ScreenBeam Mini2 wireless display adapter review

REVIEW – Have you ever wanted to display content from your smartphone, tablet, or laptop wirelessly to a TV or monitor without bringing your home’s WiFi to its knees? Actiontec has a solution for Windows and Android devices called the ScreenBeam Mini2. Let’s take a look.

What is it?

The ScreenBeam Mini2 is a wireless display adapter that plugs into an open HDMI port on a display/TV and receives streaming video from a Windows laptop, Android smartphone, or Android tablet through the WiFi network created by the ScreenBeam Mini2 adapter and not your home’s wireless network.

Hardware specs

  • Supports up to full 1080p30 HD video and 2 channel stereo
  • Dual Band: Supports both 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi frequencies

Compatibility

  • Windows device running Windows 8.1 or newer AND supports WiDi
  • Android device running v4.2 or newer AND have native Miracast, Smart View, or Mirroring support.

What’s in the box?

  • ScreenBeam Mini2 wireless display adapter
  • HDMI extender cable
  • Micro USB cable
  • AC adapter
  • Instructions

Design and features

The ScreenBeam Mini2 looks like an oversized USB thumb drive, but instead of a USB-A connector on the end, it has a full-sized HDMI connector.

On one side is a reset switch and a micro USB port which is used to power the adapter.

Installing the ScreenBeam Mini2 adapter is simple as long as you have a TV or monitor that has an available full-sized HDMI port.

All you have to do is plug the adapter into the HDMI port and also connect the included micro USB cable to the power adapter and plug it in. If you don’t have an outlet near the TV or monitor, you can do like I did and plug the micro USB cable into a USB port on my Denon AV receiver or even one on your TV or monitor.

I tested the ScreenBeam Mini2 with two different displays and four devices. The first test was with the BenQ 27 inch PD2710QC monitor and the Huawei MediaPad M5.

After plugging in the ScreenBeam Mini2 adapter, I switched to the HDMI input with the ScreenBeam Mini2 adapter and was greeted by the screen you see above.

The next step was to go into the MediaPad’s settings and start MirrorShare which is a built-in feature of this tablet. As soon as I enabled it, it started scanning for available devices and displayed the ScreenBeam Mini2 as an option.

Tapping the icon on the MediaPad changed the display on the monitor to show that it was connecting to it.

Just as a reminder… Unlike Google’s Chromecast dongle, the ScreenBeam Mini2 does not require that you have a WiFi network in your home or any internet connectivity at all for that matter. The adapter itself uses its own WiFi to connect the two devices without any need to configure, type in login IDs or passwords.

Within seconds, I was viewing the same thing on the monitor that was displaying on the tablet. I was able to see a mirror of the Android tablet’s display while running apps, browsing the web, viewing pictures from the image gallery, videos I’d recorded, etc.

But within minutes I ran into some issues worth noting. Although the Netflix app launches and displays the interface on the mirrored display, as soon as you begin watching a video, the mirrored display turns black. You can still hear audio though. I then tried the Hulu app and had the same disappointing results.

But when I tried YouTube, I had success. Videos played fine and looked great. Look, it’s Casey Neistat. Love that guy!

One other thing to note is when I turned off the display on the tablet, the connection between the two devices was broken.

I then tested the Huawei P20 with the ScreenBeam Mini2 and my VIZIO M-Series (M65-F0) 4K HDR Smart TV by plugging the ScreenBeam Mini2 into the AUX HDMI port on my Denon AV receiver.



As expected, the setup was pretty much identical to using the MediaPad with the BenQ monitor as the P20 also has the MirrorShare feature.

One thing to keep in mind is that for best video and audio results, the source device (in this case the P20 smartphone) should be placed within 30 feet of the receiver (in this case, the Denon AV receiver connected to the Vizio TV).

Just like with the MediaPad, viewing my pics, local video, apps, browser, and YouTube all worked fine and turning the phone to landscape view would cause the video to go full screen – or almost full screen. You can see that there is a big “frame” around the video on the Vizio TV.

But as soon as I tried to play a Netflix flick, I was denied…

Hulu fared the same. 🙁

My third test was with my Pixel 2 XL and I had even worse luck with the previous tests because good ole Google removed screen sharing features like Miracast from Pixel devices because they want people to buy their Chromecast. Grrrrrrrrrr… Google, you’re not my friend right now.

For my fourth and final test, I tried my Samsung Galaxy Tab S3 and whaddya know, it was the best combo yet!

Samsung’s mirroring feature is called Smart View and it works wonderfully in a couple different ways. First of all, Netflix works perfectly, no black screen of sorrow!

And second of all, the screen will blank out on the tablet to conserve battery life. Yay!

What I like

  • Easy to install
  • Doesn’t require an existing network

What needs to be improved

  • Needs support for Apple devices
  • Needs to be able to work with Netflix, Hulu, and other popular streaming services through all mirroring types
  • Needs to support streaming 4K Ultra HD videos.

