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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Sim2 Domino 80 By Alex Kidman, CNET.com.au June 22, 2007 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/reviews/enterprise/soa/Sim2-Domino-80/0,2000065720,339278972,00.htm
Design The D80 itself is a moderately chubby projector, measuring in at 17.4 x 35.1 x 31.8cm, with a carrying weight of 5kg. Not that this is a projector that's particularly pitched at the portable market; this is much more an "install once, enjoy in a fixed position" style of machine. It's also not a projector that makes much of stylised fins, dashing lines or ostentation in its design, either -- if one wanted to be unkind, we'd say it's rather squat. Sim2 provides the D80 in either a matte black or white finish. Features The D80 uses Sim2's ALPHAPATH Light Engine, which, according to Sim2's claims, protects the projected light within the projector body from outside luminance contamination, leading to claimed better black levels and less need for ventilation within the unit -- which means a quieter projector. Performance HD material, tested via Blu-Ray -- we concentrated mainly on the Blu-Ray version of Casino Royale and a Blu-Ray test disc playing through a Playstation 3 -- came out brilliantly through the D80, even during fast action scenes. If there was even a trace of rainbow effect to be seen within the movie, we didn't spot it, and likewise it did a sterling job presenting games through our test PS3 console. We were somewhat amused by the concept of plugging in the cheapest thing we could find into the D80's composite input, just to see how it would handle the upscaling. In the end, we opted for a classic Nintendo Entertainment System and a creaky Sony VHS deck. Predictably, coming off a feast of HD entertainment, the results were somewhat jarring, although the D80 did try its best. We're willing to bet that nobody else actually buying a D80 will try that particular test. For the record, the original Super Mario Brothers still looks blocky, especially on a 100" display. No matter what we threw at the D80, it projected it faithfully and surprisingly quietly to boot. The D80 is an excellent projector, and our main concerns are really very minor. At full 1080p resolution we did find some menu choices a little tough to read due to their small size, but then this is a projector that clearly deserves to be calibrated and then left alone unless like us, you can't resist tweaking. The lack of a DVI port -- or for that matter additional HDMI ports -- limits the ability to plug in multiple input sources with true HD fidelity, which is mildly irksome. The price of the D80 will not so much be a stumbling block for many as much as it will be a full-scale impenetrable fortress of cost, but if you're in the income bracket and interest group for a truly exceptional HD projector, then the D80 is certainly worthy of consideration.
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