Podcasts about display week

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Best podcasts about display week

Latest podcast episodes about display week

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Home Theater Geeks 437: Display Week 2024 and the Rise of QDEL

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 21:02


The Society for Information Display hosts an annual conference called Display Week to showcase the bleeding edge of display technology. This year's gathering focused on electroluminescent quantum dots, which is The Next Big Thing. This is a super-geeky episode, so strap on your propeller hats! Host: Scott Wilkinson Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)
ATTG 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five - Ticketmaster Breach, Podcasting, iPad's

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 4:16


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

The Tech Guy (Video HI)
ATTG 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five - Ticketmaster Breach, Podcasting, iPad's

The Tech Guy (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 142:22


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Hands-On Tech (Video HD)
ATTG 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five - Ticketmaster Breach, Podcasting, iPad's

Hands-On Tech (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 142:22 Transcription Available


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Hands-On Tech (MP3)
ATTG 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five - Ticketmaster Breach, Podcasting, iPad's

Hands-On Tech (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 142:22 Transcription Available


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Hands-On Tech (Video HI)
ATTG 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five - Ticketmaster Breach, Podcasting, iPad's

Hands-On Tech (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 142:22 Transcription Available


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Ask The Tech Guys 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 4:16


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Radio Leo (Audio)
Ask The Tech Guys 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five

Radio Leo (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 4:16


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-leo Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
Ask The Tech Guys 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 142:22 Transcription Available


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Radio Leo (Video HD)
Ask The Tech Guys 2027: Johnny Ebola and the Malaria Five

Radio Leo (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 142:22 Transcription Available


Alex Lindsay joins Leo Laporte this week for Ask The Tech Guys. What's the best way to start podcasting? Which iPad and Apple Pencil is great for drawing? Why is my iPad lagging when using a certain application? Plus, Scott Wilkinson talks about some of the technology demonstrated at Display Week 2024, and Johnny Jet talks about how you shouldn't share your itinerary information on social media. Data of 560 million Ticketmaster customers for sale after alleged breach. Tribeca to screen AI-generated short films created by OpenAI's Sora. How can I start podcasting? What's the easiest way to pull a plethora of photos off your iPhone and to store these photos? Scott Wilkinson and Display Week 2024. What apps are available to listen to radio stations on a vehicle with an infotainment system running Android Automotive OS? What's the best iPad & pencil for drawing? Johnny Jet and why you shouldn't share pictures of your itinerary online. I have a telestration setup at home with my iPad and Video Pencil, but how can I reduce the lag on my iPad when using the software? Hosts: Leo Laporte and Alex Lindsay Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2027 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-leo Sponsors: wix.com/studio HP.com - ATG - https://bit.ly/3K4ax9W cachefly.com/twit

