Grant's Perspective on ... the people you meet at InfoComm.
I really enjoy attending InfoComm (especially when it is in Orlando). I love the opportunity to see the latest in AV technology. The experience sure gets the creative juices flowing when I start to think how the new equipment can be implemented into the AV systems that I design.
It is even better when the person delivering the demonstration is someone that I frequently talk to on the telephone. George Grech of AMX is a perfect example. He is a great guy, full of energy and ideas to help us develop the best AV solutions for our clients. See the picture that I snapped of George while he demonstrates the latest AMX Inspired Signage developments.
For those who have an interest in learning about how digital signage works, I found this 7 minute video overview on the AMX Inspired Signage solution.
I need to keep this entry short. It was great to attend InfoComm but the work sure piles up when you are away!
Grant
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Friday, June 19, 2009
InfoComm 09: The Power Of AV
Grant's Perspective on ... InfoComm 09
I am in Orlando attending InfoComm 09. InfoComm is the annual event for the AV industry. It is a week jam packed with educational workshops, a trade show that features all the new audiovisual equipment and great networking opportunities with over 30,000 AV professionals.
As we were making our way to Orlando, our feelings were that the show would be smaller than previous years due to the global economic downturn. I was pleasantly surprised that the show was the size it was with lots of new products and delegates doing more than just kicking the proverbial tires.
3D projection systems were one of the shows highlights that really caught my attention. Some systems require the use of glasses and some did not. The systems that required the glasses performed better but it is certainly interesting that 3D without glasses is possible and only going to get better.
See the picture of myself and other Inland AV staff members wearing the 3D glasses and checking out the new Sharp 3D projector.
I'll try to post some pictures and more show highlights early next week. I have to go and catch my flight back to Winnipeg.
Grant
I am in Orlando attending InfoComm 09. InfoComm is the annual event for the AV industry. It is a week jam packed with educational workshops, a trade show that features all the new audiovisual equipment and great networking opportunities with over 30,000 AV professionals.
As we were making our way to Orlando, our feelings were that the show would be smaller than previous years due to the global economic downturn. I was pleasantly surprised that the show was the size it was with lots of new products and delegates doing more than just kicking the proverbial tires.
3D projection systems were one of the shows highlights that really caught my attention. Some systems require the use of glasses and some did not. The systems that required the glasses performed better but it is certainly interesting that 3D without glasses is possible and only going to get better.
See the picture of myself and other Inland AV staff members wearing the 3D glasses and checking out the new Sharp 3D projector.
I'll try to post some pictures and more show highlights early next week. I have to go and catch my flight back to Winnipeg.
Grant
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Cable Clutter on the Table
Grant's Perspective on ... Cable Clutter on the Table
My previous post was a bit of a rant about people who spend a huge sum of cash on their boardroom aesthetics and almost nothing on the room's communications system. I'm following this up with another pet peeve; a great looking room and a great AV system but with cables everywhere.
Consider connecting a laptop on a boardroom table or a lectern when doing a presentation. You'll need to at least connect the computer video, possibly power, and potentially computer audio and a LAN connection. So often this means the aesthetics of the room and presentation is marred by a tangle of cables.
There are a few options when it comes to table top cable management. By that I refer to the connection points where a user will plug-in their equipment to an AV system. Not to a traditional wall plate loaded with connection points located far away from the boardroom table, but a place conveniently right on the table.
On a boardroom table you may find connection point devices that are either pop-up, tilt-up, flip-open, or well style. There may be more than one per table and when in the closed state they hide the connection points while providing an elegant solution to a well designed AV system.
A pop-up, when activated, will elevate itself above the table to expose the connection points. A tilt-up is very similar but a tad more discreet. A flip-open is simply a lid that when open allows access to the connection points recessed below the level of the table.
All of the above require interconnect cables. These are the cables that connect your device to the connection point. I personally don't like the fact that the excess cables lay on top of the boardroom table cluttering up the area, which looks unkempt and may be a distraction.
