![Run clickshare](https://kumkoniak.com/5.jpg)
![run clickshare run clickshare](https://www.actualtechco.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Barco-ClickShare-CX-20_2000x2000-1024x1024.png)
To share a screen, you plug one of several USB remotes into the laptops that will be presenting, or connect a mobile device via Wi-Fi to the ClickShare. Once set up, it’s effectively a new Wi-Fi point on your network. Once you install the base station, get it hooked up to a display, and turn it on, the process gets slightly easier, but it definitely needs more and better documentation in the box. When you get the unit, it’s shipped with comparatively few directions, making it a fairly decent challenge to anyone not already technically savvy. On top of that, if you need to change laptops for any reason, you get to do the entire dance again.īarco’s ClickShare promises to make the process less difficult. Once you get the cable of choice plugged in, you hope it continues to work. If you’ve ever sat in a corporate conference room and watched as someone struggled to find which of the cables (Thunderbolt? HDMI? VGA? DVI? DisplayPort?) fit into their laptop, you’ve questioned two things: If you’re unfamiliar with it, the premise is fairly simple: sharing screens is harder than it should be. I recently had the opportunity to test out the Clickshare group screensharing system, sent to me by Noel Bellen of Barco.
![Run clickshare](https://kumkoniak.com/5.jpg)