

Can directly play and cast local video, music, MS Office documents.Please note: IOS system screen mirroring is perfect now! Multi-Platform support: Android phones/tablets, Apple iOS iPhone/iPad, Windows PC/Note, Mac PC/Notebook.Multi-Standard support: Miracast, DLNA, Airplay.Overall, it is a useful tools for your home multimedia entertainment, also a powerful tools for your office presentation. It can mirror whatever shown on the screen of your smartphone, tablet, notebook, PC to your HDTV or projector. It casts video, audio, photos, MS office files, PDF files, games to HDTV or projector wirelessly. It is a remote-free cross-platform (iOS, Android, Windows, and OS X) wireless display device, which receives and displays the contents you love from internet and your own portable devices (smartphones, tablets, notebook and Mac). Tronsmart Mirror2TV (T1000) is a new generation of HDMI HD Media Streamer after Google Chromecast. (If you can use HDMI you’ll get a better picture, mind.) Able to support 4K Ultra-HD, the Tronsmart’s picture quality is limited only by that of your TV.Tronsmart T1000 Get Big Update, ADD IOS Mirroring support and Default mode setting: Even if your TV is that old and rubbish that it doesn’t have an HDMI connection, Tronsmart supplies the necessary cable to hook it up via AV. You’re not restricted to whichever catchup services and apps the manufacturer stipulates either – you can do anything you can do on an Android tablet.

Nevertheless, with Android installed you can turn any old TV into the smartest TV of all. If you’ll be doing much typing or web browsing then a keyboard will also be required – operating Android’s virtual keyboard with arrow keys on a remote or even using our USB mouse really is a pain. The remote does have a mouse mode, letting you move the cursor using the directional buttons and hit Ok to select an option, but when trying to access the controls at the bottom of the screen and bypass the YouTube tutorial that appears on the first run of the app we eventually gave in and plugged in a USB mouse (a wireless mouse is preferable). We tried to operate the Draco entirely with the supplied remote control. That’s quite a big difference, though, and as we’re sure you can imagine navigating Android without touch takes a bit of getting used to.
