Tue Jan 9, 2007 2:14PM EST
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Yes, the world is getting carried away by portable video on your iPod, PMP, and cell phone, but most people can't stand the small screens. Here at CES, I saw the PicoP, one of the coolest and potentially hugest new technologies I've seen in a while. The PicoP is a mint-sized, laser-based display module designed for cell phones that lets you project the videos stored or streamed on your cell phone onto the wall. It's also great for projecting still images onto a wall, a handy use in our camera-phone-filled world.
Alas, it's only a prototype, but Microvision, the light-scanning technology company, is working on getting this tiny module into cell phones, though there's no specific date or confirmed takers yet. The company is displaying the technology here at CES with a modified smart phone that projects Windows Media videos onto a screen. This promises to do for impromptu dorm-room "happenings" (or plain old slide shows) what portable iPod speakers did for on-the-fly hotel-room dance parties.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
This would be easier to incorporate and a more useful product to have it integrated into a laptop base.....
They need this as an add-on for iPods, normal cellphones and computers... If I could plug in my external SVIDEO or component video output from my laptop and get it to display on the wall without spending a fortune on the device, that will be awesome!
Just one more great idea that will make my day at the office even better IF it ever comes to the US.
This is the same company that is making the hot new printer with Epson: http://v3.espacenet.com/textdoc?DB=EPODOC&IDX=WO2005078507
The Blackberry Pearl is your office on the go: swank design, slim profile (4.2 x 2 x 0.6 inches; 3.2 ...
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Posted by bruhwilerm on Tue Jan 9, 2007 2:34PM EST Report Abuse
I hope this isn't another Vaporware moment. This sounds like something that would come out in the Fareast and not here in the United States. This is what used to be a cutting-edge country and it is great to see something like this happening here for once in the past decade.