At this week’s Mobile World Congress, Texas Instruments released the 0.3” HD Tilt & Roll Pixel DLP® Pico™ chipset, its smallest, most power-efficient micro-mirror array, which can generate high-definition displays from compact electronics, such as tablets, smartphones, accessories, wearable displays, augmented reality displays, interactive surface computing, digital signage and control panels. The new chip is based on DLP Cinema® technology.
The new 0.3” HD TRP chipset leverages TI’s proprietary TRP DLP architecture and adaptive IntelliBrightTM suite of algorithms to deliver higher brightness and lower power consumption than previous DLP Pico chipset architectures. Additionally, the chipset’s fast switching speeds of up to thousands of times per second enables the smallest true-color RGB engines with 120-Hz video performance.
Texas Instruments is actively working with a number of developers and manufacturers to bring products to market in 2014 that incorporate the 0.3” HD TRP chipset.
PMA Research has been following the Pico projector market since it’s inception. The market for embedded Pico projectors has grown steadily over the years. Improvements in technology for these small projectors will continue to fuel market growth.