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Well, finally a normal office projector. Review of Acer X1228i with high resolution (budget and quiet!)


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We came into our hands with perhaps one of the most reliable and convenient projectors for offices and small businesses in general from Acer, which I will be happy to talk about in this review.

Unlike projectors for the home, which are expected to enjoy ultra-high picture resolution and surround sound, the requirements for office projectors are often much more modest.

Main criteria for a good working projector these are:

to work for a long time

easy to set up

The fan was not too loud

took up little space

could be attached to the ceiling

The Acer X1228i projector meets all of the above, plus it shows a decent picture with a maximum diagonal of 300 inches and a resolution of 1920×1200 pixels.

With all its advantages, this “workhorse” costs reasonable money, and the lamp service life is 6000 hours in normal and 10,000 hours in economy mode.

Let’s take a closer look at the Acer X1228i from all sides.

Appearance, characteristics, connections

Device dimensions 313 x 240 x 113.7 mm. Looks compact.

The projector body is plastic, matte black. There are practically no fingerprints left. The front part is a radiator grille for cooling; next to it is a lens with a focus adjustment ring.

On the top you can find control buttons and settings for the projector. They are pressed with a clear click, slightly convex. Next to the buttons there are three LEDs indicating the operating status of the device, lamp and temperature. There is also a convenient ring for adjusting the zoom in and out of the visible area.

On the back there are ports for connecting external image sources:

● HDMI 1.4
● USB 2.0 (service)
● Composite video input (RCA)
● Component video input
● VGA input
● Audio line-in
● Audio line out

The presence of USB does not allow you to stream a video or presentation directly from a flash drive; it is needed for firmware updates and other service diagnostics. The Acer X1228i also supports wireless projection using the included dongle, which is stored in a special compartment on the case.

The complete dongle for wireless broadcasting is stored in the rear of the case.

The Acer X1228i is capable of working around the clock without overheating and is ready for use right out of the box. In addition to the power cable, the device comes with an HDMI and VGA cable.

The projector can also be controlled using a remote control, which is especially useful if the device is mounted under the ceiling.

This photo shows everything that the manufacturer put in the box with the projector.

During operation, the fan noise is at an acceptable level, not too loud. In eco mode, the volume does not exceed 27 dB. Based on personal impressions, I would like to note the quick turn on and off of the device, both processes take literally 5 seconds.

In addition, the projector itself determines the signal source if only one port is used. For sound output there are built-in speakers with a power 3 W.

In general, the Acer X1228i is well-built, the plastic is of high quality, and the body does not creak. The knobs and buttons are reliable, controlling and setting up the projector is easy and convenient.

Settings as shown

The lamp shines brightly, take care of your eyes and do not look directly into the lens.

The settings menu can be accessed using the button on the projector body, or by pressing the corresponding button on the remote control. Next, you can adjust image parameters, including color saturation, brightness, contrast, and others. The menu is Russified, all items are clear.

From the interesting – Acer X1228i has support for 3D broadcasting; the menu has a corresponding section for setting up this mode.

The projection is bright and juicy, you can watch movies.

The device has support for XGA resolution (1024 x 768 pixels) with aspect ratio 4:3 or 16:9 and is capable of displaying images in resolution 1920 x 1200 pixels to a distance of 11.8 m.

The lamp brightness is 4800 ANSI-lumen, and contrast level 20,000:1.

The projector also supports many proprietary Acer technologies to improve picture quality and color reproduction. For example:

Acer BlueLightShield reduces eye strain by adjusting the peak value of blue light emission
Acer LumiSense adjusts brightness and saturation depending on the projected image
Acer ColorBoost3D provides accurate color reproduction and bright realistic image
Acer ColorSafe dynamically manages RGB channelspreventing the picture from fading

This is what the settings menu looks like:

In addition, the Acer X1228i can correct colors to avoid distortion when projected onto a painted wall.

In fact, you’re unlikely to fiddle with the settings manually because the projector adjusts itself automatically. Just plug it into the network and point it at a wall or screen: the Acer X1228i will align the trapezoid itself, and all you have to do is slightly tighten the focus ring for the clearest picture.

General impressions and verdict

Office top for your money.

The Acer X1228i is truly the best option for office use. It is unpretentious in maintenance, has automatic image adjustment, and operates quietly. At the same time, it shows a decent picture and will not require lamp replacement for many years, working 24/7.

This is one of those devices that is simply a pleasure to use due to its simplicity and reliability. If you want, show the presentation, if you want, you can turn on the film. For the money, the Acer X1228i is an excellent representative of the office equipment needed in the 21st century and will not let you down during important negotiations.

Today this projector can be bought from 50,000 rubles. For a high-tech device that will help make the right impression on colleagues and partners, this is an adequate price. Think about it, maybe your team is missing exactly this to make meetings more fruitful.

