BenQ Releases 4K Flat Panels and Laser Projectors for Education
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 02/04/19
 
 
Audio-visual company BenQ has added a new  line of ultra-high-definition displays and projectors suitable for education  environments.
According to the company, its new UHD interactive flat panel  Premium RP series offers "classroom-ready" features and a  user-friendly interface. The 4K IFP family includes the 65-inch RP6501K,  75-inch RP7501K and 86-inch RP8601K.
When combined with BenQ's EZWrite  5.0 software, the IFP becomes a collaborative hub, allowing users to  share ideas, notes and opinions and make annotations on screen captures from  apps, video, websites, documents and images. Participants can also annotate on  the screen from their devices, regardless of their location. Instrutors can  download and upload files from the screen to cloud services, such as Google  Drive and Dropbox, eliminating the need to use a USB drive for accessing files.
Other features include:
  - An air-quality sensor that helps to monitor the  carbon dioxide concentration level in classrooms;
- Eye-care technology that senses when someone is  close to the screen, to activate "flicker-free" and "low blue  light" features;
- Germ-resistance; the screen uses an  antimicrobial coating to kill germs accumulating on the surface and lessen the  risk of cross-infection;
- Dual pens to enable two users to write or draw  simultaneously with different colors. Within Brush Mode, participants can also  use a physical paintbrush to meld technology and art. Without having to switch  modes, a handwriting recognition feature converts written text, numbers, forms  and drawings into digital text;
- Tighter touch resolution, to reduce the gap that  shows up between the landing point and the display point; and
- Voice Assistant, to let instructors control the  flow of the class, such as starting the timer or searching the internet from  wherever they are in the classroom. Faculty members can run the IFP through  voice control or remote control.
"Educators have a huge responsibility to use technology  in a way that will spark new aptitudes in learning. However, many solutions  available are cumbersome to operate, time-consuming to develop content with and  can be unhealthy with prolonged use," said Bob Wudeck, senior director,  business, education and CinePro solutions, in a statement. "BenQ is the  first display company to prioritize healthy learning with thoughtful features  that make the display intuitive and help teachers easily achieve goals."
The company also announced two 4K laser projectors that are designed  to support 4K high-dynamic range imaging (HDR) presentations in huddle rooms  and collaborative spaces. BenQ's upcoming LK952 and short-throw LK953ST 4K  ultra-high-definition HDR projectors produce 3840 x 2160 resolution with 8.3  million distinct pixels for each frame.
The projectors generate 5,000 lumens of laser-powered  brightness for 20,000 hours. The company said the new devices use technology  for delivering "awe-inspiring clarity" and "crisply defined  details" for which Apple's iOS and high-end 4K notebooks are known.  Image-amplifying functionality further enhances the quality of projected  images, including detecting changes in the color between an object and its  background to produce sharper edges and more precise surface textures.
The new projectors will include:
  - Sealing of laser modules to protect the laser  bank with a lock-and-key design that prevents dust accumulation;
- HDMI for transporting the digital signal  directly from projector to projector or other HDMI display device without  signal degradation; and
- Flexible installation for projection onto  ceilings, walls, floors or angled signage, with horizontal and vertical lens  shift and 360-degree rotation.
An optional "InstaShow" collaboration tool can  provide one-button start for wireless presentations for up to 16 presenters;
"BenQ's LK Series laser projectors leverage technology  engineered for our gaming monitors to support true 4K HDR output," said  Wudeck. "For the first time, users can see that same arresting quality,  revealing the fine details within complex spreadsheets and graphical content in  perfect clarity and alignment. The result are images that pop with all the  nuances you don't want to get lost."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.