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Epson Brightlink Pro 1430Wi Projector Review - Special Features 2

Posted on February 4, 2015 by Art Feierman
BRIGHTLINK 1430WI PROJECTOR – SPECIAL FEATURES PAGE 2:  Interactivity and MHL Support

Interactivity

Epson offers a built-in suite of many annotation tools and other capabilities, but in addition it supports 3rd party interactive software (and vice versa).  This means more than just having a nice collection of tools, but also templates.  Ideally you work interactively with the projector by being up at the screen, and this Epson Brightlink Pro is excellent at that.

In fairness, you can react interactively from a distance with some projectors, if their “pen” system isn’t directly tied to a sensor on the projector.  This Brightlink can do some of that, the best example would be doing annotation using an iPad or other mobile device where there’s an appropriate App.

Epson does offer both iOS and Android Apps, so they can support both “up close and personal” pen/finger touch based interactivity, or use tablets, etc.  We have seen pens that will work from a distance, and while that let’s a presenter move around the room, the general issue is the further the distance from the screen, the more coarse the interaction.  You just can’t write in fairly small type with that type of pen, from 15 feet away, let alone 40.  (But that will work for a quick check mark, or underlining something, just don’t start “writing.”

Pens have been the primary tool for interactive work for more than a decade and the 1430Wi comes with two of those.  The 1430Wi is the first Epson projector in their business oriented Brightlink Pro series to add finger touch to the available tools in the interactive arsenal.   The Epson system can detect the touch position of up to 6 fingers and this is a big step forward in interactivity for video projection systems.

For example, two people could be standing next to the white board/screen with each drawing with different colors, using up to three fingers on one hand, and a pen in the other.  That’s right, the ability to have eight simultaneous actions to be done.  In theory, as many as 8 people could be up there (assuming a large enough projection surface to have room for them all to work around the white board/screen) with each doing their own drawing/annotating of the projected image.  Some could be drawing, others annotating, deleting, or adjusting the menus, or all eight might be writing 100 times “I will learn to be interactive!”

The finger touch ability has several benefits.  I appears to be more precise, and faster, and it also means you don’t have to use a pen, find a pen, etc., which means no opportunity to lose or break a pen.  Keep this capability in mind.  It will mean spending a bit more on the 1430Wi than the otherwise similar 1420Wi (i.e., with pens but without finger touch capability), but in many cases it may well be worth it.

These interactive capabilities are not limited to just drawing on the electronic white board, as the fingers/pens can be used to do such things as selecting items from a menu, scrolling pages, resizing or rotating objects, etc.   It makes the electronic white board more-or-less act like a giant multi-touch tablet.  Since the multi-touch interactive capabilities are not unlike using the interactive touch features on an iPad, Android tablet or a smart phone, users of such devices should quickly be able to be productive at using the interactive features offered by the 1430Wi.  Also the projector's remote control can be used for simple "mouse" input functions, providing another available interactive input tool.

See the later section of this review for information and the setup, calibration and use of the BrightLink Pro 1430Wi's interactive features.

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More Interactivity

Epson has on-board software in the projector which allows for all the core interactive functions, to control color, line thickness, highlights, and so much more.  You can toggle between pen, touch and mouse modes, between computer free, and interfacing with a computer.

Of particular note, you can save all your annotations and the projector can save up to 50 pages of annotated whiteboards..

You can annotate over video, another nice touch.   Ppresenters can pause a movie, then draw arrows to point out certain aspects of a scene. Perhaps an instructor or presenter might highlight areas that they want the user pay particular attention to when the video starts back up again.

All in all, the 1430Wi has a really good collection of tools built into the projector, but the additional downloadable software definitely adds a whole new level of functionality.

MHL Support

Epson seems to be big on adding MHL to many of their projectors.  For those not familiar, think of MHL as a mobile device standard that works over HDMI.

One example use would be for the case of using an Android phones or tablets supporting MHL.  The projector's MHL support would simplify showing photos and videos from those mobile devices on to the 1430Wi’s screen.  Also using those same mobile devices, that would allow you to browse the web with the pages viewed being projected.  MHL just adds another flavor of interfacing to the world.

 

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