Final thoughts

If you’re looking for a dirt simple way to mirror your Android or Windows screen on a TV or Monitor without using your network or wires, the ScreenBeam Mini2 might be the perfect solution for you. That is if you have an Android device that supports Miracast, or a Windows device that supports WiDi AND you don’t mind potentially not being able to use it for Netflix or Hulu depending on your device. Yes, there are a lot of caveats to this product, but I think it will be an easy way to bring my favorite shows with me when I’m on vacation and want to watch them on a larger screen.

Price: $49.99
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample for this review was provided by ScreenBeam. Please visit their site for more info.

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ScreenBeam Mini2 wireless display adapter review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 13, 2018 at 12:52 pm.

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Phiaton just released the Curve wireless headphones, and I think I love them

NEWS – If you’re still finishing up your holiday shopping list, your procrastination is about to be rewarded! Phiaton just dropped their new Curve wireless active noise canceling headphones today. I’ve had a week to play with a pre-release model, and it’s a good one.

Phiaton has won numerous awards for their innovative headphone designs, and the Curve looks to continue that tradition. I’m really liking the yoke-style design with the controls set in the neckband for easy access to the controls. It’s got an IPX4 sweat and splash-resistant rating as well as active noise canceling technology, which makes it perfect for the gym and the commute. The unit boasts 8.5 hours of continuous use on a single charge, and includes a fast-charge option to get an hour of use out of a 5 minute charge if you forgot to juice it up before you hit the gym. And it’s really comfortable to wear. I’ll post a full review in the next couple of weeks, but I think it’s a winner based on my experience so far.

The Phiaton Curve wireless headphones retail for $79.99, and are available now on Amazon.

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Phiaton just released the Curve wireless headphones, and I think I love them originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 13, 2018 at 11:00 am.

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Zip around the city with efficiency on a Boosted Mini X Electric Skateboard

NEWS – Okay, so this is pretty cool. And by that, I mean it’s really cool.

Boosted calls it “your new electric vehicle” and they’re not wrong.

With speeds up to 20 mph, the Boosted Mini X Electric Skateboard might replace the need for automobiles for many people in overpopulated cities. (Which is great for the environment, eeeeeeep!!!)

The board is 29.5 inches in length with a Deep Dish deck and a kicktail for ultimate control and maneuverability. According to Amazon, the deck is made from Poplar and Fiberglass, and weighs just under 17 pounds. It has a recommended weight limit of 250 pounds, but Boosted featured Shaquell O’Neal (325 lbs) riding their board on their Instagram page.

Small and lightweight, this is perfect for people who are always on the go.

It runs on 1 Lithium ion battery, which is included. This allows you to go the distance of around 14 miles before needing another charge, and the full charge time is 1 hour and 45 minutes. Tiny but mighty, the Boosted Mini can ascend hills up to a 2o% grade, with great control of acceleration and breaking.

Ride safe and easily because Boosted says, “Smoother and faster than ever, the wheel’s flex profile is soft enough to handle road imperfections, yet firm enough to provide all the grip riders need when it matters most.” It has strong trucks with 80mm lunar wheels.

Does anyone have Santa’s number? I just want to chat…

The remote control was made ergonomically to fit comfortably in your hand. It has 3 ride modes, and each mode includes a special Jerk Filter that allows a careful taper when accelerating or braking, which provides a super responsive, yet predictable ride, from beginner to pro, according to Boosted.

Get moving! Buy yours for $999 on Amazon now.

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Zip around the city with efficiency on a Boosted Mini X Electric Skateboard originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 13, 2018 at 10:00 am.

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Roborock S5 Robotic Vacuum and Mop cleaner review

REVIEW – When you have had two total knee replacements and you have a weak back, you could use some help with the housework.  I have a lot of trouble wrangling the upright Dyson we have, but I hadn’t really thought about trying a robot vacuum again because of a bad experience I had with one a few years ago.  It could get lost in my 80 sqft bathroom.  And when it wasn’t stuck in the bathroom, it wandered aimlessly around the house, never completing a room before meandering off to another room.  That was a long time ago, and a lot of progress has been made since then.  When I read that the Roborock S5 Robot Vacuum Cleaner has high-precision LDS laser distance sensors that can do five 360°-scans of your room per second so it can map out the best pathway for cleaning, I was hoping I’d find a useful partner for cleaning my floors without breaking my back and knees.

