WiDi is short for Intel Wireless Display, a feature associated with Intel’s Wi-Fi Direct standard. This is Intel’s attempt at offering a wireless video and audio streaming system that could compete with Apple’s AirPlay. Intel Wireless Display 3.5 makes WiDi Miracast-compatible, essentially turning WiDi into another branded Miracast-compatible standard. RELATED: HTG Reviews the Google Chromecast: Stream Video to Your TV Intel has basically folded WiDi into Miracast. #MIRACAST INTEL WIDI WINDOWS 10 DOWNLOAD TOSHIBA RADIUS TV# When Google launched the Nexus 4 with Android 4.2 in 2012, they talked up its support of Miracast. Soon, they said, you’d be able to buy cheap Miracast-compatible receivers that you could plug into your TV’s HDMI port. The wireless display problem would be solved, enabling easy display-mirroring from Android and Windows devices. These cheap, compatible receivers failed to materialize. Instead, a year later, Google launched the Chromecast. A Chromecast is a cheap receiver that plugs into your TV’s HDMI port, but it uses something called the DIAL (DIscover And Launch) protocol. To use the Chromecast, you open an app on your Android phone - Netflix, for example. #MIRACAST INTEL WIDI WINDOWS 10 DOWNLOAD TOSHIBA RADIUS ANDROID# ![]() You tell Netflix to play a video to your Chromecast. #MIRACAST INTEL WIDI WINDOWS 10 DOWNLOAD TOSHIBA RADIUS TV#. ![]()
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