
However impressive your multi room audio video server might be, eyes will inevitably be drawn to your showpiece items of equipment: the high definition projector and the home cinema projector screen that will doubtless share top billing in the room that you choose as your own personal home movie theatre.
Also up for awards in strong-supporting roles will be a number of heavyweight contenders in specialist categories such as the Home Cinema Audio prize for Best Soundtrack, the Home Cinema Surround Sound Prize for Most Realistic Sound FX, and the Services to Cinematography award for Excellence in Home Cinema Lighting.
The development of HDMI has raised the bar higher still, with the capacity to support 7:1 surround-sound, Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio and the ability to connect digital audio/video sources such as set-top boxes, Blue-Ray discs, PCs, gaming consoles, camcorders and AV receivers to compatible digital audio devices, computer monitors, HD digital televisions and home theater projectors – all with a single cable. The word to watch here, however, is ‘compatible’ and with technology progressing at an astonishing rate, you may need It’s done! Smart Home onboard to advise you on how to make sure that all your components come together in a future proof system that will continue to delight your family and impress your guests for years to come.
We know you’ll be justifiably proud of this amazing system, but we also understand the need to slip it sweetly out of sight when it’s not in use and we’ll have plenty of ideas to discuss about different ways to house your home cinema projector, screen and any other items of your home cinema installation, be it tucked away in the ceiling, or in bespoke cabinets designed to maintain the particular aesthetics of your home.
The sheer unrivalled quality of the High Definition viewing experience will leave your guests gasping, but they’ll be purring in admiration long before the film or the game actually starts. At the touch of a single button, you can dim the lights, turn on the projector and have the curtains gently swishing closed behind you, even as the screen begins a smooth descent or gentle rise from its discreet hiding place in the ceiling or the floor.
And that’s when the film starts...