Hardware specs

Main unit

  • Size: 13.9″ x 13.8″ x 3.8″
  • Lithium ion battery; 14.4V, 5200mAh
  • Weight 7.7 pounds
  • Wireless, smart contact charging
  • Rated voltage: 14.4V
  • Rated power: 58W
  • Suction power: 2000Pa
  • Obstacle crossing: 2cm
  • E11 filter is Teflon-coated for easy washing; reusable for about a year
  • Smart laser navigation
  • 13 sensors to avoid obstacles and falls
  • Laser range sensor scans the room quickly for distance information and planning cleaning route

Charging dock

  • Size: 5.1″ x 5.9″ x 3.9″
  • Rated power: 42W
  • Rated input: 100-240V
  • Rated output: 20V, 1.8A
  • Rated frequency: 50/60Hz
  • Protective floor mat when using the mop function (seen in above photo)

What’s in the box?

  • Roborock S5 robotic vacuum 
  • Dock charger with US plug
  • Beak-like cleaning tool
  • Washable filter
  • 2 Pairs of replacement water tank filters
  • Water tank and waterproof pad
  • 2 Mopping cloths
  • User manual

Design and features

In addition to the LDS laser sensors to map your room mentioned above, the Roborock S5 has other sensors to help it navigate your house and individual rooms.

  • There’s a collision sensor, which is the band around the front of the vacuum (seen in the following photo), that moves to indicate the vacuum has bumped something.  The S5 will change its path when a bump is felt to prevent damage to the object blocking it.
  • The little tower on the top of the vacuum is the bumper sensor that feels even the slightest brush against the top.  This prevents your vacuum from getting stuck under something.
  • Four cliff sensors on the bottom of the machine prevents it from going off an edge that’s too high for it to navigate.
  • An STMicroelectronics laser TOF range-finding module precise to millimeters helps the vacuum maintain a distance of about 10mm from the wall.  This close distance and the rotating side brush means the floor is cleaned all the way up to the wall.
  • A fall sensor can detect whether the wheels are in a  pressed-in state on the floor. When the wheels are off the floor, the cleaner will stop working immediately, significantly increasing the safety during handling.
  • An odometer measures the number of wheel rotations and calculates the mileage it travels in your house as it cleans.
  • A tri-axial gyro can detect angular changes in the yaw/pitch/roll directions to determine the orientation of the cleaner, while the tri-axial accelerometer can detect the acceleration of the cleaner in three axes X/Y/Z to determine whether the cleaner tilts or collides with any obstacle.
  • Dual electronic compass sensors can detected “virtual walls” by sensing magnetic fields. Virtual walls are created by laying magnetic tape down to create the “wall”.  The cleaner will automatically avoid the area defined by virtual walls.  Use these walls to keep the vacuum away from areas you don’t want disturbed, like around the Christmas tree or a room where it may get stuck or damaged, like a craft room.  The magnetic tape is an optional purchase.
  • The dust bin sensor prevents damage to the motor by preventing using the vacuum when the dust bin or its filter aren’t in place.
  • The fan speed sensor accurately measures the speed to determine whether the filter is clogged and to keep a record of the fan speed.
  • A recharge sensor that allows the S5 to quickly locate and return to the charging dock when it needs recharging.

Setup

To get started with the Roborock S5 vacuum, you’ll need to set up the charging dock and put the vacuum on it to charge up the battery.  There are a lot of videos on the Roborock website that guide you through setting up, using, and maintaining the vacuum.  I found them very helpful in getting to know the Roborock S5.

You’ll also need to download an app to your mobile device that can be found here.  This iOS version of this app is somewhat confusing to use, but you’ll need it to connect to your home WiFi, which your vacuum will need to create a cleaning map of your home.  This app apparently is also used by another company to control their many types of speakers and home automation devices, including robot vacuums.  There is not much information to be found about using this app, so I wasted a lot of time trying to define the rooms in my house, only to learn later that this information is only used by devices from the other company.  The Roborock S5 vacuum creates its own map of the house and doesn’t use these room definitions.  It would be very nice if Roborock could create their own app, or at least create a video or text document explaining how to use the current app.  I found that it does have a few functions for the Roborock vacuum, but they aren’t “inherently obvious to the user”, as I say.

Once you’re connected to the WiFi and your Roborock S5 is charged, you’re ready to start cleaning and letting the vacuum map out your house.  I started my first cleaning by pressing the power button on top of the S5.  As soon as I did, the vacuum moved off the charging dock and starting moving around in my hallway.

The above image from the Roborock website shows you the information you can use in the app.  You can see the progress your vacuum makes by watching the little green light.  You can send commands from the app to start a timer cleaning, or use the app as a remote control to start it cleaning or have it return to the charging base.  There’s another function for zone cleaning that we’ll discuss more later in the review.

Performance

The Roborock S5 is supposed to be good for homes with pets.  My house put it to the ultimate test, because I have a Shiba Inu who sheds huge amounts of hair 365-days a year.  It’s like living in the Wild West, what with the tumbleweeds of dog hair that can accumulate overnight.  The Roborock sucked up all the dog hair it encountered without a problem.

