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Touch and go. (What's new ... in presentation systems & products).


The worlds of multimedia and videoconferencing A real time video session between two or more users or between two or more locations. Although the first videoconferencing was done with traditional analog TV and satellites, inhouse room systems became popular in the early 1980s after Compression Labs pioneered digitized video systems  collide in a new product created by Tandberg and Crestron. The Director, which is useful for distance education and in large lecture halls, offers on-screen on·screen or on-screen  
adj. & adv.
1. As shown on a movie, television, or display screen.

2. Within public view; in public.
 touch capabilities for multimedia presentations and videoconferencing-in a single unit. Powered by a Crestron DVP DVP

See delivery versus payment (DVP).
4 control system, users can display multiple real-time images simultaneously from VCRs, DVDs, document cameras, or PCs. The DVP4 powers the touchpanel interface, which allows users to manage the presentation from the Director's 67-inch touch-sensitive screen, which also functions as a whitebeard or a high-resolution interactive control panel installed on a lectern or podium. The Director is delivered in a self-contained rear-projection cabinet that includes an XGA (EXtended Graphics Array) A screen resolution of 1,024x768 pixels. The term stems from IBM's XGA display standard introduced in 1990, which extended VGA to 132-column text and interlaced 1,024x768x256 resolution. XGA-2 later added non-interlaced 1,024x768x64K.  LCD projector See LCD TV, data projector and LCD panel. . The system also features Tandherg's AudioScience microphone, a ceiling-mounted unit with a large pick-up range. Price: $62,000. See www.crestron.com.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
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Publication:University Business
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:138
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