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Ξ TREND

Deal : Medion Akoya P63025 in the test: Fast, quiet, economical and compact


Chic, small, nimble and everything on board: There was little to complain about when testing the compact Medion Akoya P63025 desktop PC.

In 2011, the world’s largest computer manufacturer Lenovo took over a majority stake in the Essen-based company Medion. However, Medion continues to work almost independently and regularly brings new notebooks and desktop PCs onto the market. This also applies to the recently introduced Akoya P63025 – a compact computer that doesn’t have to hide under the desk. The test of the Medion Akoya P63025 shows what the small desktop PC can do – and what it can’t.

Akoya P63025 in the test: With hot-swap frame

The Medion Akoya P63025 is housed in a simple housing with a slightly structured surface. At the top of the front of the case there are two USB sockets and ports for one Headset. Underneath, the Medion has a hot-swap frame in which there is a 2.5 inch SSD or have a hard drive retrofitted.

Core i5-12400, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD

Anyone who opens the left side wall can take a look at the (tidy) interior:

  • Processor: The heart of the Medion Akoya P63025 is the mid-range processor Core i5-12400 from Intel Alder Lake Series.
  • Random access memory: The Core i5 stores calculated data in a large RAM of 16 gigabytes.
  • SSD: Windows 11, users save programs and data on one M.2 SSD with an effective 932 gigabytes of memory.

Fast work pace

The Medion Akoya P63025 performed impressively in the speed measurements: it was visibly underchallenged with office programs such as Word, Excel or PowerPoint, and with tasks on the Internet anyway. Computers need a lot of steam for complex photo and video editing, but the Medion also did that at a decent pace. In particular, programs that can distribute calculations across many processor cores benefit from the Intel CPU with its six computing units – including software such as Photoshop or Premiere.

Test table Medion Akoya P63025

Test table Medion Akoya P63025

Test results

processor

Intel Core i5-12400

graphics chip

Intel UHD Graphics 730

random access memory

16GB (2x8GB)

SSD

932GB Western Digital

hard disk

unavailable

Speed ​​with Office

high (58.6%)

Pace with photo and
Video editing

high (28.3%)

Game speed with 1920×1080 pixels

very jerky (10 frames per second)

Game speed with 3840×2160 pixels

not playable

SSD speed

slow (34.3%)

USB speed
(Read Write)

764 / 503 MB/sec.

Noises in office applications

very quiet (0.2 sone)

Noise level under full load

quiet (1.2 sone)

Power consumption in office applications

32 watts

Power consumption under full load

109 watts

Mixed electricity consumption per year (electricity costs)

101 KW/h (33 €)

power adapter

Medion Power Block 250 (250 watts)

connections

1x microphone, 1x headphones, 2x audio input, 1x audio output, 1x HDMI, 1x DP (can be used at the same time), 1x network (1 Gbit), 1x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2, 4x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1, 2x USB 2.0

Radio connections

WLAN-ax (Wifi 6; 2.4 and 5 GHz), Bluetooth 5.1

Upgrade options:
Expansion cards /
Random access memory /
mass storage /
DVD-BD drives


1x PCIe 5.0 x16 slot, 1x PCIe 3.0 x1 slot

1x NVMe, 1x 2.5″/3.5″ combination slot

Keyboard/
Mouse

Pressure point spongy /
somewhat light, well suited for office tasks

Quiet and economical

Also good: The average energy requirement was at a very low level: on average, the Medion didn’t even consume 32 watts! The noise level wasn’t high either, the Medion remained nice and quiet – even under full load during strenuous image and video editing (maximum 1.2 sone).

Decent upgrade options

The Medion does not have a memory card reader, its upgrade options are not outstanding, but quite decent (picture above):

  • CPU and RAM: The Core i5 processor (1) RAM available to the side (16 gigabytes (2)) can be expanded to 32 gigabytes.
  • SSD: The existing SSD storage (932 gigabytes (3)) users can add a second M.2 SSD and a hard drive if necessary 2.5 inch SSD expand.
  • Graphic card: A separate graphics card could be installed in the Medion (4)but only models with a maximum of one Nvidia GTX 1650-Chip (from 170 euros). For more powerful models, the power of the power supply (250 watts) is sufficient (5)) not.

WLAN-ax on board, card reader missing

The Aldi PC connects to the network either via cable or wirelessly via fast WLAN-ax. It has Bluetooth on board for wireless synchronization with tablets and smartwatches. It’s a shame: the Medion Akoya P63025 doesn’t have a memory card reader.

Medion Akoya P63025 in the test: conclusion

The Medion Akoya P63025 can be retrofitted with 2.5-inch SSDs or hard drives using the hot-swap frame on the front – if the rather large SSD storage of just under 1 terabyte is not enough. And the Medion in the MD34330 equipment variant tested here also did well in the test: it worked really quickly, wasn’t annoying with loud fan noises and didn’t put an unnecessary strain on the electricity bill. Great: It’s not a roll-container-sized example, but rather barely larger than a shoebox.