Showing posts with label sound system. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sound system. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Epson PowerLite Presenter Portable Projector / DVD Player Combo (V11H335120) Review

Epson PowerLite Presenter Portable Projector / DVD Player Combo  (V11H335120)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
.Epson PowerLite Presenter Portable Projector / DVD Player Combo (V11H335120)
I work in an office where 11 of us live and die by our presentations. We train, distribute information, do planning sessions and communally edit documents. We do this with 14-plus offices in four states.
In one of our 100+ people field review sessions early in 2010, lack of projectors at field sites was identified as a weakness. We also find ourselves short a projector or two in the office because we go all directions with various equipment when we travel.
I'm loving Epson products more and more. I'm sold on their printer usefulness, image and other and quality and buy more of them all the time. In my projector search, I began looking for the smallest, lightest projector around. I found the Powerlite Presenter instead. It plays DVD's, has a built in 10 watt sound system, projects almost as bright as the best projectors on the market, and has a microphone. It also has USB A & B connectors, HDMI for HD cable and satellite TV, HD-DVR, Blu-ray or HD camcorder, RCA jacks and composite video and sound. Comprehensive and impressive. Much bigger than the smallest units on the market but not heavy considering its size.
This is where Silly Me comes in. I imagined that since the machine had a USB A connection, we'd be able to bring along a thumb drive with our PowerPoints and run the presentations directly from the USB. Don't even think about this my presenting brothers and sisters, I've already done it for you. The machine will read only jpeg, MP3, WMA, DivX, MPEG 1/2/3/4 from a USB or external drive. Digital cameras connect easiy. I should have tried my camera on the machine before I wrote this review. I'm taking Tech Support and the documentation's word for it.
On our test run, we popped a training DVD into the machine and it ran great. I'm not sure how much of an audience/room the 10 watt sound system will reach, but it was hurting our ears in 12 x 12 foot conference room at a setting of 6. When I connected the laptop, the projector found it immediately and we had the image on the wall and on the laptop, no Alt-Function key tapping. More sophisticated projector settings like keystone, color, etc. are made using the remote control.
The microphone is six inches long on a six foot cable, an on-off switch and a multi-directional ball at the speaking end. A small clip-on with a longer cable would be excellent. We connected it, used it with the video off. It worked great. It was also able to talk over the video presentation as it played, no feedback as feared. We'll be able to do karaoke on those long nights in very small towns and be the life of the gathering.
The unit has a carrying handle, making it easy to move. The carrying case cradling the unit is a padded nylon case, much like a laptop sleeve. It has a flap on top that velcros shut under the handle and three pockets for supporting cables, etc. One large one across the back and two side pockets. I like carrying documentation with my equipment, so when I have the documentation, microphone, remote control, 10 foot power and 6 foot VGA cables and the USB B cable if I choose to buy and carry one, I've got a pretty large, though light, lumpy, bulging Powerlight Presenter package. It's not what I consider ideal carry on luggage. There are parts to lose externally exposed. If you like the idea of this unit, and fly lots, I'd suggest getting a Pelican or similar case, with plenty of foam space to create cable, mike and remote pockets.
I'm not the brightest light on the string. The quick set-up guide is excellent. Finding the documentation CD in the package, I tried using it. It didn't work. There is an executable and cab file for the documents that did not install. The majority of our computers are secure, and no oaf like me is allowed to run an executable file whenever we please. The laptop I used could have done it. Each projector comes with a Service Card with a phone number and PIN. I'd not registered the unit. When I called the mumber on the card and used the PIN, it did not recognize it and sent me to a tech support number manned by a human being. The serial numbers made of alpha and numeric characters for these units have a circular character that may be an O or a 0. No slashed zero, no "O" squished into a 0. Tech support said they are zeros. Tech support also told me to find the documentation on the web. My little human of unease down in my stomach was beginning to get out of its chair and wave its arms around. The people tech support is fine. Don't count on the materials provided in the packaging.
My little human of unease jumped around as I purchased these units because they are a new to market product with lots of moving parts and connections. And honestly, cheap for the features. I've had a lot of cheap, and not-so-cheap stuff give me lots of problems or fail. Globally, we seem to have forgotten the the word quality exists, substituting "profit" instead. So I ordered these items with 2 year "Fast Turn Depot" extended warranties. I don't need somebody in Remoteville Nevada or Utah with a dead projector two months from now.
I had a room full of people very excited when we played a video with good quality in a bright room and loud sound with microphone voice-over. When we got to playing a PowerPoint from the USB drive and failed, considerable air left our balloon, and we had a good projector with a DVD and sound. We can export PowerPoint 2007 slide shows as JPEGs, so there is still lots of hope that these machines and a thumb drive can be all we need to do our work on the road. To run a PowerPoint or Adobe Acrobat, the projector would need an Operating System and software burned into its tiny brains. Lots more than we can hope for with this kind of machine and price point.
We're going to distribute these machines and used them a lot. Features, slightly light; long-term quality, unknown; carrying case, OK; size and weight in relation to features, very good; ease of use, excellent. As we adapt to our new projectors, I know they will find a useful home with us.
If the link below works, you'll be taken to a page with step-by-step detail and another review.
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Click Here to see more reviews about: Epson PowerLite Presenter Portable Projector / DVD Player Combo (V11H335120)

