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CharlieOneSix
12th Sep 2011, 22:23
Gents - some help if you would. Mrs C16 is Chair of the local branch of the Embroiderers' Guild and is looking for a suitable PC projector for use when visiting speakers come along with their laptops to show visuals to accompany their talks. Tonight the speaker turned up with a laptop with USB but no serial port and the borrowed projector had a serial port but no USB.

The available budget is £500 and adequate connectivity is an obvious issue. A projector with USB/Serial port/HDMI would seem to be ideal but what recommendations are out there? Your advice would be most welcome.:ok:

osmosis
12th Sep 2011, 23:42
An associate has recently purchased a very portable projector for $90 Oz but I have not personally used it and cannot comment on their performance or usability. A quick search found this among many others:

No-name Mini USB pico projector now the cheapest you can buy -- Engadget (http://www.engadget.com/2010/02/10/no-name-mini-usb-pico-projector-now-the-cheapest-you-can-buy/)

riverrock83
16th Sep 2011, 01:09
As I'm sure you know - the usb / serial port is normally only used for moving the mouse around / clicking for the next slide. If I was them, I wouldn't bother with this feature - buy a separate PC remote if they must. I would expect the speaker to bring their own if they needed it.

If you're sending the picture down the USB cable then you are going to get a poor resolution and poor refresh rate. Thats what HDMI / VGA / DVI is for. Make sure you include a VGA port - all laptops can output on VGA (maybe with an adapter from DVI) but only newer laptops can output in HDMI.

Also get one which has a composite phono / RCA input - so they can watch DVDs etc if they want (although you would also need a separate set of speakers).

Most presentations are still written on PCs in a 4:3 aspect ratio. Home cinema projectors are normally wide screen. If you can find a projector that is 4:3 it would be better, but they are hard to come by at the bottom of the market. 1024x768 should be the minimum resolution - but the bigger the better. Most of the projectors in that price range wont make this.

For an indoor presentation - you would want a minimum of 1000 lux output - but the more the better, especially if its a bright room. If there is sunlight coming into the room, you'd be better with 3000 lux - but I suspect that would blow the budget. You will never be able to project onto direct sunlight. Those Pico projectors are 8 to 25 lux so not suitable.

Ignore 3D - everyone watching would need expensive goggles - just not worth it.

HTH
RR