Posts Tagged ‘dynamic digital signage’

From One DDS to Another.

As many know, I spent my entire undergrad at BYU with the intent of entering Dental School. While I was a business major, I spent a great chunk of my time studying many of the sciences including general chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, physics, biology, and biochemistry. During the interim between school I started a flourishing cable television, phone, and internet business with a couple of long time friends. It ended up being my bread and butter. It literally paid for all my schooling, housing, applications, test fees, and interview travels to various dental schools. It even helped cover a dental trip to Honduras where I helped to give free dental care to many Hondurans.

Interestingly, nine interviews and a couple acceptances later I became disinterested almost completely in the dental field. A combination of reasons led me to this conclusion. One of them came from my work as a dental assistant. I thought to myself, “if I’m going to own my own business like this, why not do something I can at least enjoy.” A myriad of other reasons were also on my list, but it was obviously not right for me. Better to find out now than later.

My brother and I started experimenting and reading about digital signage as a form of media and advertising a few years ago. Since then, I’ve been reading pretty extensively on the subject.

I just find it a bit interesting that I went from one DDS to another. First I was going to be a Doctor of Dental Surgery. Now, I’m working on Dynamic Digital Signage. Funny how things turn out I’d say.

I certainly do not regret in the slightest the things I learned while in the Pre-Dental classes I took at the “Y.” Experience is sometimes expensive, but it beats the alternative: getting two years into a career you realized was the wrong decision.

 

Alioscopy, the Glasses-Free 3D Digital Signage Solution.

Well, InfoComm was great and I saw some pretty cool stuff. I forgot to blog about Alioscopy. Alioscopy is a company that does 3d digital signage displays that don’t require glasses whatsoever. In fact, it’s a bit trippy. From what I gained from talking with the rep, they’ve got a rendering machine that takes about 7 or 8 images and overlays them in the background. SlashGear did an article on them not too long ago which said the following:

In fact, the system sounds very similar to the WOWvx technology Philips recently demonstrated in their own glasses-free 3D display. Both rely on depth information recorded from a number of slightly different points-of-view – nine in WOWvx, eight for Alioscopy – that is refracted onto the different filter layers of the panel. Each system can display pre-mixed 3D video or create the 3D effect in real-time; alternatively, both can display normal 2D pictures. However the big difference would seem to be bandwidth: WOWvx supposedly needs only a little extra above plain 2D video, whereas Alioscopy’s system demands 9GB per minute.

Can you imagine that? Any digital signage system that requires 9GB per minute is really pumping out some info. These things are cool though. If you can afford their $10k price tag. The ad potential for such a system is pretty huge though. The picture of the screen I’ve pasted above really doesn’t do the system justice. It’s kind of one of those, “see it to believe it” systems. Some cool stuff nonetheless.