to have it all plus option to work with the lights off. Found the keys 'plasticy' feeling with a key travel reminiscent of 1980's IBM keyboards. The batteries also wore out in on three days and needed recharging. The Di Novo batteries lasted up to a year for me. I then tried the Logitech wired illuminated keyboard. This keyboard is much thinner than it's wireless brother, which I loved, but couldn't deal with the wire flopping around my desk after years of no KB wires. Then I saw the new Logitech Solar keyboard on sale and gave that a try. This is the thinnest, most comfortable KB ever! Plus fits in my lapto roller for travel & no batteries! I love it and will keep it forever!!!
What's great about it: Ultra thin, Wireless, No Batteries, Short Key Travel, Fits in Briefcase for business trips
What's not so great: ? Not illuminated - That's all that would possibly make this better
SynopsisFasten your seatbelt and get ready to drive like your life depends on it. In the underground world of street racing, the streets are your playground and the laws are a joke. You are on your way to earning worldwide notoriety as a street-ruling speed demon. To seal your name in fame and to outsmart the pesky law enforcement along the way, you have just one need: the Need for Speed.You've raced before, but you've never been in a chase like Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit. Descend into open streets based on the real-life racing locales of Chongqing, Dubai, Rio de Janeiro and Las Vegas as you tear up the pavement and make your mark on the city. Race against up to 99 other speed demons in intense Rush Hour competitions and five other pedal-to-metal challenges. Police add another dimension to the high-speed drama, setting up blockades and chasing you down. In the end, it's all worth it — as you evade the fuzz and win races, you'll earn bounty, collect Supe-Up powerups and enjoy a sick collection of high-performance supercars like the Bugatti Veyron and the Lamborghini Gallardo. Will your name go down in infamy? In this Hot Pursuit, you have to prove you have the ability, guts and the Need for Speed.
Customer Rating
1
Cheesy graphics - 1995 PC version blows this away!
on December 24, 2010
Posted by: NDTechie
from Goffstown, NH
Well, I guess I should have known when the WalMart shelves on Christmas eve were fully stocked with WII version of this game while the PS3 and XBOX were sold out. $10 or $15 is the maximum that should be charged for this game. My son is too young to know this and likes playing it so far so I am unable to return unfortunately. I haven't seen this game on the XBOX or PS3 but hopefully the graphics and sound are better, and if so, may need to throw the wii out can go for the XBOX kinetic as this is the second car race game I got for the wii and it's just plain dissappointing with the 1980's atari-style graphics.
What's great about it: Nothing at all - terrible graphics and not nearly as entertaining as 1995 PC version
What's not so great: Unreasonably expensive for 1980's atari-like graphics