My preferred method is the cable well where the required interconnects already exist within the well and can be extracted when required. This way the user simply pulls out only the desired connection point to the required length to their laptop.
To do one better than that, there are wells available that also include a keypad in the lid (see the picture at the top of this post). This provides the user with control of the AV system right at the location where they connect their device. How cool is that? No more searching for the projector remote or walking across the room to a wall mounted controller and an audio mixer located in a credenza. A common example of this would allow the meeting chairperson to connect their laptop, turn on the AV system, and throughout the course of the meeting adjust the volume and select any of the other connected laptops to be displayed.
The goal is to provide a reliable AV system that is very easy to use while keeping the room looking neat and clean.
Grant
Labels:
audio visual design,
boradroom,
cable,
crestron,
extron
Monday, June 1, 2009
Improved Boardroom Communications From System Integration
Grant's Perspective on ... the value of a boardroom AV communications system.
Here is my pet peeve - As an AV guy I'm biased but it blows me away when I hear of a boardroom where the furniture cost is an exorbitant amount (furniture sales people please do not take offense, I'm just looking for balance) and yet they have no AV or some little audiovisual system and their only form of conferencing is a telephone desk station used as a speaker phone (which is only half duplex audio!). I'm surprised at the number of boardrooms that do not include popular presentation technologies.
Don't get me wrong, I have a great respect for the old-school ways of business and the person who had the "natural knack" for business, and if AV isn’t a requirement…that’s just the way it is.
Audiovisual is all about communication. Tools are necessary to effectively communicate your information - could your teacher have taught math & spelling without a chalkboard? Or was it an overhead projector? Or was it via a projector or interactive whiteboard? Audiovisual is the tool - sight & sound used to effectively communicate the information. Throw a few more "tools" into the mix to provide easy operation of these components and you have: "Improved communication from system integration...."
Today, every boardroom and multi-purpose meeting room should have a presentation system. This includes a projector & screen or flat panel display(s), sources (computer, DVD, BluRay, document camera, etc) controlled lighting, proper audio and acoustic treatment, audio conferencing, video conferencing, and an easy and intuitive control system interface to operate the system.
We specialize in boardroom and training room presentation systems and have completed many rooms where we work with the existing décor – and we know not to scratch your furniture. At the end of the day, it’s really great to see a completed integration help a business achieve their goals.
Grant
Here is my pet peeve - As an AV guy I'm biased but it blows me away when I hear of a boardroom where the furniture cost is an exorbitant amount (furniture sales people please do not take offense, I'm just looking for balance) and yet they have no AV or some little audiovisual system and their only form of conferencing is a telephone desk station used as a speaker phone (which is only half duplex audio!). I'm surprised at the number of boardrooms that do not include popular presentation technologies.
Don't get me wrong, I have a great respect for the old-school ways of business and the person who had the "natural knack" for business, and if AV isn’t a requirement…that’s just the way it is.
Audiovisual is all about communication. Tools are necessary to effectively communicate your information - could your teacher have taught math & spelling without a chalkboard? Or was it an overhead projector? Or was it via a projector or interactive whiteboard? Audiovisual is the tool - sight & sound used to effectively communicate the information. Throw a few more "tools" into the mix to provide easy operation of these components and you have: "Improved communication from system integration...."
Today, every boardroom and multi-purpose meeting room should have a presentation system. This includes a projector & screen or flat panel display(s), sources (computer, DVD, BluRay, document camera, etc) controlled lighting, proper audio and acoustic treatment, audio conferencing, video conferencing, and an easy and intuitive control system interface to operate the system.
We specialize in boardroom and training room presentation systems and have completed many rooms where we work with the existing décor – and we know not to scratch your furniture. At the end of the day, it’s really great to see a completed integration help a business achieve their goals.
Grant
Labels:
boardrooms,
value of audiovisual
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