The ultimate all-in-one, business presentation tool. Make your business shine bright with the Epson PowerLite Presenter. With a built-in DVD player, two 10 W speakers, USB Plug 'n Play instant setup on your PC, HDMI connectivity, and microphone/headphone support, it's got all the tools you need to perform to your potential. WXGA (16:10) resolution means larger-than-life presentations that dazzle on widescreen notebooks, providing 30 percent more image area than standard projectors provide. Experience ultra bright, true-to-life images with 2500 lumens color light output and 2500 lumens white light output, plus an Auto Color Mode feature that automatically selects the optimum presentation setting based on the lighting within the room. With the all-digital HDMI connection, you can display amazing HD video content. Add exciting aspects to any presentation with multiple inputs for things like your camcorder, digital camera, iPod or gaming console. And with USB Plug 'n Play connectivity, just plug in a standard USB cable and instantly view your images on both the screen and your Windows PC, simultaneously. Or, use a USB memory device for convenient, PC-free presentations. With a carrying handle on the projector and an included carrying case and remote control, you can take the show on the road. This affordable, light weight projector/DVD combo, is your all-in-one solution for instant presentations virtually anywhere.

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

Klipsch CS-500 2.1 Home Theater System with DVD Player Review

Klipsch CS-500 2.1 Home Theater System with DVD Player
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The sound from this system and easy connectivity were a big plus. 2.1 sound was good, solid base and good spoken word sound for movies/TV.
Unfortunately, the DVD player starting conking out and wouldn't play DVD's without skipping or pixelation after about 90 days. Trying to get an exchange through Klipsch or Amazon. The discs that were problematic on this unit played fine on another DVD player.
I've learned a lesson that it might be better to buy big, heavy items like this through a local store that might be easier in terms of exchange, especially when it quickly became defective.
UPDATE 4/12/09 - although amazon was a pain, Klipsch handled the situation very well, offering an exchange and even upgrading to the next model up.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Klipsch CS-500 2.1 Home Theater System with DVD Player


Sleek, simple, and small, the Klipsch CS-500 2.1 home theater system with DVD player delivers the effect of a large, 5.1 home theater system with just two speakers, a subwoofer and an A/V center. It features a built-in Class D amplifier that distributes 35 watts of power to each satellite and 100 watts of power to the subwoofer.
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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Samsung HT-C6900W Blu-Ray Home Theater System Review

Samsung HT-C6900W Blu-Ray Home Theater System
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
We got the system a week earlier than initially projected - nice gift for Christmas to replace the underwhelming sound of the Sony DAV-IS50 system. Purchase decision was based on integrated feature set, Blue-Ray DVD, iPod docking, wireless speakers, InternetTV ready with wireless LAN. The initial installation took little more than 1/2h. The lack of at least one HDMI cable in the package was just an annoyance, since we had already the needed set of cables. This system has 2 HDMI inputs which turned out to be necessary when I realized that the Netflix function provided via the InternetTV mode does not include browsing the full Netflix Instant offerings but showed only my own Instant Queue. I still prefer the full search functionality of the ROKU box for streaming Netflix movies and gave up the built-in streaming feature. The provided iPod docking integration was another disappointment. I am used to hear music from my iPod library of >6K songs all the time and expected a simple enablement to get this going. What is provided however is a relatively cumbersome interface requiring multiple menu's to go through and have the TV on to set things up while I normally run my full library in shuffle mode. I ended up dusting off my old DLO HomeDock and connecting it to the AUX port. After updating my Harmony One universal handset I am back in business. The sound quality of this system is great and meets all expectations.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Samsung HT-C6900W Blu-Ray Home Theater System

Be surrounded by superior sound with the Samsung HT-C6900W 3D Blu-ray home theater system.

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