1920x1200 is a WUXGA resolution.
There is no such beast YET.
There is one company in Norway ,projectiondesign,that has two models in the works for the second Quarter of 2008.
http://www.projectiondesig
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Browse All TopicsWe need to purchase a Projector that can display 1920 X 1200 widescreen resolution from a laptop. This will be used for AutoCAD and other business presentations. Price is a factor, but resolution/brightness/cont
I notice that NO projectors come with 1920X1200 native resolution. The closest is UWXGA - 1920 x 1080. Will this distort the display coming from a laptop displaying 1920X1200?
We are just after some advise and options: What is the best projector (or method) to project data from a laptop running 1920X1200.
Thanks,
Damian
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1920x1200 is a WUXGA resolution.
There is no such beast YET.
There is one company in Norway ,projectiondesign,that has two models in the works for the second Quarter of 2008.
http://www.projectiondesig
Damian,
The projector can run at it's own resolution even though you are running at UWXGA
I'm running a Dell M90 with a Quadro FX3500 at 1920x1200, but regularly project (or hook up to monitors) in either single or dual mode at resolutions ranging from 800x600 to 24" monitors running 1920x1200 (ie: the Samsung 245b)
When I do presentations to large groups (AutoCAD and SolidWorks), I regularly use projectors in the range of 1280x1024 and 1600x1200 with great success. Shoot for high Lumens
I know this has been closed but I do want to mentiion something.
Bandwidth!!!
At a high resolution like the one requested remember bandwidth. Waht many people are overlooking these days is that the cable and the equipment cannot support analog transmission of the super high resolutions.
This forces us to consider digital signal distribution, which presents it's own set of problems if you want to go any distance at all.
for 1080p your bandwidth requirements will only allow you to use digital transmission like DVI or HDMI. HDMI or DVI with HDCP is best for future proof. Many LCD's these days will have a DVI that supports HDCP. Or an HDMI connector that reads DVI/HDMI.
a 1080p projector will be expensive and not so bright. If you cannot control your environmental lighting and need a brighter projector, something around 1366x768 is the next most common. Good price point on those too. Projectorcentral.comm is a great tool as Kutyi mentioned.
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by: KutyiPosted on 2008-02-24 at 14:48:49ID: 20971798
Have a look at this tool to select a Projector: http://www.projectorcentra l.com/proj ectors.cfm
You won't find a project at your resolution and sill have to settle for something lower. The quality is still going to be good. As for brand, I would check replacement bulb costs on any one you are looking at, and overall warranty. I would not focus as much on the brand as the warranty and bulb replacement.