Then you would be mistaken. Those "optimized lines" (or the lack thereof) are *very* important. And yeah, it's another one of the things that Pangolin's hardware does for you behind the scenes. Without it, scanners can (and *will*) fail.
We saw an impressive demonstration of this at the Pangolin user's meeting on the ILDA cruise. Dirk Bauer of Medialas had one of his Infinity series RGB projectors set up in the room. These projectors have built-in scanner protection circuitry, so that if your controller sends an image that could harm the scanners, it will kick in and "excercise" the scanners in such a manner that the bearings will not fail.
We had the projector connected to a QM-2000 and were displaying a frame that consisted of just 4 white points. The 4 points appeared rather dim, considering this was a 3 watt RGB projector. Bill explained that the drop in brightness was due to the fact that the laser was off while the scanners were moving from point to point. I objected to this explanation, since surely the scanners were moving quite fast, and the distance between the points seemed rather small...
That's when Bill and Dirk both started talking about Cambridge scanners failing back in the late 1990's when displaying low-point-count frames consisting largely of a few static beams. Dirk's solution was the integrated electronics in his projector, while Bill's solution involved some changes to the QM-2000's operation. To demonstrate this, Bill dug deep into the menus in Showtime, and found the setting to turn off the scanner-protection feature that Pangolin has.
Bam! Instantly the points appeared brighter! But within a few seconds, they started to smear out into shallow lines, and they got dimmer again... Dirk explained that his scanner protection circuit in the projector was kicking in to save the scanners.
Now, I had never heard of this feature before, and I've been using Pangolin for over 18 months. For that matter, there were several professionals in the room (all long-time Pangolin users - some of whom owned several boards), and only one of them knew anything about this feature!
This gets back to my earlier point about passing judgment from a position of ignorance. *I* was ignorant of all that went into the QM-2000 back when I argued that it was over-priced several years ago. And even now, as a Pangolin user, I'm still learning about what it can do. (Just as the folks on the ILDA cruise were.)
So before you make the same assumption that I did, you might want to see what all the Pangolin users are going on and on (and on!) about. Because there really is more to laser show software than just parsing an ILDA file and sending the points to your scanners.
I completely agree with this. If two things are exactly the same, but one costs more, then there is no reason not to buy the cheaper one. The problem is that sometimes the cheaper one is cheaper for a reason.Anyone who pays top dollar for the sake of paying top dollar is a moron.
You mentioned CZ versus diamond. For *most* jewelry applications, I agree that a CZ would appear to offer few drawbacks over a diamond. However, diamond has a higher refractive index, much greater thermal conductivity (CZ is effectively an insulator, whereas diamond conducts heat better than copper), and it is also harder than CZ.
Of those three items, at least two of them (hardness and refractive index) play some role in the stone's suitability for jewelry, and as a result, a trained eye can spot a CZ fake. Is that relevant for you and I, or for most jewelry consumers? Maybe, maybe not...
But when you start talking about other uses for diamonds (industrial use, for example), all three differences become significant, and CZ quickly becomes completely inadequate. So saying that CZ is just as good as diamond only holds true for the specialized case of jewelry for the masses that won't notice the differences between it and real diamond...
The same principles apply to other products (like laser show software!) as well.
Finally, you mentioned that we should "Keep an open mind everyone"... I would like to add that your statement cuts both ways. While people *do* need to be receptive to new ideas, they also need to be receptive to the idea that they *don't* have all the facts they need to make an accurate comparison. In fact, a lot of the purchases we make are based on incomplete information. Sometimes that's not a big deal (choosing a brand of toilet paper, for example), but sometimes it matters a lot (buying a house!).
Laser show software and controllers are a significant investment for most hobbyists. And I can say that if I knew what I know now back when I got started in this hobby, I would have *jumped* on Pangolin and never looked back. (Instead, I started with the Alphalite, moved up to Mamba 2004, then Mamba Black, then considered Full-Auto for a while, before finally trying Pangolin.) I wasted a lot of time and a lot of money in the process.
Adam