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For example, creatives working on portrait images, magazines or documents benefit from quickly spinning a screen on its side, and flipping a screen 90° degrees is a common desire amongst programmers as it allows them to display and edit more lines of code. Take a look at how to speed up a laptop or PC too.Whatever the reason – even if you’re the recipient of an office gag carried out by an unkind colleague – rotating your screen 90° is an easy task, and here we’ve covered a couple of ways to do it.If you’re running Windows 7 or 8, you may be able to quickly rotate your screen 90°, 180° or 270° at any time by pressing three keys.Simply hold down Control + Alt and then select the arrow key for which way you want your laptop or PC screen to face.

Your monitor will then go briefly go blank and will return in a few seconds facing a different orientation. To restore this back to the traditional settings, press Control + Alt + the up arrow. Another way to rotate your screen is to right click the Windows desktop and select Screen Resolution from the dropdown menu that appears. Changing the screen orientation via Control Panel is equally simple. Press the Windows key and type in Screen Resolution then press enter.From here select the monitor that you wish to rotate from the Display drop-down box and then finally select Portrait or Landscape in the Orientation field. You can also rotate a display using your graphics card’s control panel. (Note that there are too many different software suites to list the each one individually, so treat this as a general guide.)A shortcut to your graphics control panel can be found in a couple of places. Right-clicking the desktop and selecting the appropriate option will give you access to the Intel, Nvidia or AMD graphics card control panels, but the graphics drivers and software often add icons to the system tray on the right-hand side of your taskbar. Double-clicking these icons, or right-clicking thereon, will normally give access to the control panel, and also often a wide range of other options, too. Handily, some also permit you to right click their respective icons and select screen rotation from a dropdown menu.

Once the relevant control panels are open, you’ll need to peruse the ‘display’ or ‘desktop’ menus to find the rotation option for your monitor. The exact location varies from manufacturer to manufacturer, so a quick hunt around will soon locate the option you need.A print-your-own Raspberry Pi laptop has smashed past its crowdfunding target and is heading into production.The Pi-Top kit includes all the components you need to assemble your own laptop, including the Raspberry Pi Model B+, 13.3in LCD screen, keyboard, Wi-Fi adapter and an injection-moulded starter case. Those who already own a Pi can order a kit without the computer.

The British team behind the Pi-Top claims the kit includes everything you need to build the laptop within an evening, and without having to reach for a soldering iron. However, for those who already own a 3D printer, the kit includes the STL files necessary to print your own case, giving owners the option to customise their own case design.The Pi-Top team has also developed a series of HATs – small add-on boards that allow you to extend the functionality of the Raspberry Pi. These include kits that allow you to turn a Pi into a robot (for which you can again print a 3D case) or a home automation device.Pi-Top focuses on teaching people how to create real hardware, the makers claim on their Indiegogo project page. Online and integrated lesson plans teach you how to understand electronics, create printed circuit boards, and 3D print objects.

The project aimed to raise $80,000 by this Thursday, but it has already blasted past that target, accumulating $125,000 in pledges at the time of publication.Backers aren’t expected to receive their Pi Top laptops until next May. We have sourced every component needed for Pi-Top from suppliers across the world to create the 3D printed prototypes we have today, the team says on its Indiegogo page. After thorough testing and relationship building with our suppliers, Pi-Top is now ready to be released on a larger scale. The two co-founders of the project are Jesse Lozano, a law student who studied software development in his spare time, and Ryan Dunwoody, who studied engineering at Oxford.

The PC Pro Excellence Awards are our honours for the best tech prodects and services of the year, from consumer goods such as laptops and tablets, all the way through to busines equipment like servers. These awards go to the most outstanding examples of design, reliability and value for money, nominated by you and chosen by us. We couldn’t do the awards without our readers, with 8,337 of them rating products and services they’d bought for everything from reliability to value. We used the results to generate percentage scores for each category: if everyone was very satisfied, a company would score 100%; if all were dissatisfied, 0%. The Products of the Year were nominated by readers and voted on by the PC Pro editorial team.

Zen Internet, pat yourself on the back and have a biscuit: you’ve picked up your 11th consecutive Excellence Award for the best broadband provider in the UK. The Rochdale-based ISP, which has batted aside big players such as BT and Virgin Media for more than a decade, even managed to improve on last year’s stellar scores. This year, it topped rivals by a solid 10% overall, and by even more of a spread in key categories such as customer support and reliability. Those two areas are Zen’s strongest: it picked up an almost-perfect score of 97% for customer support, more than double the worst-rated in the category, Orange, and well above the rest of its competitors. Only BT-owned Plusnet comes close. “I couldn’t rate the support and service from Zen highly enough,” notes one Birmingham-based user. “They’re the only ISP I would recommend now.” Zen was just as strong for reliability, with its 97% score also well above rivals. Can you imagine your children coming home with such glowing grades? It would be milkshakes all around.

Zen also wins on value for money – more on that below – and takes home the top score for speed. The company’s customers clearly love it: no wonder then that the vast majority would buy from Zen again, with Jonathan Duggan-Keen describing the ISP as “faultless”. Jules Williamson-Cotton has used Zen for nine years and “cannot recommend them enough,” saying she wishes “all companies were like Zen… the world’s best ISP for sure!” Now that’s how to build a broadband business.As ever, Plusnet is the bridesmaid rather than the bride, again coming in second to Zen. It remains an achievement: nine out of ten customers would buy from Plusnet again, with customers praising its customer service. Mike Stayman’s comment sums up the sentiment nicely: “Plusnet never treats customers like idiots.”

Plusnet came close to beating Zen on value for money, an area in which it won praise from customers. “Great value. I constantly check other ISPs and none can yet compete with the packages from Plusnet,” says Scott Kelly from East Kilbride.Others warned that prices have recently increased, so Plusnet will need to be careful to keep costs down. “I’ve just dropped Plusnet after being with them for more than 15 years, because they became too expensive for what I was getting,” says Mark Wallis. “I was sad to leave Plusnet, but I don’t like being ripped off.”Those looking for budget broadband may also want to consider TalkTalk. Its budget focus continues to win a solid Value for Money score of 74%, despite posting less rosy results in the other categories.

Who else could challenge Zen for the top spot? Virgin’s speed ranking continues to improve; no surprise given its recent speed boosts, which bumped its lowest-tier 30Mbits/sec lines to 50Mbits/sec for no added cost. It has also improved its customer support and reliability – if that trend continues, Zen could have another challenger to its crown. “I would factor in the availability of Virgin Media cable broadband into any house-purchasing decisions I made,” says Colin Ashdown, currently based in Peterborough. “I’d be highly unlikely to move into an area where it wasn’t available.” BT has had a disappointing year in our Excellence Awards. Its Value for Money ranking slipped despite the arrival of BT Sport, which offers subscribers free football matches on television, and its Speed score also fell despite constant investment -although to be fair, BT’s coverage was frequently praised.The major complaint was service: BT is below the curve on customer support, barely managing a passing grade – “appalling” and “terrible” were words that frequently came up in the comments. “BT customer service is shocking,” said Chris Dimond. “Shame as
their hardware and service is good.”http://www.dearbattery.co.uk/samsung.html

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