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edtechnology.co.uk | T: @Educ_Technology
| PROMOTIONS | 27
Finger-touch interactivity, mobile device integration and ultra-short-throw projection are fuelling an unstoppable trend
The rise of interactive projectors I
t may have become more interactive, but life in the classroom is never static. For the past decade interactive
whiteboards have been installed in classrooms and helped a generation of students learn via advanced teaching methods unheard of a decade earlier, but the demand for the integration of mobile devices and for new kinds of content is creating a thirst for a new, more versatile hands-on technology fit for the progressive classrooms of the 21st century. At the vanguard of that change
is the ultra-short-throw interactive projector. Enhanced by ultra-short-throw technology as well as by brighter, more efficient 3LCD optical engines, it's a shift that's being driven by Epson, which
already has a 76% share of the ultra-short- throw interactive brand share in Europe and the Middle East. As the market leader with a long heritage in the education sector, Epson believes its responsibility is to tirelessly innovate to improve a generation of classrooms. Epson's new range of ultra-short-throw education projectors unveiled at BETT 2014 does just that, ushering-in a new era of interactive projection with some exciting new features that strive to allow for more versatile teaching methods. In an age where design and
manufacturing are more often than not completely divorced, Epson stands out as one of the few companies that embraces design and manufacturing as nothing
less than an art form. Epson argues that the biggest
advantage interactive projectors have over interactive whiteboards is a reduced cost of ownership. With the interactivity built into the projector – without the need for a separate, expensive interactive whiteboard – cost is reduced, meaning that educators are able to make their money go further. Epson is at the forefront of some
exciting new technology that culminates in mobile device integration and Epson's pen-free finger-touch interactivity. All of this will help educational institutions take advantage of – and accelerate – the unstoppable transition to interactive projectors. ET
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