With a new “phygital” approach (blending offline physical aspects with online digital ones), the retail industry remains the bastion of video screen technology.

 

Immersive, interactive, memorable. This new kind of dynamic display leaves an impression.

 

But digital signage isn’t only used for commercial purposes and advertising. It also has a critical place in university research, for example at the Observatory of Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (OVSQ).

 

The OVSQ received a multi-screen visualisation system called MIRE (for Mur Immersif pour la Recherche et l'Enseignement or immersive wall for research and education) with a display area measuring 6 m wide and 1.80 m high—a flagship in the French digital signage industry for research based on high-performance computing infrastructure.


The video wall enables the visual depiction of digital simulation results with 3D glasses and movement tracking as well as simultaneous data processing.

The multi-screen configuration means it can also be used for other collaborative projects as each user or user group can present, share and discuss their own data on one of the screens, and this is just one of the many ways the university is is benefiting from it.

Cindy Castro, IT Systems Engineer, OVSQ


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