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Product Description
Play games, browse the web, or put your Raspberry Pi experiments on the big screen with this handy HDMI display from Elecrow. The 11.6-inch TFT LCD display has a 1920 x 1080p resolution for high-definition viewing, as well as a wide color gamut that’ll help your content stand out Read More
How's the response time on these little monitors? I'm looking for something relatively cheap for a small emulation station using a Shield TV and this might just fit the bill.
If somebody made this with a built in battery, I would buy it in a heartbeat. I hate having to lug an old monitor out of the closet to work on a server or pc.
Nice! I couldn't even find a way to contact them without first making a pledge (which I haven't done). They're probably right, though. Assuming the monitor's HDMI and DisplayPort inputs adhere to the standards, there is nothing else they can do. It's up to the adapter to do the conversion properly.
That's basically the whole point of standard interfaces: as long as both devices are built to the same specification, the manufacturer of one device doesn't need to know anything else about the other device to ensure interoperability.
I was really hoping this was going to be a touchscreen...
I ran across these Elecrow screens when searching for a 1080p touchscreen to use with an RPi or any of the other ARM dev boards I own. Sadly, they don't seem to make one. The highest resolution touchscreen they seem to make is 1280x800.
Maybe it's time for a Massdrop X Elecrow 1080p 10 point capacitive multitouch screen. :) Just please drop it near the beginning of the month so I can be sure to have the money to buy it.
Anyone know if this screen is actually any good? There are tons of these small LCD displays out there on eBay/Amazon/AliExpress/etc, but many of them have no or a few bad reviews. Does anyone have any real length of time experience with this one?
ben_r_I have one. I didn’t buy it from mass drop, but pretty sure it’s the same one. I use it w/ my Raspberry pi and a big SSD for a music server, so not really hard core monitor usage but I’ve been happy with it.
Theoretically a PD port could from a battery pack charger. You'd have to search for a 12V out one, dunno if 15V or 18V would be close enough to not risk damaging the charger or monitor. Doubt an actual USB port on a computer or console or video device would run 12V USB. Now, a PC power supply would if you adapt a SATA or GPU power to a USB plug. Also, you'd have to check if it's getting AC or DC, but there are possibilities