Sixteen:Nine
Tobias Lang, Lang AG

Sixteen:Nine

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 36:41


The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED – DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT Germany's Lang AG is a family-owned and run business that has developed through the years into one of the larger and more influential players in the pro AV market - operating as both a supplier for rentals and staging market, as well as a distributor for systems integrators. The company is run by Tobias Lang, who based on a couple of chats, clearly has both passion and deep knowledge of the sector, business demands and both the state and opportunity of emerging display technologies. We had a 30 minute-plus conversation that flew by, getting into a bunch of things - including the potential for a projection systems, which these days don't get anywhere near the attention of LED displays. We also spend a lot of time talking about LED, and how he thinks that technology isn't necessarily supplanting LCD. From his perspective, he thinks LCD and LED technologies are actually merging. Have a listen and he'll explain. Subscribe from wherever you pick up new podcasts. TRANSCRIPT Tobias, thank you for joining me. Can you give me a rundown of what your company is all about, what it does, and its background?  Tobias Lang: Yeah. Thank you, Dave. Lang AG is a video-only company, which is doing only B2B, which means we cover both verticals, which are rental and staging and system integration. We supply mostly the European rental and staging market with big projectors, LED screens, cameras, converters, whatever you need in video, and as a distributor, we supply both rental companies and system integrators with the staff of the manufacturers we work with such as Epson, Panasonic, several LED manufacturers to supply the modern technology to them in a good way to consult them, which is fitting to each other. What amount of your business would you describe as being involved in digital signage?  Tobias Lang: First of all, if you look at the turnover of Lang AG, we do have companies in Switzerland, Spain, the UK, and Germany, which is the biggest. Germany did more than 80 million last year, and 60% of this is done by sales. If you look at digital signage, which is part of sales, this is a significant number, maybe 15 to 20% of our business.  The business itself is in the orbit of Cologne, that area? Tobias Lang: Yeah, we are spotted in the western part of Germany. We have everything in Germany in one warehouse, as we have in Zurich, Switzerland, Barcelona, Spain, and London, UK because it's very important for our customers to have the opportunity of a one-stop video strategy.  How long has the company been around?  Tobias Lang: We are now 45 years old. My father, when my brother was born, said, “Hey, I have three kids now. I should start something serious.” He founded a company in 1978 without any other ideas because he loved stuff like projection at this time. With the evolution of technology, we ended up being where we are today.  Were you groomed to run the company one day or were you doing other things and decided to go into the family business?  Tobias Lang: I worked for the company as a child which is typical for a family business, then I tried to step away a bit. I studied mathematics. I founded a software company. I did some interesting things.  This stuff is still existing and I still have my chairs, but at one point, I decided that it was a great opportunity to join the family business Lang AG and to be honest, this was maybe one of the best decisions in my life. I love what I'm doing.  That always helps, doesn't it?  Tobias Lang: It does, yeah.  Is there a particular market where you're seeing a lot of activity right now and is it evolving?  Tobias Lang: Over the last two years, this immersive art experience vertical projection was said to be dead or going down five years ago, ten years ago, and what we were able to see over the last months is that projection is growing, and we enjoy this because we love projection and this is based on all these immersive experience setups which are done worldwide mostly based on art, but we believe other verticals can follow.  So these are effectively entertainment venues?  Tobias Lang: So far, yes. But we believe that corporations will use similar setups for brand experience and stuff like that. I've been to at least a couple of those venues, they work because they're darkened, they're purpose-built and you can control the lighting and everything else.  When you get into a corporate environment, that becomes more challenging but is the technology catching up in terms of laser light brightness, the projection engines getting smaller and detached, the projection head being away from the rest of the equipment, and so on? Tobias Lang: This is a challenge for sure, but if you look at most installations, most of the projectors are around 10,000 lumens, and you could use brighter projectors, and there are opportunities from the technology side to set up even brighter projectors than we have today. The brightest projector at the moment for the event market or the integration market is 50,000 lumen. You could easily go above.  It's a question about the demand, how much it will rise. But, I believe we will see this too because if you look at the Pavillion of Dubai Expo, 2/3 of these pavilions used projection over LED because of the flexibility of the technology. LED is a strong technology and a strong growing technology, but there will always be room for projection because of its flexibility. For example, the setup time of a projector, don't underestimate that.  Yeah. It used to be for projection mapping and edge blending and everything else. That was like a lot of work and a lot of mathematics and everything else, and now you can do it in software quite quickly from what I understand. Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's fantastic. That's true.  Yeah, makes a huge difference. The thing I like about projection is the way it can just arrive and be unexpected versus if it's fixed hard physical displays, you know that there's something there in most cases with the exception of places like the Comcast Tower, but the projection, you can have a wall that all of a sudden is a digital canvas. Tobias Lang: Yeah, and our understanding of the word, “screen” will change. Mapping is a good example, we use buildings as screens. Decades ago, we had a television at home and this was the screen for us, and yeah, we see changes happening and we see different dimensions of screens and in this flexible world, we will use projectors more. But in our world, we'll be LED, and we'll be covered with some kind of display, but where we don't have a display, we could add a projection screen to add some value.  Is the partner reseller market and as well as the end user market getting more sophisticated, do they understand this technology more or is part of the role of your company doing education and holding their hand? Tobias Lang: I think it is both. This is always about technology that has different layers. First, you have to train the experts. You have to give an understanding of the possibilities, and then you need to set up a discussion about opportunities for creative people, and then demands rise, and there's some latency in this process as you could feel from the immersive art experience and the change to other verticals, and I believe that they're by nature and you can't change it.  From what I saw on your website, you have a lot of technical people on board. People who can pull apart devices and get down to the board level with them and everything else. Is that a bit unusual?  Tobias Lang: I wouldn't say this is unusual. What may be is unusual that we have technical staff who can decide every single day what they want to do, because of some service and stuff like this, it's necessary sometimes, but we drive an R&D team, which is absolutely free to make a choice of what they believe is important for us tomorrow. The market expects us to give feedback on future technology and therefore we have to look deep with our partners into product planning and technology, and this is what we love, and I think that's within our organization, a great job opportunity if you join one of those teams. So when you say you're doing R&D, you're not coming up with your own products, I assume, or am I getting that wrong? Tobias Lang: No, we are not a manufacturer, but we have to set up solutions sometimes. So what we try to do is, we add value to a product. For example, in the US market, most people know us as the cage company, as we did all the projector frames. They almost thought for a while, this is our business.  What we did, in reality, is that we looked for a solution for our projectors to use them in rental, and we added a mechanical solution on top. For other products, we add batteries as a solution to run wireless. Now, we added some drone business because we believe if you're strong in mappings and you supply media servers and high-brightness projectors to the markets, you should cover the pixels in the sky in the future too. It also means you're future-proof.  Tobias Lang: Future-proof is a hard word. Let's say we are interested in the future, and how it will go.  Yeah, I guess you can never be totally sure because it moves so fast.  Tobias Lang: That's true. I would assume that when you're doing all this value-added engineering work, it's in part that in order to service a customer and address a project, you can't wait on the marketplace for the suppliers to just develop something and put it on their roadmap to serve your needs. Sometimes, you must do it yourself to make it all happen.  Tobias Lang: You have to bring together the information of the need of the market on the one hand and the possibility of, what's on the technical side thinkable on the other hand. So we have to bridge between our customers and the manufacturers, and it depends on the demand or the project.  To be honest, in the first project, you understand the need, but the solution is not available yet. But you learn from it to bring it back to the discussion of product planning, and future roadmap, and then you can return with the right solution for the future because if there is a need in AV for a solution, this will hit you a second, a third time and so on. Are you in front of end-user customers at all, or your team, or is that something that you stay at arm's length? Tobias Lang: We try, and I believe we are mostly invisible. Most of the end customers in the European market have no clue that we exist. If our customers rent material from us, it's just a gray case without any brand of Lang AG.  I assume that your business partners prefer it that way, they want to own the customer?  Tobias Lang: Yeah. We always say we are behind, we let the show to our customers and I think those who like this come back to us and we understand this as one of our values.  When we were talking ahead of turning the recording on, you were talking about one of the things that your firm does is you work hard to try to forecast what will be possible and what matters and what the need is of the marketplace. That has to be challenging just because of the way technology shifts, and also, there are so many different factors as to what the marketplace wants including, the war in Ukraine and supply chains and everything else that has happened in the last couple of years.  Tobias Lang: Yeah, around 10 or 15 years ago, it was much easier to drive a mid-size family business. But today, with the experience of a pandemic, of such a war influencing the supply chains, you have to make sure that you have an understanding of the global world and the effects which are happening for your industry. So we try to be in shape around this. For the actual situations, we handle this quite well. It is easier if you always love to ask yourself what's new, and what's next, because, then you are flexible and agile enough to change fast.  Some of the trends that I've been hearing a lot of discussion about are moving manufacturing out of China into other countries, having storage warehouses, different methodologies for shipping, and everything else. Has that been critical with the weather the last two, or three years? Tobias Lang: I wouldn't say critical, but it is part of the game. This is mostly a discussion around LEDs, and in the end, you have to understand that even if you produce an LED panel in Europe, there will still be parts that will be supplied from Asia. So it's only bringing the challenge to different classes regarding customs rules. It is a bit about politics because it depends on what the European Union will change in the rules of customs, I think there is a similar story in the US.  When I was at the Munich Digital Signage Summit Europe, one of the areas that was discussed quite a bit was green signage and sustainability. Is that factoring into how you do business? Tobias Lang: Yeah, a lot, and this is rising fast, and I believe there's no stopping it. So it will continue to rise.  In every single supply chain, you will have to report what you do regarding sustainability. You will have to explain yourself in the future much more intensively, much more often how you face this challenge. As a company, it's very important that you have to accept these circumstances and then you should work on it. Energy management and conservation and cutting energy costs were something that was around prior to the Ukraine War and everything that kind of bubbled out that, but has that really heightened in the last year and a half?  Tobias Lang: Yes, there is a different pace of this change. I'll give you an example. Last September, there was a new rule by the European Union that all signage displays had to be turned off in Germany between 10:00 PM and 6:00 AM, and most LED screens were never built to be turned off, so they just used a black image to be turned off. But in reality, they were still running.  So this was a challenge, no one was prepared for and I think it's sustainable and good that we now have the discussion of how to manufacture an LED screen, which is easy, honestly speaking, that you can turn off every day.   Yeah, I didn't even know that until I was at the Munich thing, because you just assume it's a display, there's an on-and-off. Why is it difficult for them to be turned off and then turned back on gracefully?  Tobias Lang: Honestly, in most installations, those screens were done modular, which is no surprise because it's cheaper in transport, and then you set up the screen, and you do some kind of dressing, and not all screens understand the dressing once you turn the screen on.  The result is if you turn the screens off, you can turn it on again. You need to have an LED Technician too, because the dressing is no longer working. These are just simple things, but this is a different way of thinking because, in the past, people were consulted to let the screen runs.  And are there workarounds? Is this all being addressed?  Tobias Lang: Yes, there are some workarounds out there. There's a lot ongoing and I believe this story will be done in 12 to 18 months completely. It is a learning curve, and it also shows the strengths of our industry that we can adapt fast. We can do a lot regarding sustainability because we can save energy quickly if we focus on the right questions. In an absolute way of thinking, we are maybe not the greenest industry, but in relation from year to year, we improved so much that we can be proud as an industry of what we are doing. Is it a hardware fix that puts an intermediary device, or is it a software fix, or is it like the new generation of Nova Star controllers and so on that will get around that? Tobias Lang: So, in the first step, it is a hardware fix, what is done now, and in the second step, it will be mostly a software fix. One of the things that I read in another article that was attributed to you was, and we were talking ahead of this discussion, you were saying how LED and LCD will merge, and I was thinking it kind of is because LCDs are using LEDs as their backlighting and so on, but you're talking about something different here, right? Tobias Lang: First of all, I have to mention that it is tremendous what is happening in 2023 in the LED market. When I went to ISE, I was surprised at how many manufacturers talked about micro LEDs… And some of it actually was true micro LED. Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's true. But before this year's ISE, it looked like all the manufacturers of high-resolution LEDs were going to chip-on-board technology, and then the semiconductors offered a micro LED package, so a package again with where you could do pick and place like with SMDs to produce an LED panel, and a lot of companies looked into this and announced that where they will have a product in future based on this technology. And I wondered, okay. Is this even before COB has started to come to the top the end of COB because there is a superior technology?  This is still an open question. I can't answer it by today. But it shows how interesting it is, and the comment about LED and LCD merging is based on the fact that now nearly every former LCD manufacturer, like the Chinese BOE, is joining the LED race because everyone is accepting that there will be a lot of replacement from the LED or former LCD installations and based on this challenge, a lot of LCD manufacturers ask their health how to use the stuff they did in the past, and they found out that if they use the transistor film, they have an LCD, they could supply active matrix solutions based on LED as the video source. So driving every single pixel by a transistor to get a value as a product that is superior to what we know.  So I believe we will see screens that are more flexible, and more transparent than we used to, and this is incredibly interesting because it will change our understanding of the word display and screen to have just one dimension in a 4:3 or 16:9 screen. We have to start to think completely differently, and the funny thing is that the concept of active matrix and passive matrix, I don't know, maybe 30 years old or whatever, was there as long as I am in the industry, but it was always too expensive to drive every single pixel and there were no advantages, but now it seems like an active matrix became reachable in a price range, and there are supplies added values because you get such light and flexible products and for example, the hype of the transparent LED from Muxwave we saw at the last shows was one of the rising stars, gives us a first look in the first understanding of what could be the future, what could be possible and I'm pretty sure we will see many more products based on this technology.  Not everyone, to be honest, agrees that this is the way to go. There are some manufacturers which believe passive matrix is still the way to go, but there are also a lot of manufacturers which believe in active matrix. It is very interesting to follow this discussion and to see every single move of the different manufacturers, and this is for example, for me, a strong argument why it is wrong as a market player just to visit one show a year. That's the reason why you have to show ISE and InfoComm, Display Week because the different levels of information you get at the different shows by the different timing is helping me so much to face these questions. I'm trying to wrap my head around this. When you're talking about TFT, does that limit the dimensions and shape of the displays to how LCD is made right now in terms of having mother glass, and the largest display you're going to get is 105 inches, or does that not really in play here? Tobias Lang: Yeah, I'm not an expert, to be honest, on LCD factories. What is the limitation of the size? Is it the glass? Is this the Tft? Is it a combination? But for sure, this will have an influence on active matrix products.  For example, at Muxwave, it's about the drivers, the number of pixels, you can reach, it's not about the transistors. So this question will be answered by yes/maybe if you have really high-resolution products, and maybe by no, if you have lower-resolution products. Because you do a lot of work in the rental market, equipment is going to be put up and torn down repeatedly. You have to think a lot about durability, right? Tobias Lang: Yes, that's true, and redundancy. This is one of the main challenges. If we face AV over IP, which will come into our market for sure, and we believe based on XMTP and IPMX but it is a change, and people in the event, want to be sure that everything is working out because if you look at a modern event what kind of amount of setup timing those professional players have left, it's quite tight, and they need to be sure that everything is working and therefore, we have to understand that our role is to make their work as easy as possible.  Having chip-on-board and things with hardened or more durable surfaces and having lightweight, grid-based systems, even down to something like the Muxwave product, which is super thin and would go up and down pretty easily, that stuff, I assume, is pretty attractive?  Tobias Lang: Yeah, that's one of the arguments we believe you will see those solutions in rental and staging too because there are advantages in rental and staging regarding transport cost, which is also a question which is regarding sustainability, and then it is an advantage quite often, in setup timing.  There will be a mix, and this is somehow in our life so incredible that you can always learn from one vertical to the other, so sometimes technology, which is done for integration, will be helpful in event and staging and vice versa. Last question. I'm curious if there's a project that you've seen in the last year or so, digital signage or pro AV in some way where you thought, okay, that's really good, that's where this is all going.  Tobias Lang: As you can imagine, I was involved in several projects, and I don't want to mention any particular out of this, but I can tell you I'm really looking forward to coming to Vegas to see the fair by myself in real life because I did some running when they were setting it up while different shows in the morning and I always pass by, and when I saw the first images on social media, I was excited and this is for sure a big thing, and like I think everyone in the industry, I would love to see it in real life.  Yeah, I'm looking forward to that in December when I go to Digital Signage Experience. I've been watching it for a while now and actually trying to do a podcast with them, and maybe one day they'll say, yes. Tobias Lang: I will for sure listen to this podcast.  Yes. It's the company that's the LED suppliers, the same one that put the LEDs on the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, Montreal Company. Alright. Tobias, thank you very much for spending time with me.  Tobias Lang: Much appreciated, Dave. Thank you for having the interest, and I enjoyed every single second.

