Thursday, March 31, 2011

World's biggest touchscreen display unveiled at CeBIT

For the last eight years, German presentations specialist Stereolize has been helping Microsoft do its thing at CeBIT, and every year the company tries to top the previous year's efforts. For this year's trade show, the company went super-size – creating 234-inches of diagonal, interactive touchscreen loveliness that towered above the Microsoft presenters and left onlookers having to pick their jaws up off the floor. Read on, to see a short video showing the huge display in action ...

Rather than stitch together a number of displays to form a kind of touchscreen wall, Stereolize chose to make one huge display from the biggest piece of security glass available – and even that proved a less than straightforward task. "We found out there is a limit on production size," Reiner Knollmueller from Stereolize told Gizmag. "Then another limit for transporting it and a third for operating it on a booth environment."

Even before Microsoft could attempt to build its booth, Stereolize had to erect the custom steel frame and then move in a specially-ordered crane to bring in and mount the high-gloss security glass – which weighed around half a ton – in the frame. "After some meticulous cleaning, a dedicated rear-projection foil was put into a frame and placed gluelessly behind the glass window," explained Knollmueller. "One of the many characteristics was keeping the frame as minimal as possible in order to create an almost borderless display impression."



Thursday, March 24, 2011

Galaxy Tab takes thinnest tablet crown - twice

Samsung has unveiled not one, but two new tablet additions to its Android mobile product line at Florida's CTIA Wireless 2011. The company has managed to slim down the width profile on both devices to an iPad 2-beating 8.6mm (0.33-inch), claiming the crown for the world's thinnest tablets in the process. The 8.9-inch and 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab devices both get a couple of cameras, benefit from dual-core processing and come in three storage choices.