

- #Best pico projectors 2018 skin
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Lisa favored PC Mode over Cinema, but hey – to each their own.
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Perhaps a little on the cool side with some pink hues, but skin tones look mostly natural and that’s one of the main things we look for in our home entertainment and home theater projectors. Cinema Mode, however, has some really great color. No pico or pocket projector has truly excellent color, in that there will always be something that’s a little off. Looking at Lisa’s photos, the Optoma ML750 has some truly good color. You could wirelessly stream from that laptop and place it somewhere else, out of sight, out of mind. This should make cord cutters happy – if you’re streaming Netflix from your laptop like Lisa did, then you wouldn’t need to have an HDMI running from the computer to the projector. And, having the ability to move it from room to room, such as from the living room to the bedroom, makes it that much better.Ī rather awesome feature of the ML750 that sets it apart from most other pico and pocket projectors is that it has optional wireless capabilities, via Optoma’s wireless dongle. Still, Lisa says that having the Optoma ML750 in her apartment was just as easy as owning a TV, if not easier. It’s nicely bright and should be able to handle some mild ambient light, though there will be some wash out. No lumens measurements were taken at the time for this one – but looking at Lisa’s photos, I think it’s safe to say it would’ve come in within 25% of its 700 lumen claim. It can technically be found for under $500, if you’re willing to go refurbished (at the time of this being published), but as it’s not under $500 new, I couldn’t consider it for the Best in Class – Under $500 Award.

If you have a tight space, consider the ML750ST for just $50 more – it would have won this award, but its price is $549. You may have more room for your setup, so having the projector a bit further back would be an option in that case, allowing the Optoma ML750 to display a much larger image. This Optoma doesn’t have as short a throw distance as the ML750ST, so Lisa couldn’t get it to be much larger than 60” in her space. The ML750 has a fixed lens, so where you place it determines the size of the projected image. She wasn’t going for the home theater experience, rather the “this is a way better idea than a small LCD TV that I just don’t have room for,” experience. She would routinely project movies and other content from about 45” – 65” diagonal sizes instead of watching on her laptop. In the case of the Optoma ML750, it solved a very real problem Lisa was experiencing – a problem many New York City dwellers face – getting the “big screen experience” in a compact space.

This was one of two models she reviewed from Optoma, the other is the ML750ST, which did not win an award (more on that later). Luckily, Art is her father, and they were able to come up with a creative alternative in the Optoma ML750 – that is, in exchange for a review.

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When Lisa reviewed it, she did so with this question in mind: Is the ML750 ideal for cord cutting professional Millennials living in the Big City? Lisa’s first New York City apartment didn’t have a proper set up for a TV – her door swung all the way open and would easily hit the wall that TV would go on. Though it is a few years old, it is still currently shipping but at a substantially lower price. The Optoma ML750 was reviewed by Lisa Feierman in 2015.