It's Always Day One
New Video creative option for Sponsored Display (Week 40, Lesson 2)

It's Always Day One

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 1:48


Video creative is currently being tested on select accounts and is expected to be rolled out soon.5 Amazon ad lessons. 2 minutes read. 1 weekly email.https://georges.blog/subscribeFind every wrong with your Amazon ads in under 72 hours.https://georges.blog/audit

Tech Café
Display Week 2022 (ou pas)

Tech Café

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2022 41:00


Un supplément week-end où l'on aborde les faits marquants de la Display Week 2022, mais aussi plein d'autres sujets… Merci à Cyberghost VPN de soutenir cet épisode et pour profiter de la réduction, direction ce lien : https://cyberghostvpn.com/TechCafe ❤️ Soutenez Tech Café sur Patreon

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1893

Ask The Tech Guys (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 161:34


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
The Tech Guy 1893

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 161:34


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

Radio Leo (Audio)
The Tech Guy 1893

Radio Leo (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 161:34


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/radio-leo Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

The Tech Guy (Video HI)
Leo Laporte - The Tech Guy: 1893

The Tech Guy (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 162:20


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
The Tech Guy 1893

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 162:20


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

Total Mikah (Video)
The Tech Guy 1893

Total Mikah (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 162:20


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-mikah Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

Radio Leo (Video HD)
The Tech Guy 1893

Radio Leo (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2022 162:20


Fixing stuck pixels on an LCD monitor. Adding security cameras to food trucks. Expected WiFi speeds for a gigabit internet plan. Archiving email from an IMAP server. Upgrading to a new monitor. Creating and accessing a database of fine art. Buying a new Windows 11 laptop. Remotely monitoring a CNC machine. Understanding the Cricut cutter. Plus, conversations with Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick Debartolo. What to know as crypto such as Bitcoin and stablecoins plunge : NPR Elon Musk pauses Twitter deal: What that means | Protocol Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal fires two top executives, freezes hiring - The Verge Royal Mail wants fleet of 500 drones to carry mail to remote UK communities - BBC News The EU Commission's New Proposal Would Undermine Encryption And Scan Our Messages | Electronic Frontier Foundation DJI's new Mini 3 Pro drone hits the aerial photography sweet spot | TechCrunch Stuck Pixel Fixing Guide (Diagnose, Fix, Prevent!) Display Week > 2022 The Mobile Scoop Shop - The Mobile Scoop Shop Owlcam | AI-Powered Car Security Camera System Arlo Pro 2 Add-on Camera | Arlo Accessories MOVING IMAP MAIL TO LOCAL DRIVE - Apple Community Thunderbird — Make Email Easier. — Thunderbird MailStore - The Standard in Email Archiving Email Backup Software to Download Emails from Cloud-Based Services Here's What Travelers Need to Know Before Their Memorial Day and Summer Trips The Easiest Way to Digitize Your Old Photos - JohnnyJet.com Ninox Database Use Claris FileMaker to Build Business Applications — Claris Galleries - Séraphine - LongShadowStudio Airtable Product - Build a Better Way to Work | Airtable Laptops | Shop Laptops, 2 in 1s, & More | Lenovo US 12th Gen Intel Core Laptop Computers | Dell USA Antivirus.com - Cybersecurity, Data Leaks & Scams, How-Tos, and Product Reviews Windows Security: Defender, Antivirus & More | Microsoft TRUMPF SE + Co. KG | TRUMPF TruTops Fab Software helps you Monitor your TRUMPF Machines from Anywhere  - Headland Machinery Cricut Home Tech Guy Labs | Giz Wiz Biz Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Mikah Sargent, Scott Wilkinson, Johnny Jet, and Dick DeBartolo Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/the-tech-guy/episodes/1893 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/radio-leo Sponsors: go.acronis.com/techguy wealthfront.com/techguy

headed home
Acts Book Study(Gods power on display!)Week 19

headed home

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2021 42:35


www.longviewbaptistchurch.org Acts 5:21-32 1.The power and works of God will leave the world SPEECHLESS! 2.God will clear every path and pave every road when we are SOLD OUT to Jesus Christ!... 3.Only defy an order when it contradicts the truth of Gods Word!...

AVNation Daily Download
Daily Download Thursday September 2, 2021

AVNation Daily Download

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021 2:20


Sometimes technical jargon goes right over the consumer's head. What do they need for the right application? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

AVNation Daily Download
Daily Download Thursday September 2, 2021

AVNation Daily Download

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021


Sometimes technical jargon goes right over the consumer's head. What do they need for the right application?

AVNation Daily Download
Daily Download Thursday September 2, 2021

AVNation Daily Download

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021


Sometimes technical jargon goes right over the consumer's head. What do they need for the right application?

The CEDIA Podcast
The CEDIA Podcast: The AV Show with Mike Heiss (2021_26)

The CEDIA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2021 60:33


Michael Heiss has been busy, covering events including Display Week, E3, and the Apple Developers Conference (WWDC21). He'll also tell us about the latest gaming, display, immersive audio developments, and quite a bit more. https://michaelheiss.com/

Enterprise Podcast Network – EPN
Display Week 2021 – a Virtual Event on May 17-21

Enterprise Podcast Network – EPN

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2021 17:47


Dr. Radu Reit, Chair of the Marketing Committee at the Society for Information Display (SID) again joins Enterprise Radio. The post Display Week 2021 – a Virtual Event on May 17-21 appeared first on Enterprise Podcast Network - EPN.

