![]() Katzmaier echoed what I was thinking: "The color's oversaturated, the picture's soft, and the contrast isn't good," he said, "but for what it is - and its price - I think most people will be fairly impressed. I watched the movie for a while myself and then had our video guru David Katzmaier come in and take a look. For source material, I used an iTunes copy of "Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol." It's a 1.8GB file and about as high-quality as you're going to get coming from an iPhone. ![]() I set up a little viewing area in an office and projected about a 30-inch image on the wall (the manual says you can go up to 50 inches but the sweet spot is more in the 25- to 30-inch range). But in dark conditions projecting on a plain white wall, the picture was OK. The projector just doesn't work well in a lighted room, unless you project a tiny picture that isn't much bigger than your phone's screen. The first thing I'd advise is to turn the lights off. But the product developer told me that there are more important factors that go into making a good picture than just brightness - and he's mostly right.Īn iPhone docked in the accessory. It's also because the Pop Video just isn't that bright, coming in at less than 10 lumens. That's partially because it's trying to avoid getting into the brightness game, which is a little like the contrast game with TVs or the watts-per-channel game in audio, where numbers have a tendency to get inflated. It's worth noting that the company doesn't list brightness specs (lumens). ![]() IPhone 4/4S and third- and fourth-generation iPod TouchĪs for the light engine inside the Pop Video, Micron uses something called FLCOS microdisplay technology, which is cheaper to produce and more energy-efficient. 6 inch (HWD)īuilt-in lithium ion rechargeable battery
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