The Roborock is very quiet.  It’s not noiseless, but I could certainly continue with what I was doing without being disturbed by the noise.  I live in a high-rise building, with neighbors on three sides of me.  I feel I could use the vacuum without them hearing it through the cement walls of the building.  Because of the layout of the building, I feel I could even vacuum my living room, dining room, foyer, kitchen, or hall bathroom on a timer overnight without them hearing anything.

After that first pass through my hallway, I was quite pleased with how clean the floor was.  The little side brush swept up the dust and dog hair that gathers against the wall without bumping into the wall.  In my kitchen, it could navigate around the legs on my work table, and it easily climbed up on and cleaned the two anti-fatigue floor mats in there.  It could switch from my hardwoods to my area rugs without problem in the living and dining rooms.  It did push my little door mat at the front door out of place, but I need to buy some anti-slip tape for that rug anyway.

It did have a bit of trouble climbing over the marble thresholds for my bathrooms, so I just need to put the S5 into the bathrooms and shut the door while it vacuums so it won’t try to go back out of the bathrooms after it has cleaned.  The bathrooms are the only place it can’t reach parts of the room to clean.  It’s big enough that it can’t fit between the toilet and wall in one and the toilet and the shower in the other bathroom.

When the Roborock S5 starts working, it wants to do your entire house.  I had hoped that I’d be able to tell it to vacuum a specific room and have it go clean that then return to the charging dock.  That’s why I was trying to define the rooms of my house in the app.  Well, you can’t do it that way – or at least I can’t figure out how to do it that way.  But I don’t have to always have the vacuum clean the entire house.  Once the Roborock has defined the entire house, I can go into the app and select Zone Cleaning.  With this option, you just draw a square around the area of the house you want cleaned, and the vacuum will go clean that area and return to the dock when it’s finished.  I have long had a zone approach to cleaning my house – Mondays are for the living room, dining room, and foyer; Tuesdays are the kitchen; etc.  Because I can set up a zone for vacuuming, I can start the Roborock S5 cleaning the room I’ll be working on that day while I run my early morning errands, then I’m ready to dust and straighten that zone when I get back.  I LOVE the zone cleaning function!

The Roborock S5 can also wet mop.  It has two microfiber cleaning cloths and a water reservoir that attaches to the bottom.  It can do zone cleaning with the mop, too.  I haven’t used the mop function because I have hardwoods everywhere except the kitchen and bathrooms, and I clean the floors in those rooms with a steam cleaner.

What I like

  • Quiet
  • Vacuums efficiently and thoroughly
  • Can “measure” the room’s shape and size and eventually produce a map of your entire house
  • Can use timers to start cleaning
  • Can set zones for cleaning
  • Will return to the charging dock when it needs recharging
  • Can wet-mop as well as vacuum

What needs to be improved

  • Could use more documentation about using the current app – OR –
  • An app just for the Roborock S5 would be perfect

Final thoughts

The Roborock S5 robot vacuum is a great addition to my cleaning arsenal.  It’s quiet enough that I don’t have to worry about bothering the neighbors or waking up my daughter whenever I decide to vacuum a room.  I could even have it run overnight without worrying about noise.  It picks up dust and dirt and the rolling tumbleweeds of dog hair without a problem.  And I love that I can draw a zone on my home’s map and have the Roborock S5 clean that area immediately or on a timer.  The Roborock S5 is a great value for the price.

Price: $565, as reviewed
Where to buy: Amazon
Source: The sample of this product was provided by Roborock

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Roborock S5 Robotic Vacuum and Mop cleaner review originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 13, 2018 at 9:00 am.

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Elago’s W5 Apple Watch Stand mimics the original Nintendo Game Boy

NEWS – In the past Elago has made unique nostalgic Apple Watch stands that made the Watch look like a classic Macintosh or iMac monitor. They’re back at it again, but this time their nostalgia is aimed at classic gaming.

The Elago W5 Stand is the successor to their W3, and W4 stands. With the W5 Stand the Apple Watch display lines up perfectly to seem as though it is the display of a classic handheld game console (the original Nintendo Game Boy).

The Watch fits into the stand horizontally, supporting the Apple Watches Nightstand Mode.

Like its predecessors, the stand is made from scratch-free silicone to prevent damage to your Apple Watch and keep it from moving around on your nightstand or desktop.

The stand works with all models of the Apple Watch (Series 1-4, 38mm, 40mm, 42mm, 44m).

The Elago W5 Apple Watch Stand comes in four colors: Red, Jin Indigo, Black, and Light Grey and is available from Elago’s website for $15.99. Currently, only Light Grey and Black are available for purchase.

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Elago’s W5 Apple Watch Stand mimics the original Nintendo Game Boy originally appeared on The Gadgeteer on December 13, 2018 at 8:00 am.

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