Sixteen:Nine
Dr. Erica Walker, Emma Mayes - ColorNet

Sixteen:Nine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 32:23


The 16:9 PODCAST IS SPONSORED BY SCREENFEED - DIGITAL SIGNAGE CONTENT If you have been around digital signage for a while, you have almost certainly heard a discussion at some point about accurate color reproduction on screens, and the problems big brands can have with that. The example used most often is Coca-Cola Red, which is a VERY specific red. It can be a problem at the display level, but it also has to do with the source. A small research team of academics and students at Clemson University in South Carolina are well down the path of sorting it out. In their case, the problem was Clemson orange - a very specific shade of orange seen on 10s of 1,000s of shirts, hats and giant foam fingers during Clemson football game broadcasts. The orange shown on TV sets and replay boards is not, in some cases, the right orange. A research project called ColorNet is using AI and neural networks to make real-time color adjustments on the fly to the broadcast signal - using an algorithm light enough that it can run on an off-the-shelf PC. I spoke with Dr. Erica Walker and graduating student Emma Mayes about the project, and how the technology might be applied as a low-cost box in the back of digital signage screens - so that networks run by brands can really show their true colors. The chat is a bit technical, but even I got most of it. One other note - I THINK at some point I reference Clemson as being an SEC team. Wrong. It's in the ACC. I'm in Canada. Ask me about curling. This is how you'd reach Walker - eblack4@clemson.edu Subscribe to this podcast: iTunes * Google Play * RSS TRANSCRIPT Emma, Erica, thank you for joining me. Can you give me a rundown on what ColorNet is all about? I know it's a university project that you guys presented at Display Week, going back about a month or so.  Erica: Yeah, absolutely. Thanks for having us today. ColorNet is an artificial intelligence solution for brand colors to be displayed correctly on screens. So not a color solution that would display all colors correctly, that solution already exists. This is specific to a brand color, and in this case, Clemson University’s orange and purple.  That’s because you guys are working or studying out of Clemson, correct?  Erica: That’s correct. And actually the solution could work for any color. We just happened to use the colors that we see the most on our own campus and in our athletics.  Which is orange?  Erica: That's correct.  So this is a project coming out of the graphics communication department, or is it multiple departments?  Erica: It actually includes a lot of different departments. Each of us on the project is from a different department. In fact, I'm from graphic communications. The students are from engineering and computer science, a variety of engineering degrees. And then my co-creator, or co-inventor, works in a multidisciplinary department with a focus on data science.  Okay, so what's the problem you're trying to solve here? Erica: Yeah, thanks for asking that. It is something that is very commonly talked about at Clemson Athletic games and probably at other universities as well. But, the orange is incredibly recognizable, our brand orange for Clemson fans. And when you watch a broadcast of the football game or basketball game or baseball game, the orange is always skewed. It's always normally skewed towards red. Now, obviously the settings can be impacted by the settings on your screen itself, but what if we could address this at the feed level, at the camera level, at the production level?  And that would ensure that if Clemson orange is a Pantone color that is going to be color accurate, at least coming out of the feed? Erica: Exactly. That's really that's the tipper right there is that we don't have control over other people's screens. Like the screen inside your home, we aren't trying to make any adjustments to that. That would be the homeowner or the screen enter the bar that would have to make those adjustments, but we can make adjustments to the screens inside of our facilities. So the big screen inside of the football stadium, we could adjust that cause we have control over it, but the main thing is just having a clean feed, having a feed where Pantone 165 is a recognizable color and it displays correctly. And why is that a problem either, you know, if I'm a Clemson fan, I know my orange, but, if I'm a Syracuse fan, maybe it's a different orange who's going to know other than the Clemson fans?  Erica: Right. So, that's a fair question. On any given Saturday, there are over 70,000 people in the stadium watching the game, and so that's a big audience, but in general, we just use Clemson orange as kind of a testbed, for this example. So it could be done for soccer teams, you know, in Europe, the big leagues. It could be done for major league baseball, it could be done for NBA finals. It could be done for really anything where brand color is recognizable to a fan of any team of any sport. And again, you can't really control the final output, like on my TV, if the calibration is off, it's gonna show it to be orangey-red instead, or wherever. Will this help that at all?  Erica: In my head, if the feed is better than more than likely, it will show better on your TV. Now that's not true if you've amped up your colors or if maybe, I know there are settings that are specific to gamers that they like, and so if you've changed the color settings on your TV, then that could be a problem, but one of the conversations we've been having with these screen manufacturers is what if we could address this at the screen level as well? But obviously, the goal of artificial intelligence is not to weasel our way into people's homes and make adjustments on their TV. So that's not the goal, but we do think that we could address it in, think of like large format displays. So if you go to the Coca Cola headquarters, they want their Coca-Cola red to display correctly on the screens that are scattered throughout their entire building or their manufacturing facility, or anywhere where they have the control over their screens. So kind of thinking of it from the brand level, as much as from the consumer level.  Yeah, it’s not really the business application here, I mean, you mentioned that there's a patent around it and the idea around that is for really super brand sensitive, color-sensitive companies like Coca Cola, and any number of other ones, that they have more of an assurance that the broadcast advertising is going to look in the color that is really important to them? Erica: Right now, that's what we're looking at as brand applications. So, as I said, there are solutions out there to solve, like overall, you know, a correct profile so that your TV shows colors accurately. So we aren't trying to necessarily do it across all colors, we're trying to really focus on the brand colors.  Right. So how does it work and how did you get started on this? This doesn't strike me as one of those things that you wake up in the middle of the night and go, “I must solve this.”  Emma: Right, so the basic approach that our team took is that we were trying to make it where when you're color-correcting, instead of correcting the entire frame, instead, we're working more with image segmentation. So the current process with athletics is that, oftentimes, they have to pick something in the frame and color-correct to that, and just hope everything falls out. So with basketball games, they look at the court and they say, “okay, the Clemson paw print in the middle of the court has to be brand color. Everything else will just be what it has to be.”  But we're trying to just get that right. The idea is that, well, what if we can make it so they don't have to compromise? So that way, it can be segmented, So we're color correcting the correct areas and frames as opposed to everything else. The idea was also to decrease the kind of manual burden on the technician when it comes to the color correcting, so we looked at doing image segmentation through machine learning by creating a convolutional neural network.  I know what those are.  Emma: (Laughter) Without getting into the nitty-gritty. We usually just look at the acronym CNN, so you don't even really have to know how to spell it, but what I’m saying is, just the gist of it that we basically looked at this game footage, we pulled it and we used Adobe Premiere Pro and the Lumetri color panel and we basically picked the range of colors we wanted to correct. So that way we can adjust it to kind of perceptually that natural approximation of what we're looking at for that color brand, and then we pass in the color incorrect and correct footage into the model and it creates a mask and it's basically just showing pixel by pixel what's the difference in color. And so the whole idea is that our model is able to generate these masks and automatically generate exactly what those corrections are gonna look like. So once we created this data, we trained it, and then that way it learned how to color-correct to these brand specifications in these image segmentation. So that way our grass is in a weird color, our court is in a weird color. We're just adjusting the jerseys and the Clemson football fan gear and the audience, so it's fixing the colors that need to be fixed and leaving alone what needs to be left alone.  And is that because you're segmenting it and isolating certain elements of it, that's how you can do it in real-time or near real-time as opposed to doing it in post-processing? Erica: What makes it able to do it in real-time is partially the hardware. You need hardware that can run on that. And it really just looks like a desktop computer, like a regular box that you're used to, but we do want it to run it in real-time. And so in order to do that, we try to make everything as slender as possible. Some neural networks have just millions of parameters that they're checking on and we kept making things smaller and smaller so that it could run more efficiently. Now there is a point where it gets too small, and it runs too quickly and it's not as effective. So that's part of the research piece of this is that the students are learning at what point do we make adjustments to make this efficient versus to make it effective?  I have this idea in my head, and again, as anybody who listens to me knows I'm not an AI scientist or anything close, is that there is some pretty serious computing hardware, a big server room full of computers doing the work of the neural network, but it's sounding like you're saying this is just like a box?  Erica: Yeah, it can actually run on something as small as a raspberry pie, believe it or not. It doesn't run in the same frame rate that you'd want to run for an event, but we can run about 8-10 frames per second on a Raspberry PI. You don't need an entire room full of servers in order to process this in real-time, it's very doable. I don't pick it up and carry it around, but, but you certainly could if you needed to.  So this is not a million-dollar addition to a TV studio or something? It sounds pretty elemental in some respects.  Erica: Absolutely, you know, really when it comes down to it and Emma can probably speak on this better than I can, but really all an algorithm is a text file that you have to train, like the real meat of it on our end is training it and making it effective and making adjustments because it is in a new area that you can't just go and Google, “Hey, I'd like this algorithm that can do this.” We're actually doing it and modifying it as we go.  So for a Clemson football game, if you have, I don't know, 20-25 cameras, whatever it may be. Do you need a processing unit for each of those feeds or is a master feed funnel through one box? Erica: We only need one. Actually, the way it works is, you're right, they do have like 20 cameras and range from little tiny GoPro cameras up to, you know, high-end broadcast cameras with 4K, and so those are all processing that color so differently.  But it all comes into live, it's coming into a production studio. So if you watch a lot of athletics, like NFL or, even NCAA, sometimes they'll show you the trucks and inside of the truck, all of those feeds are coming in, and they are making those adjustments on the fly as the feed comes in. They choose which camera feed they want to show, and then it gets projected out and all of that's happening in real-time.  