Your screen is shared on the meeting room display.
This video tutorial and the procedure below guide you How to use the Miracast application to share your device with the meeting room display. Miracast comes built-in to Windows 10 and you can use it to connect your Windows 10 device to the ClickShare CSE-200+ Base Unit to share your screen with the meeting room display.
This means that your PC or tablet can still be online via its Wi-Fi connection while streaming over Miracast.Īn inherent limitation of the Miracast P2P connection is that only one device can be shown on screen at a time. Base Unit) creates its own wireless network and the device connects directly (via P2P) to it without compromising its personal Wi-Fi connection.
In the latter case, the Miracast receiver (i.e.
In the discovery stage, the Miracast enabled devices (typically Windows 10 computers or certain Android smartphones) searches for the CSE-200+ Base Unit enabled for Miracast streaming ( option Streaming via Miracast must be enabled in the Base Unit WebUI). Miracast streaming with CSE-200+ Base Unit works in two stages: Discovery and Connection. Miracast over Infrastructure Connection Establishment Protocol (MS-MICE) The ClickShare CSE-200+ has been certified for the Miracast Release2 (R2) standard as from the 1.8.0.6 firmware release.ĬSE-200+ has a separate Wi-Fi chip built-in dedicated for Miracast P2P connectionsĬompatible with all four different network integration levels, see But it's also not ideal for long term use yet either.This article applies to the following products: Yes, you can have a different experience using different devices. If the Windows computer struggles too, then it could be your environment. You can try a Windows PC with your Miracast adapter and see how that performs.if it runs better, it's possible your phone is the culprit. And using more processing power can impact that too. If it's older or lower end, it will struggle to process the screen capturing to send over wifi. You phone should also impact performance too. I think I tried with Roku and that works well too.
My LG TV works pretty well, but doesn't want to connect most of the time. My dedicated Miracast dongle works the worst, but it's a 1st generation generic Chinese model I've had probably close to 8 years. I've had different levels of performance with different products. But 5 Ghz devices can still cause interference.Īlso, device used does impact performance. If the Miracast device works over 5 Ghz WiFi, you'll have a better experience than 2.4 Ghz, for instance. Interference from other wireless devices will definitely impact performance. However, just like any other network issue, it's entirely dependent on your environment. It's pretty old now and evolving with the WiFi standards.