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Wireless content from your tablets and smartphones
Retrieve stored information in the cloud directly from your projectors
Go mobile, send files from tablet or smartphone directly to your projectors
Remote computer control & access through mobile devices
Present instantly by simply turning on the projector without using a computer
InfoComm 2013 Awards: Best New Meeting Room Projector: Mitsubishi Cloud Projectors » rAVePubs.com
“Mitsubishi Cloud Projectors can be connected to a LAN and used as a thin-client to retrieve stored information to be presented directly to the projector. The projectors also function as a terminal adapter, enabling a cloud connection through a computer or server. Applications and data can be used in the cloud infrastructure for easy accessibility and to help reduce both overall total cost of ownership and amount invested in equipment. This concept will be copied by every other projector manufacturer.” – rAVePubs.com
White Paper Download – Projecting From the Cloud: What You Need to Know About the Future of Projection
Cloud Projectors: WD390U-EST, WD390U-EST(M), UD740U, TX20u, TW21U
Mitsubishi Cloud Projectors can be connected to a LAN and used as a Thin-client to retrieve stored information to be presented directly to the projector. The projectors also function as a terminal adaptor, enabling a cloud connection through a computer or server. Applications and data can be used in the cloud infrastructure for easy accessibility and to help reduce both overall total cost of ownership and amount invested in equipment.
Present on screen using only a tablet or smartphone! The free WiFi-Doc application allows files stored on a tablet or smartphone (txt/pdf/ppt/xls/ doc/jpeg files) to be sent directly to the projector giving presenters the freedom to interact more with the audience.
Access and control computers wirelessly via mobile device through the SidePad application.
Simply walk into the classroom or meeting room, turn the projector on, and start displaying – it doesn’t matter what platform or OS used to create the original content, simply connect to the cloud, LAN network, or to the Internet, and you’re ready to start presenting.
Useful utilities for your projector
Your source for all questions about Mitsubishi Projectors
Here, we’ll introduce you to the basic business and home theater projector technologies that make up our portable projector lineup, suggest some example uses, and explain some of the features that you might want to consider when purchasing a projector. The operation of today’s business and home theater projector systems is based on receiving an electric signal (either analog or digital) from a data source (computer, VCR, DVD, etc.), transforming the signal into an image, and projecting the image onto a screen. To do this, the signal must first be converted into a digital signal. If sent as analog, it is passed through an analog-to-digital signal converter. The digital signal is now ready to be processed into an image for projection. Currently, there are two technologies used in business and home theater projectors to display images: liquid-crystal display (LCD Projector) and Digital Light Processing (DLP Projector).
For a LCD projector, the digital signal is processed to polysilicon panels. A light source is passed through a series of dichroic mirrors to separate the various color wavelengths and then through the polysilicon panels where activated pixels process the light into a final compiler before projection through the lens and onto the screen.
With a DLP projector, the digital signal is processed to a DMDT chip. The light source is passed through a color wheel and onto the DMDT chip, and is then reflected off the chip through the lens and onto the screen. The introduction of this rather new technology has led to the further miniaturization of business and home theater projector systems.