And so we actually talked about different places that ColorNet can live within the system and the place where we landed it is that if we have it right inside of that production suite, you only need one device or you can have it on the other end of that production suite, and you still only need one device, but then you're only color correcting the feed that's actually going to get put out there, versus correcting all the different feeds on all the different cameras. Is this a problem that's common to any live event broadcaster or is it defined by the quality of the equipment you're using, like would a local community cable operator have a much bigger problem than let's say Fox Sports? Erica: The problem is pervasive anytime you have brand colors. I'm gonna show my age on this, but I don't know if you remember when Reese's Pieces was the product that was advertised in E.T. when E.T. came out. And so, you know, even in a Hollywood film, you have a brand and that brand cares about their colors. And so it is pervasive everywhere, but the piece of equipment actually can run anywhere, it doesn't need a fancy studio, it doesn't need ESPN type quality. It could run at any small studio just as well as it runs here, because once you've trained it's really running on its own. It's capable of doing the work without a lot of manual input.  So in theory, is this a box, like I could order it, in theory, on Amazon, pull it out of the box, plug it in, plug the feed-in and plug the output in and give it power and off you go, or is this a whole bunch of tweaking and software and behind the scenes to make it all happen? Erica: To answer that really the box that we ordered, the box that this runs in, it was ordered off of Amazon. It is just like a plain old normal computer box, you know, like a desktop, but the magic happens inside of the training and inside of the algorithm and inside of the adjustment to the code, so it's not really the “special sauce,” so to speak really what happens, prior to receiving the box.  Right. But do you train it? Let's say heavens forbid that another SEC school uses this, would that box have to be trained for the Crimson tide colors or whatever? Erica: Yeah, I think you understand a lot more about this than you're letting on, but that is a 100% the case. We would have to train it each time, as needed per color, is our current structure, but I'm actually gonna let Emma jump in on what we're thinking about moving forward. Emma: When we trained for Clemson orange and Clemson purple, the way our data was set up, it was that you're going to look for these ranges of colors around the brand color so that way, you know what kinds of areas you're going to be shifting to be correct. Our goal is to try and kind of generalize it. So the idea is, we can give some kind of hardware to deliver to the shader and painter with these corresponding teams. So that way they can change what color it is. So we're going to come up with the new approach to it, where instead of looking for this range of colors, to then shift, we're going to look for these areas. So we're hoping to train so it can pick out the jerseys where the fan colors are and it's very adjustable considering what those colors are. So that way you could pick up this technology and plug it in for a different team and it could work that way instead of just being limited to a specific brand's color palette. Right. Okay, so I'm a digital signage guy. This is a digital signage podcast. I wonder, of course, what the applications potentially are for the digital signage business.  You mentioned, early on Coca Cola and how across its a corporate campus and its many corporate campuses really, if it has a signage network with the Coca Cola brand on there, if the output PC or PCs or media players are outputting nominally incorrect colors, this could be put in the middle of it? Erica: Absolutely. So, that's one approach that we've considered. So let's say that let's use our Coca-Cola campus example.  They want to ensure that no matter what footage is going on what type of screens, they may have multiple brands, I don't even know, that the Coca Cola red is always correct. And so in that case, you actually would put ColorNet at the screen level, so we would want to pull it down to a much smaller device, more like that Raspberry PI size, so that you could actually just slap it right onto the back of each screen or each set of screens and have that screen Coca-Cola ready, you know? And so you can sell it that way to a brand owner versus having it at the live video remixed phase.  Do you sense the addressable market for this has a whole bunch of brands in particular, who are that color-conscious or is it a subset that really cares and others who, you know, “our brand color’s blue” and that's all they say. Erica: Actually, coming from my background, I was steeped in brand from a print perspective. And so from a print perspective, the tolerance of brand colors on your box or bottle or flexible packaging, is very small. It's measured in Delta Es and they say it's a 2 Delta Es. Most companies don't want you to be any further off the brand color specs than Delta E. And that's basically just a measurement saying, this is as close as we are willing to purchase the product. Like if it goes over 2 Delta E, we don't want your printed product. And so coming from that background, all of the big brands care, all of them want their color to be correct.  I know there's an argument going on right now, that might've stemmed out of that recent in AB and SID type conversation, from Display Week. But this idea that screens are actually changing our tolerance for brand colors and at some point, are we not going to care so much about brand colors? Because we are willing to accept them further apart, from the brand spec, because of the screen differences that we see.  I still think that brands are willing to put money, time, and effort behind their branding in general and that they are going to care if their product looks correct because it is as much a part of their identification as any other part of their business.  Yeah. That would make sense. I'm sure there'd be some reticence around spending thousands upon thousands of dollars per site to do that, but if it's, as you say, a Raspberry PI device that could just plugin via the HDMI feed or whatever into the display, then yeah, maybe they'd be happiest clients to do that.  Erica: Yeah, especially for those big brands, I bet you and I've never sat in the branding room for Coca Cola, but both Coca Cola and Pepsi use a color of red, right? I bet you that their branding teams would just go to battle over making sure that all of their products are the correct color of red so that there is no confusion on the customer level of which product you're actually looking at. Yeah, well, I've certainly heard those stories in the past when it comes to digital signage and Coca-Cola red and a few other colors that the Coca Cola people flip out if it's not right, and they had some big problems with early-stage video walls and things like that and there was a particular product that they really liked because of the saturation levels and everything that gave them as close to the print grant as they wanted to see, I don't know if it was that 2 Ease measurement or whatever you were talking about, but it was good.  Erica: Yeah, and you know, some companies will have different Pantone colors for their print products compared to their screens. So for instance, Clemson has two different oranges, and when it comes down to it, the Pantone that they've chosen for screen and the Pantone that they've chosen for print products, so the difference between CMYK and RGB, those two oranges look the same.  So it comes down to this perceptual thing. So it's not always about hitting the same Pantone and it's about the perceptual brand recognition of that orange, whether it's on a car, whether it's on a screen, whether it's on a Jersey, and so on. Okay. So this is a combination product or initiative of a couple of professors, and I think four students, is that accurate?  Erica: Yeah, that's correct. We had four students, and then we actually just added a new student this semester. So obviously the great part about students is that they have wonderful, fresh ideas coming into a project. The sad part is that they do graduate and go away, like Emma graduates in December.  And so, there is kind of this rotation of students who have worked on the project over time.  So where does it go from here at some point Does this become a company or does it get licensed or was that just so far off that it's hard to really kind of rationalize?  Erica: Certainly from our perspective, our goals align a lot more with the research end and sharing what we find, but from a university level, we are involved with the university research foundation and their job is to help connect us with potential manufacturers or companies or lines of products that would benefit from us. And so from the university level, they have a lot of interest in that. I'm not opposed to a company or partnering with an existing company. But certainly, you know, the students getting experience out of this and our personal research goals, our primary.  In the conversations with the companies provide a lot of opportunities to, have funding and to expand, and to come up with new ideas of how this technology could perhaps be implemented.  Is there an application as well for things like medical imaging and seismic imaging where life and death decisions or very expensive decisions are made based on the color of some high-resolution image? Erica: Absolutely. We've been looking at expanding this out into some different applications and you really hit the nail on the head as one of the ideas that our team had bounced around is, what if this could be used to emphasize a lifeboat or something like that is lost at sea, you know, how could we make it really fast and really easy, despite all the reflections that waves make? And we've looked at it as an agricultural thing again, where it's emphasizing, if there are healthy plants or if there are weeds, so it really could be modified and used in a lot of different contexts, just like you're saying. So what came out of SID in that presentation that you did? Did you have companies or other really smart people coming up or contacting you? Erica: Yeah, exactly, but not so many from virtual conferences we've found, but when we've done some presentations in person and unfortunately, SID was not one of them this year, which I was super excited about that audience. But when we have presented in person, it has led to lots of conversations with different companies and ideas of how it could benefit them and their customers.  Okay, so if there are people listening to this who actually understand it fully, how would they track you down and how do they sort of get involved in this in some way, or get some questions answered? Erica: We would love to hear from people. Again, it's so exploratory still at this phase, and so hearing what real companies with real customers, what they need, what is their pain point and how could we consider ColorNet as a potential solver of that pain point, just reach out to us. My email is at eblackor@clemson.edu.  Okay, and you guys have a football team, right?  Erica: (Laughter) We hope we have a good one again, fingers crossed.  Is it a challenge because people think so much about Clemson as, you know, a big sports school, football school, when this is a totally gearhead kind of science project with AI coming out of Clemson, do they go, “Oh really, you guys do that too?”  Erica: Well, we're hoping that we actually solve a problem for our athletic department. So fingers crossed, we've proved it out that it can be done. And right now we're just kind of taking a back seat to whatever Coronavirus brings for this coming season. But our original intent was to be up and operational for our athletic department this fall, which we're capable of doing, but again, we're just kind of taking a back seat to all the decisions that they're having to make to keep their student-athletes safe and the fans and all of that.  Which is a moving target right now. That's broadcast may be more important than ever for the next few months.  Erica: I agree. There's no telling where all this is going to go, but we have our first football game on Saturday, and so fingers crossed, everybody stays healthy and well, and we can get that type of normalcy back for Saturdays.  All right, Erica and Emma, thank you so much for spending some time with me. I really appreciate  Erica: This was a lot of fun. Thanks for inviting us.

