Moderate quality video in dark rooms. Silent. LED source said to last up to 10,000 hours. Absolutely tiny.
Requires dark rooms for even muted color reproduction. Battery is a tease, lasting 50 minutes.
A triumph in portability, the MPro110 can be packed along anywhere. You’ll never get an excellent image, but its size mostly offsets that shortcoming, especially in darkness.Micro Professional Projector MPro110 ...
Underwhelming colour reproduction; VGA cable too short
An entertaining gadget but it left us wanting more Good points Silent in operation; well designed Bad points Underwhelming colour reproduction; VGA cable too short ...
Pico projectors are a lot fun and great attention getters. To maximize your business and social enjoyment try to minimizing room light and project to a surface of neutral color. If you cant control the room light try a smaller image. It will brighten...
Abstract: No, the title does not say pocket protector, this review is going to give you a closer look at one of the first pocket projectors in the world.The 3M MPro110 pocket projector is about the size of a late 90s mobile phone (4.5"x2"). On the front of the ...
Abstract: Video Review: 3M feels your projection pain and that is why they have created the MPro 110, a mini projector that fits in your pocket and throws out a huge 50" screen. It has multiple inputs to interface with your iPod, computer, or digital camera, but...
Battery powered, Highly portable, VGA and composite video ports allow connection to a variety of devices, Cool fan-less operation
Dim output limits range of useful enlargement, VGA cable is stiff, bulky and short, Lens suffers from pin-cushioning, *
If you compare the MPro110 to a standard digital projector, it comes up short on many measures. Think dim output; limited enlargement; a lens that’s not corrected for linear distortion; native VGA resolution; and a total dearth of added features...
I am in love with the concept, and this little LCOS-based 640x480 projector does some amazing things given its size and resolution. But even understanding its limitations, it still has some major build-quality issues that prevent it from true awesomen...
Extremely small and light, Can run on an internal battery
Extremely dim, Low resolution, Hard to focus, Gets very warm
With the MPro110, 3M certainly achieved a technological success. We look forward to seeing the second or third iteration of this design, particularly one with an onboard flash memory drive for showing laptop-less slideshows. For now, however, we sugges...