![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjklGa2GkFa1J20la1NhR4P5MywGlArCcucb2fHkc-FjQT8iAX89WOQBH5Tl4sGQvPvMmTiXJr1Zp0Mu5C7tX4_zbR2-NqRwsg4SaAoCXzrwmatTzPFOfj-DiJkRoDRRYTQhTlMbgXPRAE/s320/s1_mixer.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj0ds7JMK_bqlreDm8ttgVe2oFIEPwIIkeYsX0eF6pJ1QQUTK-5vJJYG6M-MxKg7DkkSM5qCiXaoN1iSMEwBG23m7ZWgT9Tf522Ye8dSqi4bfLJ24SJQYH1FKONPFoSCltZ1nsj0b_xtZ0/s320/s2_mixer.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_gR4wwA5BVNQzwO2M9rHz3QeOi82CNuVvn8qaX0OxI1_gxqLtB492TqCUkzchKAedok-hVKBJIow86DA8FYW46cPs_DylFDfTrziXML9ZxRbZEhkd0U0j9IHYCsUFx326OGggWBfJtIQ/s320/s3_projector.jpg)
These are the screen shots of my first video mixer test attempt that I talked about in the previous blog post. From this first attempt, you can see that I was able to get multiple mirrors of the same video output onto both a television and projection. The problem is, this is kind of the opposite of what I am attempting to do. as you can see in slides 2 and 3, the two separate screens are actually a mix of two video feeds, instead of what I was going for which was getting one to two video inputs to be spaced out as I wanted between the two instead of identically mirrored. I could go into more detail of the varied results I got from this first attempt, but instead I think I will focus more on my progress with using the video mixer in my next post which will show the results of my second attempt.
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