

We also think that we should cater for upgrading the projector at some stage to 4K. The club projection software we use takes advantage of independent laptop screen and projector screen: the image is shown on the projector, and thumbnails of the entire set and control stuff is on the laptop screen. Having independent images on laptop screen and projector is the only way of ensuring that the projected image is not limited in any way by the laptop screen.

My suggestion is to ensure the projector port of the laptop has the resolution you require and then use "extend these displays". There's a further issue: in that mode the laptop will probably use the same profile for laptop screen and projector screen.
#Projection card not working in nuke 10 windows 10#
We are seeking to replace the laptop with a Windows 10 laptop with sufficient screen resolution to be able to project using mirroring to simplify setting up.Īs I say, I wouldn't do that. The alternative is to use only the projector (and not the laptop screen). I always use extended desktop, but I find it makes things much simpler! The main thing is that "duplicate displays" means you're limited to the resolution of the laptop. We are currently using a Windows 7 laptop with a maximum screen resolution of 1600x900 so we often use extended desktop which complicates the setting up. My camera club uses a WUXGA (1920x1200) projector although we normally use a 4:3 aspect ratio and project at 1600x1200.

On the other hand, can we be certain that any 4K Windows laptop will be capable of displaying and outputting at 1600x12x1200?
#Projection card not working in nuke 10 full#
It is very difficult to get full specifications on laptops and graphics card so one option would be to take our (very heavy) projector along to a computer store before buying and plugging it in to see what resolution options come up. The question that I want to ask is how we can be absolutely certain that any laptop that we buy will be capable of running at both 1600x12x1600 resolutions so that we can run the projector in mirror mode? We are therefore looking at getting a 4K Windows laptop and that means that we have a somewhat limited choice with our limited budget. We are seeking to replace the laptop with a Windows 10 laptop with sufficient screen resolution to be able to project using mirroring to simplify setting up. My camera club uses a WUXGA (1920x1200) projector although we normally use a 4:3 aspect ratio and project at 1600x1200.
