Philips Pronto TSU9800
Philips Pronto TSU9800.
This product cannot be ordered online. Please call for more details
Based on the award winning TSU-9600, the TSU-9800 brings all the functionality and ease of operation you are used to but expands it into a larger unit giving you even more possibilities.
Deep in darkest Belgium the Pronto designers have been hard at work on expanding the Pronto range with the TSU-9800 and a new programming software package being the result.
At first glance it appears to be a TSU-9600 on steroids but there is more to this beast than meets the eye. Most obviously the unit is bigger than the 9600. The extra space being to accommodate the 6.4" colour VGA touchscreen. That is 2.7" or 70% bigger than the 9600. A bigger screen means you can have bigger buttons or fit more information per page.
Other than the touchscreen the jog-wheel has been changes also. This is a ball bearing wheel with an optical reader providing smooth accurate scrolling, particularly useful when linked with ProntoScript for scrolling through media lists on a server or your PC.
Two extra hard keys are provided, BACK and INFO, extending your programming options.
Not content with these few amendments the engineers went still further and have produced an optional wall bracket for the TSU-9800*. Once wall mounted the unit becomes fixed making it ideal for secure areas. Because of this the unit has the option to be hard wired when fixed. Power can be routed through the wall bracket and you can connect an Ethernet cable for direct connection to your network in case the WiFi coverage is less than perfect.
The Normal base supplied with the unit not only gives the TSU-9800 a base on which to charge and be stored but you can secure the remote to it and hard wire in the same way as the wall bracket option. The base can serve as a charge only or when fixed to the pronto becomes the ideal choice for secure areas or other areas where the pronto does not need to move. Boardrooms, cinema rooms, lecture theatres etc. The dock glow light can even be defeated if required by the flick of a switch on its rear.
|