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©11-15-01
Bryan William Jones
- Product Name: Keyspan
Presentation Remote
- Company: Keyspan
- URL: http://www.keyspan.com/
- Category: Input device
- Price/Options: $79.00 U.S.
- OS X: Yes
- Testing System(s): 2002 iBook 700
Mhz OS X 10.2, 2002 Powermac Dual 1Ghz 10.2
- Rating: 4 bounces - Pure
Lust

Keyspan
has been making products for the Macintosh platform
for years now with their first product being
a serial
card that I purchased for my Powermac 9600.
(Still have it, and both the 9600 and Keyspan
serial card have worked flawlessly ever since).
Keyspan's next product that really caught my
attention was their Digital
Media Remote (review).
I purchased it as soon as it was released in
late 1999 and I must admit to becoming reliant
on it for my presentations using Powerpoint
both in my lab for visiting faculty, staff,
students and patients seeing presentations on
the G4 PowerMac with Cinema Display as well
as with my iBook on the road for presentations.
Additionally, I tend to not like being stuck
in front of one's laptop, standing in back of
a podium in favor of moving around a bit. The
DMR's infrared (IR) remote functions nicely
for this allowing freedom of movement as long
as you point the remote generally in the direction
of the receiver that you plugged into your laptop.
In fact, the DMR worked admirably when I used
my iBook to host the presentations for the last
FFB
meeting for visual transplantation with Powerpoint
presentations from about twenty speakers all
using my little iBook and the DRM. For this
meeting, to ensure a smooth flow to the presentations
with a minimum of fuss, I volunteered my iBook
and switched the presentations in the background
in-between speakers while they simply handled
the DRM remote from the front handing off from
one speaker to the next. Scientists can be a
picky bunch and sometimes hard to please, but
the combination worked beautifully and my only
complaints with the DRM have been that for presentations,
the little buttons on the remote are not optimized
for an ergonomic feel and one tends to have
to hold the DMR in one hand while using the
obligate laser pointer with the other hand.
Enter Keyspan's new device, the Presentation
Remote. The Presentation Remote differs
from the DMR in a number of fundamental ways
that target it more for the presentation environment
rather than the media environment. First off,
it features a radio frequency (RF) signal rather
than an IR signal allowing for one to make their
presentations without pointing in the general
direction of the receiver/laptop combination.
Additionally, they have also reduced the number
of buttons on the remote while still providing
right and left click functionality (nice for
OS X), full mouse control, a mode button, composite
switch, and here's the kicker....a built in
laser pointer all while making the remote more
ergonomically friendly. I wanted one.
The remote comes packaged with the handheld
remote, the USB RF receiver, a battery for the
handheld remote, a documentation card and a
nice little carrying case. Initially I was troubled
by the lack of a software CD in the package
but this turned out to be an advantage, as Keyspan
thought ahead and required no additional software
to load as the device is interpreted by your
computer as being a keyboard or mouse. You simply
plug it in and go. Excellent.
In use, the Presentation Remote functions nicely
with good ergonomic feel in the hand and the
laser pointer is quite bright and easy to access
as opposed to some laser pointers I have used
with either hard to reach buttons or buttons
that get hard to push after talking for 45 minutes
or so. The mouse control and left and right
click functionality are easy to use as well
allowing for remote operation of other functionality
outside of the presentation software environment.
I tend to like to embed all of my animations
and video within the presentation software,
but there are those times when you might like
to navigate around another application to demonstrate
something that the presentation software package
is unable to perform and the navigation ability
of the Presentation remote works well here.
After using the remote for a week and giving
two presentations, I can honestly say that Keyspan
has an impressive product. Any criticisms? Well,
it would not be a proper review without something
to criticize, and even those criticisms have
nothing to do with the functionality of the
remote. Rather they concern the supplied instructions
which are not entirely clear and contain some
inconsistencies. For instance, the instructions
to deactivate the laser mode read: "To
deactivate the laser again, hold down the Laser
Pointer Button until the Mode Button flashes
rapidly." Well, you can hold down the Laser
Pointer Button forever without deactivating
laser mode. To truly deactivate the laser mode,
one must hold down BOTH the Laser Pointer Button
AND the Mode Button until the Mode Button flashes
repeatedly. (This is the advantage of hiring
a technical writer to review your documentation
and perform end user testing). Alternatively,
if the laser is not used for 30 minutes, the
laser pointer mode is switched off automatically.
The only other question I had involved the USB
RF receiver which appears to have a little red
LED on it that does not seem to have a function
that I could determine, and a minor suggestion
might be to place a little pocket in the carrying
case for an extra battery for those road warriors
who constantly travel to make presentations.
Finally, the laser is a red wavelength laser
and very bright, easily seen across a large
conference room/ballroom, but for the true geeks
among us (and some color blind folks), it might
be nice to have green lasers available at extra
cost. That is not really a complaint or indictment
of the built in laser as the performance of
this laser pointer in the Keyspan Presentation
Remote leaves nothing to be desired.
Overall, the device is outstanding and well
worth the price of entry. For those people that
give presentations using their computers, this
device is a must have and I will be toting it
along with my iBook and the rest of my road
warrior accompaniments.
What about the DMR? No, you can't have it as
I would never give that up. My Keyspan DMR while
no longer on the presentation circuit, is now
being used for what it probably is best optimized
for, being a media remote control. It now resides
at home, hooked up to our Powerbook powered
home stereo system serving up our entire CD
collection via iTunes.
- Bryan
William Jones
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