The weight of the gun is a good trade-off between being heavy enough to allow good spatial/inertia awareness and light enough for extended use. The gun is a Beretta pistol rip-off, made from plastic and feels good in practice. These strips can be simply hung from the top of the screen via removable hooks, screwed to a wall (for huge screen projector action) or our favoured choice of just bluetacking them to the sides of the screen to avoid having to recalibrate each time. A simple enough solution that will work for any display - futureproofing is looking good.
Once calibrated, the gun then knows where you are pointing it, based on the signals received from each emitter. A strip of infrared emitters is placed on both sides of the screen and connected to the gun. The Topgun works by sensing the orientation of the gun. However, the EMS LCD TopGun is worth looking at. Whilst there has been an attempt at getting a universal gun to work before, we weren't impressed by the results. When there was only one type of TV, making a lightgun was easy, but on more modern TVs most lightguns will either not understand the refresh rate, or just not function at all since they depend on detecting the electron beam coming from a CRT TV. Then the traditional tube was usurped by flat screens often running at 720-or-higher number of lines. Then came progressive scan for a higher clarity of picture. However, recently TVs have been anything but standard. Company's customer base spans 11 countries Retail offering of up to 22.91 million shares at RM1.36 per share IPO to raise RM104.For years, the standard in colour TVs was the 50/60Hz interlaced CRT (cathode ray tube) display running at 576/480 lines. KUALA LUMPUR, (ACN Newswire) - Aurelius Technologies Berhad ("ATech" or the "Company"), a provider of electronics manufacturing services ("EMS") for industrial electronic products enroute to a listing on the Main Market of Bursa Malaysia Securities Berhad ("Bursa Securities"), is pleased to announce the launch of the Company's prospectus for the initial public offering ("IPO") today.ĪTech offers a comprehensive range of EMS to multinational corporations across 11 countries covering Asia Pacific, Americas and Europe. These services include engineering support services, prototyping, board assembly, mechanical assembly and test for communications devices, Internet of Things ("IoT") devices, electronic devices and semiconductor component modules used by the telecommunications, transportation, power management and IoT industries.
With a long track record of 28 years, ATech has built a business based on long-term client partnerships. All top five customers are foreign companies or subsidiaries of US public-listed companies. The IPO involves up to 103.87 million ordinary shares comprising public issue of 77.01 million shares and an offer for sale of up to 26.86 million shares. The institutional offering of up to 80.96 million shares represents 22.60% of the enlarged issued shares.
The retail offering of up to 22.91 million shares, representing 6.40% of the enlarged issued shares, will be offered at a retail price of RM1.36 per share. The company is expected to raise RM104.73 million in proceeds from the IPO, of which RM40.0 million would be used to acquire new machinery and equipment, RM29.52 million for repayment of borrowings, RM28.13 million for working capital and RM7.08 million for listing expenses.