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>> Maybe because most companies have tons of laptops lying around, but very
>> few (if any) DVD players.
>
> I don't think so. Even our paragliding teacher first asked for a laptop,
> even though he has a fully equipped home theater and he doesn't work for
> a big company.
Again, they are probably just expecting that it is more likely you carry
around or have available a laptop rather than a stand-alone DVD player.
Stand alone DVD players tend to be wired in to systems and not easily
portable, whereas laptops are designed to be portable.
> Pretty many projectors, especially the meeting room models
> have more decent audio equipment themselves.
Oh I didn't realise that, most of ours that are remaining (they are
replacing them all with big TVs now) are fixed to the ceiling and have the
SVGA cable routed somewhere that pops up on the table. Connecting up 3.5mm
stereo audio or some cable from a DVD player is going to be tricky.
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scott wrote:
> Oh I didn't realise that, most of ours that are remaining (they are
> replacing them all with big TVs now) are fixed to the ceiling and have
> the SVGA cable routed somewhere that pops up on the table. Connecting
> up 3.5mm stereo audio or some cable from a DVD player is going to be
> tricky.
I could fancy some of that... How much does it cost to buy a decent
ceiling-mounted projector these days?
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> I could fancy some of that... How much does it cost to buy a decent
> ceiling-mounted projector these days?
Dunno, our old ones are huge monsters that look like they have come from the
80s. I bought a portable desk-mount one a while back to take to customer
meetings and was really impressed how it knocked the socks off our old huge
beasts. It was around 1000 euro IIRC, from NEC. But saying that we just
got a 52" TV for our meeting room for about the same price and it means you
don't have to close the blinds when it's sunny to see anything, nor is there
is loud hum from a fan right above your head. FOr a small to medium sized
meeting room it's perfect, but for anything larger you'd want a beefier
projector I would imagine which is going to cost a lot more.
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scott wrote:
>> I could fancy some of that... How much does it cost to buy a decent
>> ceiling-mounted projector these days?
>
> Dunno, our old ones are huge monsters that look like they have come from
> the 80s. I bought a portable desk-mount one a while back to take to
> customer meetings and was really impressed how it knocked the socks off
> our old huge beasts. It was around 1000 euro IIRC, from NEC. But
> saying that we just got a 52" TV for our meeting room for about the same
> price and it means you don't have to close the blinds when it's sunny to
> see anything, nor is there is loud hum from a fan right above your
> head. FOr a small to medium sized meeting room it's perfect, but for
> anything larger you'd want a beefier projector I would imagine which is
> going to cost a lot more.
Our projector is... shagged. It leans to one side, it's never ever in
focus properly, it's not very bright, you have to repeatedly press the
resync button to get the whole picture in shot, and it sounds like a
coffee grinder.
I really want to replace it with something better... but I suspect I'll
never get authorisation to spend the money. :-(
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> I really want to replace it with something better... but I suspect I'll
> never get authorisation to spend the money. :-(
Just make sure that one day it stops working completely... You could use a
BOFH-approved mains AC plug to 15-pin SVGA converter cable :-)
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scott wrote:
>> I really want to replace it with something better... but I suspect
>> I'll never get authorisation to spend the money. :-(
>
> Just make sure that one day it stops working completely... You could use
> a BOFH-approved mains AC plug to 15-pin SVGA converter cable :-)
Maybe I should just switch it from 240V to 110V? >:-)
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On Tue, 30 Jun 2009 14:03:08 +0100, Invisible wrote:
> scott wrote:
>
>> Oh I didn't realise that, most of ours that are remaining (they are
>> replacing them all with big TVs now) are fixed to the ceiling and have
>> the SVGA cable routed somewhere that pops up on the table. Connecting
>> up 3.5mm stereo audio or some cable from a DVD player is going to be
>> tricky.
>
> I could fancy some of that... How much does it cost to buy a decent
> ceiling-mounted projector these days?
I bought one in December (the Mitsubishi HC5500), with the ceiling mount
and screen it ran about $2K. It was a special bundle deal (and there was
a rebate), but that should give you a good ballpark.
It throws a 106" image, really nice for the home theatre. I do have a
technical issue that I need to call Mitsu about, though, periodically I
can't turn the projector on without unplugging it. Which is a pain for a
ceiling mounted projector.
Jim
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Invisible wrote:
>>> Unless you have my mum's DVD player.
>>
>> Why yes, it's a HiFi-model, it needs to warm up first to make sure the
>> picture won't have 7th harmonics on the signal!
>
> ...it's HDMI? :-P
Well, you sure don't want to have negative bits or anything on HDMI
interface!
My DVD-player has HDMI and upscaling to 720p. It's also free of area
codes and it gives really nice image even on S-video (my projector and
amplifier doesn't have HDMI) and cost me about 200 euros couple of years
ago. And it boots in couple of seconds.
-Aero
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> My DVD-player has HDMI and upscaling to 720p. It's also free of area
> codes and it gives really nice image even on S-video (my projector and
> amplifier doesn't have HDMI) and cost me about 200 euros couple of years
> ago. And it boots in couple of seconds.
That sounds like mine, amusingly it is a Sony one that doesn't have any
region code lock :-) Anyway, it's been stored away now ever since I got the
PS3, I watch everything (DVD, BR, DivX, etc) on there now.
PS: Remote controls that work via Bluetooth rock!
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scott wrote:
>
> That sounds like mine, amusingly it is a Sony one that doesn't have any
> region code lock :-) Anyway, it's been stored away now ever since I got
> the PS3, I watch everything (DVD, BR, DivX, etc) on there now.
Yes, it is. Mine is Sony DVP-NS76H. It needed to be hacked to be region
free, but that was pretty cheap and the official service made it, so it
didn't even burst out the warranty.
> PS: Remote controls that work via Bluetooth rock!
I'm sure of that!
-Aero
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