I'm sure there are many other people having this same experience. I would agree with you up to a point! It is my firm belief that the market is 'user' driven and it is my opinion that the 'user' is looking for a machine that can be used for longer periods and driven harder! The savy manufacturer will cotton onto this very soon (if they have not already)and when they do it will be a whole new ball game in the laptop area. If you use a laptop as a substitute for a desktop and are running it for long periods, it will overheat even with a cooler. There is no laptop that can substitue for a desktop. Laptops main feature is portability, not heavy usage. Alladream nice to hear from someone with personal experience, and thanks for sharing your story. Your computer must have thanked you for using a cooler lol and I hope that the heat has not done any lasting damage to your computer! I would definitely agree with you that,if technically challenged, consult a trusted electronics shop with a variety of laptop coolers to choose from! Seriously thanks for taking the time to read about Laptop coolers!
In fact, Canon doesn't have an 8K projector in development yet, only one that's 4K. So, no matter how spectacular the 8K resolution, it will only be able to be shown at a much lower resolution. Certainly, an 8K projector will come, though at that point who knows where technology will be, But it's important to innovate and push the technology. One other camera worth mention is the Kodak PixPro SP360 4K Action Cam. It's an odd-looking little device - a small cube with a dome. But what sets it apart, in addition to being 4K resolution, is that it shoots in 360-degrees, either video or still photos. Kodak promotes it as being especially valuable when attached to a drone. I have no idea how big the drone market will get. It might be a passing fad for home use as a toy - but I think not. There are too many companies showing them at CES (like DJI, AEE, 3DR and many more), and they're clearly too high-end. It seems like business application will be their most significant use, but it's a developing field. This is somewhat the same with 3D printers.
I was inundated with press releases for them before the show, and they seemed to pop up everywhere. Ubiquitous as they were, I still don't get the sense that they're showing a capability that the general public is crying out for. But the prices have come down so significantly from recent years that the business market seems ripe for growth. In an odd way that sort of overlaps my feeling about Virtual Reality, which has been proclaiming it's the Next Big Thing for the past three years. It did get a massive push at this year's show with the oft-delayed and highly-anticipated Oculus Rift finally - finally! And as I said, they've finally come to market, with sets from a Florida company, Izon, and other companies are scheduled to have their sets on sale by the summer. They've already sold sets to Duke University for medical use, and Florida State University film department.
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