The CEDIA Podcast
The CEDIA Podcast: Display Week (2020_34)

The CEDIA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2020 53:36


Mike Heiss (M Heiss Consulting) attended the annual Display Week show (virtual this year) to fill us in on the latest gear – that you can’t even buy yet. This show from SID (the Society for Information Display) is a look at emerging tech as it begins to come to market. https://michaelheiss.com/ http://www.displayweek.org/2020.aspx

The CEDIA Podcast
The CEDIA Podcast 1923: Report from Display Week

The CEDIA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019 58:44


Michael Heiss just attended the Display Week show in California, and he's got the skinny on display technology that'll be impacting us in the near future. He also took a look at a show called “Digital Hollywood,” and he has info on those presentations, too. http://www.displayweek.org/ https://www.digitalhollywood.com/ https://michaelheiss.com/ For more on CEDIA, go to cedia.net.

AVexcel
AVexcel - Episode 81

AVexcel

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2018 54:03


Recorded on May 31, 2018  Hosts: Patrick Norton and Robert Heron  The rundown: - Premium LCD quirks - Display Week 2018 - Quantum dot tech update - AR/VR display updates - Nuraphone's BT headphone - Bluewave's GET - Help selling your gear - What we're watching - Your excellent feedback & questions AVexcel is 100% powered by our awesome crew of Patreon supporters - thank you!  Visit AVexcel.com for links, show notes, contact info, and more!

c't uplink (SD-Video)
c't uplink 22.5: Displays der Zukunft, Taucher-Smartwatch, alternative Windows-Startmenüs

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2018


Einen Blick in die nahe Zukunft der Displays hat Ulrike auf der Display Week geworfen. Der Konflikt zwischen OLEDs und LCDs tobt Dank Quantenpunkten weiter und immer neue chinesische Hersteller drängen auf den Markt. Flexible Displays scheinen in absehbarer Reichweite. Und am Ende gibt es unter anderem die überraschende Erkenntnis, dass 3D wieder lebt. Michael ist mit seiner smarten Tauchuhr von Garmin untergetaucht und hat offensichtlich ein neue Lieblingsgadget gefunden – nicht nur unter Wasser. Außer präzisen Aufzeichnungen jeden Tauchganges, bietet die Uhr auch klassische Fitness- und Smartwatch-Funktionen wie die Anzeigen von Nachrichten und Terminen. Bei Jan dreht sich alles um die Frage, wie man das Startmenü von Windows so hinbiegen kann, dass es wieder mehr der praktischen Inkarnation von Windows 7 gleicht. Denn nachdem es kurzzeitig komplett aus dem Betriebssystem verschwunden war, taucht es in Windows 10 nur noch als Hybride aus Kacheln und klassischen Einträgen auf. Die Alternativen haben wir parat. Mit dabei: Michael Link, Ulrike Kuhlmann, Hannes Czerulla und Jan Schüßler Die c't 12/18 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es unter www.ct.de/uplink.

c’t uplink
c't uplink 22.5: Displays der Zukunft, Taucher-Smartwatch, alternative Windows-Startmenüs

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2018 53:34


Einen Blick in die nahe Zukunft der Displays hat Ulrike auf der Display Week geworfen. Der Konflikt zwischen OLEDs und LCDs tobt Dank Quantenpunkten weiter und immer neue chinesische Hersteller drängen auf den Markt. Flexible Displays scheinen in absehbarer Reichweite. Und am Ende gibt es unter anderem die überraschende Erkenntnis, dass 3D wieder lebt. Michael ist mit seiner smarten Tauchuhr von Garmin untergetaucht und hat offensichtlich ein neue Lieblingsgadget gefunden – nicht nur unter Wasser. Außer präzisen Aufzeichnungen jeden Tauchganges, bietet die Uhr auch klassische Fitness- und Smartwatch-Funktionen wie die Anzeigen von Nachrichten und Terminen. Bei Jan dreht sich alles um die Frage, wie man das Startmenü von Windows so hinbiegen kann, dass es wieder mehr der praktischen Inkarnation von Windows 7 gleicht. Denn nachdem es kurzzeitig komplett aus dem Betriebssystem verschwunden war, taucht es in Windows 10 nur noch als Hybride aus Kacheln und klassischen Einträgen auf. Die Alternativen haben wir parat. Mit dabei: Michael Link, Ulrike Kuhlmann, Hannes Czerulla und Jan Schüßler Die c't 12/18 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es unter www.ct.de/uplink.

c't uplink (HD-Video)
c't uplink 22.5: Displays der Zukunft, Taucher-Smartwatch, alternative Windows-Startmenüs

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2018


Einen Blick in die nahe Zukunft der Displays hat Ulrike auf der Display Week geworfen. Der Konflikt zwischen OLEDs und LCDs tobt Dank Quantenpunkten weiter und immer neue chinesische Hersteller drängen auf den Markt. Flexible Displays scheinen in absehbarer Reichweite. Und am Ende gibt es unter anderem die überraschende Erkenntnis, dass 3D wieder lebt. Michael ist mit seiner smarten Tauchuhr von Garmin untergetaucht und hat offensichtlich ein neue Lieblingsgadget gefunden – nicht nur unter Wasser. Außer präzisen Aufzeichnungen jeden Tauchganges, bietet die Uhr auch klassische Fitness- und Smartwatch-Funktionen wie die Anzeigen von Nachrichten und Terminen. Bei Jan dreht sich alles um die Frage, wie man das Startmenü von Windows so hinbiegen kann, dass es wieder mehr der praktischen Inkarnation von Windows 7 gleicht. Denn nachdem es kurzzeitig komplett aus dem Betriebssystem verschwunden war, taucht es in Windows 10 nur noch als Hybride aus Kacheln und klassischen Einträgen auf. Die Alternativen haben wir parat. Mit dabei: Michael Link, Ulrike Kuhlmann, Hannes Czerulla und Jan Schüßler Die c't 12/18 gibt's am Kiosk, im Browser und in der c't-App für iOS und Android. Alle früheren Episoden unseres Podcasts gibt es unter www.ct.de/uplink.

Tech Café
88. Elon Musk peut-il faire noter les journalistes ?

Tech Café

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2018 93:37


Soutenez Tech Café sur Patreon sinon on vend vos données tous les liens sur techcafe.fr Discutez avec nous sur Telegram On the road again, again... La conduite autonome ne rassure pas vraiment… Comme la voiture mobileye qui grille un feu rouge à une conférence de presse..? Rapport sur l’accident mortel : des éléments techniques et le profil de la victime. Tout ça, c’est de la faute de la presse. Et Elon ne va pas se laisser faire… En attendant, il devra répondre de ses tweets devant les prud’hommes américains. On arrête pas le progrès : les chanteurs de rue prendront bientôt la carte bancaire. Sony n'abandonne pas le jeu en mobilité. Et au fait, la PS5, c’est pas avant 2021. Display Week 2018 : Les Dossiers de l'Écran Les PPI s’envolent, on distinguent très nettement le futur de la VR ! Ecrans géants, transparents, flexibles, écrans hauts parleurs : LG en furie ! Vers un grand retour des écrans 3D ? Une sélection des lauréats : Dimenco et la VR sans casque : la réalité simulée. Tianma, des écrans HDR LCD pour smartphones. AU Optoelectronics : des écran OLED transparents, et Micro LED. Visionox : des écrans partout et de toutes les formes… Avec la concurrence de ClearInk, l’encre électronique évolue, la couleur dès 2018? Previously on Damages... L’amant dans le placard dans l’assistant vocal. Amazon Rekognition : importé d’AliExpress ? PrimID reconnaît les singes et c’est pour leur bien. Pour de vrai ! Les applications de musique peuvent-elles condamner des artistes ? RGPD : ça chauffe. Apple attend son chèque d’1 demi milliard de la part de Samsung. Intel accusé de licenciement discriminatoire. Le Bitcoin n’est-il en fait qu’une grosse marionnette ? Sexy Café : L’outil anti-revenge-porn de Facebook s’étend. Pornhub propose désormais un VPN ! Et propose aux pornstars d’être payés en cryptomonnaies… Avec l’Oculus Go le porn VR a enfin son ambassadeur ? A moins que ce ne soit l’inverse ? En bref Avis aux mélomanes… passez votre chemin ? Une IA qui transforme une mélodie d’une musique en la même mélodie mais d’une autre musique… On cherche le bon goût. C’est pas vous : toutes les chansons pop se ressemblent de plus en plus. Microsoft montre son propre “Duplex”... en chinois. Nouvelle année, nouvelle étude sur les mot de passes. Ca va pas mieux... Vu sur leboncoin : entreprise ayant commercialisé un smartphone mais qui n’a pas eu de succès commercial. Bonus GPP : The Expanse saison 3, au passage le show sera repris par Amazon... Participants : Pierre Olivier Dybman Guillaume Poggiaspalla Présenté par Guillaume Vendé

The Essential Apple Podcast
Essential Apple Podcast 89: That's Kiwi, Not Kiwi…

The Essential Apple Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018 101:36


