On 06/08/2005 10:47 AM, Weinstein, William wrote:

>We are looking into renovations of our information desk and want to explore
>the possibility of using electronic signs for visitor information, tours,
>lectures, etc.  We have grand plans that include creating a sign that will
>require multiple monitors and we would eventually like this information to
>be available in multiple locations.  
>
>At this stage I would be interested in anyone's experience in developing
>this type of system.  What hardware and software was used.  What
>infrastructure issues needed to be addressed.  What existing content
>resources were used or developed to provide the information sources for the
>signs.   You all get the idea.
>  
>
For our new lobby, we installed LED signs (a la Jenny Holzer, but with
the newer blue LEDs) around our circular admissions desk, over the coat
check, and between brick piers by the front entrance. The standard
interface to these was a super-old-fashioned, desktop app connecting
over RS-232 to the signs. It looked like HyperTerminal and it require
that the operator memorize a series of arcane command strings.
Unrealistic. We bought serial to Ethernet adapters, used firewalling and
IP restrictions for security (passwords are clear-text), and set up a
web-based app on our intranet to replace the subset of the control
interface that we needed. It's just a series of web forms, providing an
interface to server-side scripts that send command strings according to
the format the signs expect. It can happen on schedule (the texts are
mostly pre-defined), or the Visitor Services and Security departments
can set up special messages, as needed. Apart from the fun of using a
modern, purely web-based interface to control ancient technology, this
was all sort of strange. It was a design decision to go with the LED
signs, not a technical decision.

Second, in much smaller and more temporary installations that what you
may be talking about, we've used our Open Kiosk software
(http://www.mozdevgroup.com/clients/bm/) to display banners/flash
movies/etc. delivered from a web server. In this way you could use
standard, off-the-shelf parts, and pretty basic web programming, but
you'd be limited by the number of monitors you can plug into one
computer or by the number of computers you want to deal with. The web
display might also be limiting, depending on what you were trying to do
(e.g., Douglas Hegley's requirement that they be able to play "same or
unique information on every screen"; and coordinating the
displays--sequencing them, for example--might be very hard).

I have no experience with any standard way to do this, and I'd be
curious to know how it's done on a larger scale. So Douglas Hegley's
response was very interesting. How do the buildings in Times Square do it?

Good luck,
Matt


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