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Yet another item you immediately realise you don’t have it already because you don’t need it, you don’t want it, and you never will need or want. A projector? In 1975, yes. Not today.
I see Jumperman Knowles is now an expert on visual aids now.
Or more like stating the bleeding obvious.
The output quality of that projector is absolutely f ****.
One of them said 'pin sharp'.
They've obviously never seen a sharp pin!
 
Knowles is so much better as a technology expert than Van Krankshaaft…

although it's not like it's hard to explain a projector, most of his talk is about what your laptop can show. the only technical bit is you plug this cable into this hole. ;):ROFLMAO:

We had projectors in every classroom at the work, had to fit them to the roof to play onto whiteboards, usually linked up to workstations/laptops and DVD players. While they were great instead of TVs, they were a pest at times, teachers were forever needing help with them. Remotes were always going missing. :(
 
although it's not like it's hard to explain a projector, most of his talk is about what your laptop can show. the only technical bit is you plug this cable into this hole. ;):ROFLMAO:

We had projectors in every classroom at the work, had to fit them to the roof to play onto whiteboards, usually linked up to workstations/laptops and DVD players. While they were great instead of TVs, they were a pest at times, teachers were forever needing help with them. Remotes were always going missing. :(
Hammy was a Teacher Urgh
 
This is like something along similar lines that I used to get extremely excited about when Dad used his cine projector to play a black and white Gregory Peck film called Marooned. I thought the film, played large and proud, and shaking and blurred, off my bedroom wall was absolutely amazing. Then again, I was 10 years old, and it was 1972.
 
So you were the one, who had to record school programmes, and drag the TV in the wooden box around

I was the Science Technician so spent most of the time there, but also had to help out with AVA/IT/Reprographics stuff as well, we had someone who recorded the TV programs on Video, but they didn't do a very good job. Spent a long time transferring all the V2000 tapes to VHS and then to DVD (thousands of programs over the whole school), in the end used to do the recording, editing and burning to DVD at home, much easier.
And yeah we had to shove TVs on trolleys about, in the early days there was only a few TVs but eventually every dept had their own TVs, but then we installed projectors in every classroom so TVs ended going for recycling.
 
I was the Science Technician so spent most of the time there, but also had to help out with AVA/IT/Reprographics stuff as well, we had someone who recorded the TV programs on Video, but they didn't do a very good job. Spent a long time transferring all the V2000 tapes to VHS and then to DVD (thousands of programs over the whole school), in the end used to do the recording, editing and burning to DVD at home, much easier.
And yeah we had to shove TVs on trolleys about, in the early days there was only a few TVs but eventually every dept had their own TVs, but then we installed projectors in every classroom so TVs ended going for recycling.

Oh man, was anything more exciting in school than when the TV trolley got wheeled in?! 😂

…of course, the teacher wouldn't have a clue how to work it —"JUST CLUNK DOWN 'PLAY' ON THE MACHINE, MISS - NO THAT WON'T BREAK IT, IT'S HOW IT WORKS!!!!"— and once that hurdle was cleared, the remote would've fallen out of the caddy on the way to class so they couldn't turn it to the right channel.

Usually, by the time we were actually watching whatever it was we'd see about 10 mins of it before the 'end of class' bell cut in.
 
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