Recorded 26th May 2018 This week GDPR happened... some US news sites decided they couldn't be bothered figuring out what it meant and have basically just blocked off access from the EU (except that isn't how GDPR works) while Microsoft and Apple have decided they will make GDPR compliance a global thing; because that is the right thing to do (and actually also it is the easiest solution). News is surprisingly abundant as we run up to WWDC and there aren't even any rumours/leaks of note regarding that! To cast a jaundiced eye over it all I am joined by Alister Jenks, from quite literally the other side of the world to me – Wellington, New Zealand. Why not come and join the Slack community? You can now just click on this Slackroom Link to sign up and join in the malarkey! Essential Apple Recommended Services: 33mail.com – Never give out your real email address online again. Sudo – Get up to 9 free “avatars” with email addresses, phone numbers and more to mask your online identity. ProtonMail – End to end encrypted, open source, based in Switzerland. Prices start from FREE... what more can you ask? ProtonVPN – a VPN to go with it perhaps? Prices also starting from nothing! Fake Name Generator – So much more than names! Create whole identities (for free) with all the information you could ever need. Pinecast – a fabulous podcast hosting service with costs that start from nothing. Essential Apple is not affiliated with or paid to promote any of these services... We recommend services that we use ourselves and feel are either unique or outstanding in their field, or in some cases are just the best value for money in our opinion. On this week's show: ALLISTER JENKS On Twitter as: @zkarj Website Aviation Photography and Flikr APPLE Apple is offering a free month of iCloud storage instead of just giving everybody a useable amount – The Verge Apple sent hundreds of engineers to Display Week to try and find the next notch - BGR Apple's autonomous vehicle project may be closer to fruition than it appears - MacDailyNews TECHNOLOGY Here's Amazon's explanation for the Alexa eavesdropping scandal – Recode SECURITY What Yahoo's NSA Surveillance Means for Email Privacy - ProtonMail Blog With even porn sites offering VPN, the three reasons Apple should do the same – 9to5 Mac IN THE NEWS GDPR... GDPR leads some US news sites to block access in Europe – CNet Apple's example shows how Europe's new privacy law will benefit people worldwide – 9to5 Mac Microsoft says it's extending GDPR rights to consumers worldwide – CNet Nemo's Hardware Store (1:01:20) Macally Charger 61 – Amazon $70 US or £60 UK Macally MGRIPMAGXL 12in Magnetic Suction Cup Car Mount – Amazon $13 US or £18 UK Social Media and Slack You can follow us on: EssentialApple.com / Pinecast / Twitter / Facebook / Google Plus / Slack Also a big SHOUT OUT to the members of the Slack room without whom we wouldn't have half the stories we actually do – we thank you all for your contributions and engagement. You can always help us out with a few pennies by using our Amazon Affiliate Link so we get a tiny kickback on anything you buy after using it. If you really like the show that much and would like to make a regular donation then please consider joining our Patreon or using the Pinecast Tips Jar (which accepts one off or regular donations) And a HUGE thank you to the patrons who already do. Support The Essential Apple Podcast by contributing to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/essential-apple-show This podcast is powered by Pinecast.

AppleUsos
Steam, Samsung paga, Mac App Store, Car Play, Display Week.. y mucho mas.

AppleUsos

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018 42:49


Episodio numero 43 de AppleUsos. - Apple rechaza la aplicación de Steam. - Samsung paga a Apple 538 millones. - Nueva Mac App Store. - Car Play en mas de 400 modelos. - 369 ingenieros de Apple en la Display Week. - IOS 12 y NFC. - Rechazar una llamada con pantalla bloqueada. - Nombre del próximo Mac OS. - Fallos Alexa. - Diseño/Patente de bisagra flexible. - Deseos para la WWDC. - Apple desvela informacion de usuarios. - Pagar con Apple Pay a músicos callejeros. - Amazon te repara tu iPhone. - Xiaomi copia los Emojis y mas. XIAOMI EMOJIS: https://youtu.be/WxBIZiD75bc Gracias a todos y espero vuestras reseñas en iTunes. francisco@AppleUsos.com

Tangible Tech
Apple World Today News Update: May 25, 2018

Tangible Tech

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2018 4:29


Friday at last! To end your week, we have stories about Apple retail stores, Apple employees at Display Week in LA, and some possible names for macOS 10.14: The Pier Apple Store in Atlantic City, NJ will be closing soon due to a sharp decline in tourism and visitors to the city A new, larger Apple retail outlet is nearing completion in Seattle's University Village shopping center Some possible names for macOS 10.14 have surfaced in overseas trademark filings, including Sequoia, Mojave, Sonoma and Ventura Apple employees were in evidence everywhere at Display Week in LA this week, checking out the latest display technologies and making presentations --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tangible-tech/support

MIXEDCAST: Podcast über VR, AR, KI
VRODOCAST #83: Neue VR-Displays, Sound-AR, Copy-KI und Ready Player Hype

MIXEDCAST: Podcast über VR, AR, KI

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2018 29:17


Im VRODO-Podcast Folge #83 geht's um 18 Megapixel pro Auge, Boses neue AR-Soundbrille, eine stimmkopierende Künstliche Intelligenz und die mögliche Hype-Abstrahlung von Ready Player One auf die VR-Branche. 18 Mpixel 4.3-in. 1443-ppi 120-Hz OLED Display for Wide-Field-of-View High-Acuity Head-Mounted Displays Auf der Display Week in Los Angeles will Google gemeinsam mit LG ein neues Display für VR-Brillen vorstellen. Der recht konkrete Titel der Präsentation steht in der Überschrift. Die Performance des VR-Displays tönt berauschend: 18 Megapixel OLED-Display bei 4,3 Zoll und mit 120 Hz. Das dürfte VR-Brillen auf ein völlig neues Level hieven. Clay Bavor, Googles VR- und AR-Chef, durfte einen Prototyp schon im vergangenen Jahr testen und schwärmte von der visuellen Qualität. Steckt das Display in LGs kommender SteamVR-Brille? Mehr über das Google-LG-VR-Display: https://vrodo.de/virtual-reality-google-will-neues-highend-vr-display-vorstellen/ Boses Augmented Reality für die Ohren Auf dem SXSW Tech-Festival in Texas zeigte der US-Audiospezialist Bose eine Augmetend-Reality-Brille für die Ohren. In Verbund mit einem Smartphone erkennt das Gerät die Blickrichtung des Brillenträgers. Taucht in dessen Sichtfeld ein interessantes Objekt auf - beispielsweise eine Statue oder ein Restaurant - kann er Audio-Informationen dazu abrufen. Ein weiteres Anwendungsszenario ist die Navigation. Hat das Konzept Zukunft? Mehr zur Audio-AR-Brille von Bose: https://vrodo.de/augmented-reality-bose-arbeitet-an-einer-ar-brille-fuer-die-ohren/] Künstliche Intelligenz kopiert menschliche Stimme und braucht dafür keine vier Sekunden Der chinesische Suchmaschinenriese Baidu trainiert wie sein US-Pendant Google fleißig die Künstliche Intelligenz. In einem Projekt stellten Baidu-Forscher kürzlich eine Copy-KI vor, die anhand eines Tonschnipsels von nur 3,7 Sekunden den Charakter und Klang eine Stimme kopieren kann. Nach dem Kopiervorgang kann die KI-Stimme anhand einer Texteingabe jeden erdenklichen Satz aussprechen. Noch ist der Unterschied zwischen realer Stimme und Computer-Kopie gut wahrnehmbar. Aber wie lange noch? Baidu-KI klont Stimme: https://vrodo.de/kuenstliche-intelligenz-algorithmus-klont-stimme-in-nur-37-sekunden/ Ready Player One Weltpremiere Steven Spielbergs Verfilmung der Virtual-Reality-Story Ready Player One feierte auf der SXSW Premiere. Die Kritiken fielen durchaus positiv aus: Der Film soll ein visuelles Spektakel sein, dem es jedoch zum Teil an Tiefgang fehlt. Der Hype jedenfalls scheint groß. Falls der Film an den Kinokassen ein Erfolg wird, könnte das auch die VR-Branche voranbringen. Oder doch nicht? RPO: Hilft oder schadet der Hype: https://vrodo.de/ready-player-one-bringt-der-film-virtual-reality-nach-vorn/

The CEDIA Podcast
CEDIA Tech Council 1727: Display Week

The CEDIA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2017 32:55


Brighter brights, deeper darks, QLED, CLEDIS, and "quantum dot liquid on the rocks" -- the always-entertaining Michael Heiss joins CEDIA's Dave Pedigo and Ed Wenck for a look back at the Society for Information Display's Display Week.

