Welcome | Sign In
TechNewsWorld.com
Tech Blog

LIVE FROM CES
Gadget Gawking at CES: Mini Projectors Still Just Good Ideas

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Gadget Gawking at CES: Mini Projectors Still Just Good Ideas

There's a pall over CES this year, with exhibitors demonstrating a stiff upper lip along with their gadgets. There are hot spots, of course, and no shortage of cool concepts -- but some of them, like the pocket projector, aren't quite ready for prime time.


Listen to Your Customers, Grow Your Bottom Line.
Learn how loyal customers can be your best advocates for evangelizing your products and brand, while helping you to dramatically gain new business. Download "Customer Experience Management: Engaging Loyal Customers to Evangelize Your Brand."

The doors to the Las Vegas convention center opened Thursday, and the Consumer Electronics Show is now officially in full swing.

I'm in no position to do an official head count, of course, but the crowd seems just a little thinner than it did last time I was here. Sure, there are the occasional bottlenecks with the crowding and the elbows and the coughing right next to your face, but certain parts of certain halls just seem kind of dead. I can find places to sit in the press room and the slop stands. Is it really less crowded? Perhaps the constant message from exhibitors ("Yes, it's economic Armageddon, but we're doing fine") has tinted my perceptions. Who knows?

There's also a greenish hue hanging over the show. Exhibitors are giving out fewer paper press kits, opting instead to give out CDs, thumb drives, or adding a "/ces" to the end of their Web sites. I'm a big fan of that last one -- the less crap I have to carry around, the better -- but it would be much more useful if there were greater free WiFi access throughout the center.

Pocket Projectors

I dropped by Optoma to get a look at its Pico projector, which began shipping last month. This is something I'd read a great deal about but wanted to see in person.

The Pico is a US$399 DLP projector, about the size of a pack of cigarettes, that hooks up to a digital camera, iPod or iPhone. It lets you display your photos on any wall or screen, anywhere. Optoma says it'll project images at sizes up to 100 times that of the device's small screen.

The LED light source inside is good for 20,000 hours, which means the device will probably be well into obsolscence by the time the bulb blows. It has inputs for USB and standard composite.

Perhaps I've been jaded by the incredibly luminescent, huge, LED-backlit TVs I've been staring at for the last two days, but the Pico's image came off as just plain limp. The photos appeared a little fuzzy, the color was drab -- and this was all on a screen about 15 inches across, which is the around the maximum size you'd want to try in a lighted room, according to the Optoma rep I spoke to.

The company didn't have it on display in a darkened area, which I assume would yield a better image. Still, 100 times larger than the source screen, even in the dark? I'm skeptical.

Even though I was left wanting more in terms of picture quality, I still love the idea of pocket-sized projectors. Maybe the next generation of the Pico, if there is one, will usher in some big improvements. Internal memory? Flash card slot? Perhaps, but Optoma isn't talking about any specific plans just yet.

The Color of the Bulb

So, I crossed the South Hall to the 3M booth, where they were also showing off some small projectors.

3M's currently available mini is the MPro110. That projector looked perhaps a little sharper in ambient light, though it could have been due to better source material (but who'd use fuzzy, washed-out pix for their product display?). I got to see 3M's in lower-light conditions at about 15 inches, and it was definitely an improvement.

3M was also talking about the next generation. The MM200 on display is still a prototype, but it noticeably improved the image's color quality. That, I'm told, is due to the RGB LED it uses; the MPro110 uses a white LED.

It's also smaller and thinner than the MPro -- little enough to cram into a smartphone or portable media player, for instance -- and 3M is talking about selling the hardware out to other manufacturers for use in whatever devices they can come up with.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Paul Hartsock


More by Paul Hartsock

Will Google Take Over Your Tube?
March 19, 2010
Google may be perched above your TV soon, according to a recent report. Word is, the search behemoth is teaming with Sony, Logitech and Intel to create a TV set-top box platform based on its Android operating system and designed to meld traditional TV with Internet content. Meanwhile, the FCC showed off its big plans, Microsoft bared a little more WinPho7, and Apple revealed a new way to deal with old batteries.
'Street Fighter IV' on iPhone: Loud, Dumb and Fun as Ever
March 18, 2010
Games in Capcom's "Street Fighter" series have always been noisy, colorful, ridiculous brawlers, and the latest port to the iPhone, "Street Fighter IV," is no exception. The game delivers exactly what fans of the series have come to expect, and it's nicely surprising how little the virtual touchscreen buttons diminish from "SFIV's" playability.
Can a Clown-Nosed Wand Move the Needle for PS3?
March 12, 2010
Sony stirred up some excitement among PS3 fans by giving its Move motion controller a few minutes in the spotlight and mentioning it will be ready by this fall. Ever since Nintendo scored a huge hit with the Wii years ago, its rivals have been scrambling for motion-control systems of their own. Meanwhile, HP and Apple vied for tablet attention, EFF cried foul on Apple's contracts, and Newegg fried a supplier.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Free eBook: Secure Your Datacenter
Click here to download today.
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network