My friend called the other day. And as usual, after a few minutes of chit-chat, our conversation veered towards the upcoming ICC Cricket World Cup. While we were debating the chances of India retaining the trophy, my friend mentioned an existential question he was facing - to move or not to move?
A cricket fanatic, my friend is a finance professional based in Mumbai. He works with a foreign bank and apparently is doing well enough to think of buying a 65-inch 4K television, which he simply can't accommodate in his Bandra flat. He wasn't getting a bigger place in Bandra, and he really didn't want to shift - his wife's office was nearby and his child had just started school. But then a World Cup comes every four years.
Well, I suggested, how about dropping your plans for a big TV and look at a short-throw projector instead? Yes, it's a kind of a compromise as I couldn't suggest any 4K projector, but there were a few I had on hand to review, and suggested my friend should wait till I was done.
First up was the Benq W1080ST+ (Rs 1,25,000). Setting it up was fairly easy. The projector comes with a plethora of connectivity options. I connected my TATASkyHD+ to the HDMI port and started off with the second match, India vs Australia, in the recently concluded tri-series Down Under. Did I mention, I placed the projector about 2 metres from the wall and was enjoying an image equivalent to that on a 70-inch TV?
Just when I thought India's great batting line-up would surely notch up a 300+ score, disaster struck. Raina mistimed a hit off Mitchell Starc over the in-field and Glenn Maxwell took a comfortable catch at mid-on. In came Captain Cool MS Dhoni. He smashes a few to the boundary and the Indian crowd goes ecstatic.
I should mention that I connected external speakers to the projector to get the atmospherics right. While the in-built audio does suffice, it wasn't loud enough to convey the excitement of the crowd. One must mention watching a match on a big-screen TV offers a lot of depth, which seemed to be missing on the projected image. But that in no way takes away the excitement of watching the match on the big screen.
I switched on during the course of the third match of the series - India vs England. Axar Patel had just come in and was taking guard as Steven Finn came in to bowl. The score read, horror of horrors, 137/6. Make that 137/7. Displaying absolutely no footwork, Patel was castled. It was painful to watch on the big screen to boot the great Indian batting line-up fail in so vivid detail on a big screen. I switched to some saner stuff, such as pulling videos off my home media server and watching them - ah the joys of wireless communication. Next, I plugged in a pen drive with some pictures of office and watched them on the big screen.
I then found an interactive presentation pen in the package. When switched on and connected wirelessly, the screen became a virtual whiteboard for presentations. And if the projector was connected to a computer, the whiteboard could be saved as well!
My friend is a happy man. He doesn't have to shift and is instead driving his wife mad by dragging her to showrooms for projector demos.