Home Theater Geeks (MP3)
HTG 356: The Future of Displays

Home Theater Geeks (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2017 66:54


Journalists Chris Chinnock of Insight Media and Mike Heiss of Residential Systems and TWICE join host Scott Wilkinson to talk about what we learned about the future of display technology at DisplayWeek 2017. Topics include color conversion of blue light to longer-wavelength colors using quantum dots and phosphors, the various forms of QLED technology (photo-enhanced, photo-emissive, electro-emissive), an early demonstration of a full-color electro-emissive QD display, bendable OLED screens, micro LED, microdisplays, AR/VR, lightfield displays, a transparent flat-panel directional speaker, answers to chat-room questions, and more. Host: Scott Wilkinson Guests: Chris Chinnock and Michael Heiss Subscribe to Home Theater Geeks at https://twit.tv/shows/home-theater-geeks Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.

led oled ar vr displays home theater qled cachefly qd scott wilkinson display week insight media home theater geeks residential systems mike heiss journalists chris chinnock michael heiss subscribe
Home Theater Geeks (Video HD)
HTG 356: The Future of Displays

Home Theater Geeks (Video HD)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2017 66:54


Journalists Chris Chinnock of Insight Media and Mike Heiss of Residential Systems and TWICE join host Scott Wilkinson to talk about what we learned about the future of display technology at DisplayWeek 2017. Topics include color conversion of blue light to longer-wavelength colors using quantum dots and phosphors, the various forms of QLED technology (photo-enhanced, photo-emissive, electro-emissive), an early demonstration of a full-color electro-emissive QD display, bendable OLED screens, micro LED, microdisplays, AR/VR, lightfield displays, a transparent flat-panel directional speaker, answers to chat-room questions, and more. Host: Scott Wilkinson Guests: Chris Chinnock and Michael Heiss Subscribe to Home Theater Geeks at https://twit.tv/shows/home-theater-geeks Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.

led oled ar vr displays home theater qled cachefly qd scott wilkinson display week insight media home theater geeks residential systems mike heiss journalists chris chinnock michael heiss subscribe
Home Theater Geeks (Video HI)
HTG 356: The Future of Displays

Home Theater Geeks (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2017 66:54


Journalists Chris Chinnock of Insight Media and Mike Heiss of Residential Systems and TWICE join host Scott Wilkinson to talk about what we learned about the future of display technology at DisplayWeek 2017. Topics include color conversion of blue light to longer-wavelength colors using quantum dots and phosphors, the various forms of QLED technology (photo-enhanced, photo-emissive, electro-emissive), an early demonstration of a full-color electro-emissive QD display, bendable OLED screens, micro LED, microdisplays, AR/VR, lightfield displays, a transparent flat-panel directional speaker, answers to chat-room questions, and more. Host: Scott Wilkinson Guests: Chris Chinnock and Michael Heiss Subscribe to Home Theater Geeks at https://twit.tv/shows/home-theater-geeks Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.

led oled ar vr displays home theater qled cachefly qd scott wilkinson display week insight media home theater geeks residential systems mike heiss journalists chris chinnock michael heiss subscribe
Home Theater Geeks (Video LO)
HTG 356: The Future of Displays

Home Theater Geeks (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2017 66:54


Journalists Chris Chinnock of Insight Media and Mike Heiss of Residential Systems and TWICE join host Scott Wilkinson to talk about what we learned about the future of display technology at DisplayWeek 2017. Topics include color conversion of blue light to longer-wavelength colors using quantum dots and phosphors, the various forms of QLED technology (photo-enhanced, photo-emissive, electro-emissive), an early demonstration of a full-color electro-emissive QD display, bendable OLED screens, micro LED, microdisplays, AR/VR, lightfield displays, a transparent flat-panel directional speaker, answers to chat-room questions, and more. Host: Scott Wilkinson Guests: Chris Chinnock and Michael Heiss Subscribe to Home Theater Geeks at https://twit.tv/shows/home-theater-geeks Thanks to CacheFly for the bandwidth for this show.

led oled ar vr displays home theater qled cachefly qd scott wilkinson display week insight media home theater geeks residential systems mike heiss journalists chris chinnock michael heiss subscribe
c't uplink (HD-Video)
c't uplink 7.0: Apples WWDC, Desinfec't 2015, Display-Neuheiten

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2015


In der neuesten uplink-Folge gibt's wenig zum Anfassen, aber dafür vieles zu bereden: Wolfgang Reszel von Mac & I berichtet über OS X und iOS 9 – und worüber Apple bei der WWDC nicht gesprochen hat. Jürgen Schmidt stellt das ultimative Viren-Dezimier-Betriebssystem Desinfec't vor, das der aktuellen c't-Ausgabe 14/2015 beiliegt. Das selbstbootende Linux-System ist schon seit vielen Jahren ein echter Verkaufsschlager – und wird nicht nur von Onkeln und Tanten, sondern auch von Virenprofis verwendet. Über futuristische Displays berichtet zum Schluss Ulrike Kuhlmann: Sie war auf der DisplayWeek in San Jose und hat dort biegsame Bildschirme und ultrahochauflösende Mikrodisplays gesehen.

c’t uplink
c't uplink 7.0: Apples WWDC, Desinfec't 2015, Display-Neuheiten

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2015 42:00


In der neuesten uplink-Folge gibt's wenig zum Anfassen, aber dafür vieles zu bereden: Wolfgang Reszel von Mac & I berichtet über OS X und iOS 9 – und worüber Apple bei der WWDC nicht gesprochen hat. Jürgen Schmidt stellt das ultimative Viren-Dezimier-Betriebssystem Desinfec't vor, das der aktuellen c't-Ausgabe 14/2015 beiliegt. Das selbstbootende Linux-System ist schon seit vielen Jahren ein echter Verkaufsschlager – und wird nicht nur von Onkeln und Tanten, sondern auch von Virenprofis verwendet. Über futuristische Displays berichtet zum Schluss Ulrike Kuhlmann: Sie war auf der DisplayWeek in San Jose und hat dort biegsame Bildschirme und ultrahochauflösende Mikrodisplays gesehen.

c't uplink (SD-Video)
c't uplink 7.0: Apples WWDC, Desinfec't 2015, Display-Neuheiten

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2015


In der neuesten uplink-Folge gibt's wenig zum Anfassen, aber dafür vieles zu bereden: Wolfgang Reszel von Mac & I berichtet über OS X und iOS 9 – und worüber Apple bei der WWDC nicht gesprochen hat. Jürgen Schmidt stellt das ultimative Viren-Dezimier-Betriebssystem Desinfec't vor, das der aktuellen c't-Ausgabe 14/2015 beiliegt. Das selbstbootende Linux-System ist schon seit vielen Jahren ein echter Verkaufsschlager – und wird nicht nur von Onkeln und Tanten, sondern auch von Virenprofis verwendet. Über futuristische Displays berichtet zum Schluss Ulrike Kuhlmann: Sie war auf der DisplayWeek in San Jose und hat dort biegsame Bildschirme und ultrahochauflösende Mikrodisplays gesehen.

c't uplink (HD-Video)
c't uplink 1.8 - Spielemesse E3, Displays der Zukunft, Turing-Test

c't uplink (HD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2014


Im aktuellen c't uplink geht es um Trends auf der Spielemesse E3 und die Bildschirme der Zukunft auf der Display Week. Außerdem bezweifeln wir die Intelligenz von Maschinen und etwas Musik gibt's auch noch auf die Ohren. Mit dabei: Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @hannibal4885), Hartmut Gieselman (hag), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Ulrike Kuhlmann (uk).

c’t uplink
c't uplink 1.8 - Spielemesse E3, Displays der Zukunft, Turing-Test

c’t uplink

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2014 40:08


Im aktuellen c't uplink geht es um Trends auf der Spielemesse E3 und die Bildschirme der Zukunft auf der Display Week. Außerdem bezweifeln wir die Intelligenz von Maschinen und etwas Musik gibt's auch noch auf die Ohren. Mit dabei: Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @hannibal4885), Hartmut Gieselman (hag), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Ulrike Kuhlmann (uk).

c't uplink (SD-Video)
c't uplink 1.8 - Spielemesse E3, Displays der Zukunft, Turing-Test

c't uplink (SD-Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2014


Im aktuellen c't uplink geht es um Trends auf der Spielemesse E3 und die Bildschirme der Zukunft auf der Display Week. Außerdem bezweifeln wir die Intelligenz von Maschinen und etwas Musik gibt's auch noch auf die Ohren. Mit dabei: Hannes Czerulla (hcz, @hannibal4885), Hartmut Gieselman (hag), Martin Holland (mho, @fingolas) und Ulrike Kuhlmann (uk).

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast
Podcast #589: SID Display Week 2013

HDTV and Home Theater Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2013 35:58


The Society for Information Display held their annual Display Week conference in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada last month from May 19 - 24.  The show came and went without so much as a mention on the HDTV Podcast, but in our reading and research since the show, it turns out some very cool innovations were on display. Next year's show will be in San Diego, we might have to make a day trip out of it.

Good e-Reader Radio Show
Good e-Reader Radio Show – SID Display Week and IDPF Preview

Good e-Reader Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2013 24:08


Welcome back to another jaw-dropping edition of the Good e-Reader Radio show! Put the little ones to bed and hide your daughters. Today, I will regale you with tales of SID Display Week and some of the cool tech Peter and I saw. Mirasol display technology is, in fact, not dead, and the company has […] The post Good e-Reader Radio Show - SID Display Week and IDPF Preview first appeared on Good e-Reader.