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Squirrels
Wireless screen mirroring and digital signage solutions for seamless collaboration

What is Squirrels?

Squirrels develops comprehensive wireless collaboration solutions that eliminate the need for traditional HDMI/VGA cables and overpriced hardware. Their technology facilitates screen mirroring and digital signage across various devices and platforms, including AirPlay, Google Cast, and Miracast, making it suitable for educational institutions, businesses, and home entertainment.

The company offers multiple products like Ditto for wireless collaboration and digital signage, Reflector 4 for receiving screen mirroring, and AirParrot 3 for sending screen mirroring and media streaming. These solutions are trusted globally by millions of users and integrated into thousands of classrooms, providing scalable and secure alternatives to outdated presentation methods.

Features

  • Screen Mirroring: Advanced AirPlay, Google Cast, and Miracast support for wireless presentation
  • Digital Signage: Comprehensive solution for displaying content on multiple screens
  • Cross-Platform Compatibility: Works with Mac, Windows, iOS, Android, and other devices
  • Enterprise Scalability: Secure and scalable software for large organizations
  • OEM Integration: Licensing options to add wireless collaboration to hardware products

Use Cases

  • Wireless presentations in classrooms and lecture halls
  • Business meetings and corporate collaboration sessions
  • Home entertainment streaming and media sharing
  • Digital signage for information displays in public spaces
  • OEM integration for hardware manufacturers adding screen mirroring capabilities

Related Tools:

Blogs:

  • Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Most AI note-taking lists are really lists of meeting bots, which join your video call and transcribe it. That's useful, but it's half the picture. Decisions happen in hallway conversations, client dinners, on-site visits, and hybrid rooms where nobody is on a video link. This guide covers different parts of the note-taking workflow: hardware capture for in-person settings, platform-native tools for online calls, and AI layers for organizing and synthesizing what you've captured. It compares six tools by capture context, workflow fit, pricing, and limitations.

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