Read the Original Article at http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=212902015
Call it the Times Square effect. Digital photos, video, and high-resolution graphics are pushing the limits of desktop and other wide-screen monitors. Hiperwall specializes in so-called video walls, giant displays comprised of a dozen or more LCD monitors assembled together. The startup is aiming its platform at applications beyond marketing and entertainment, including trading floors, utilities, and command centers.
--John Foley
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Monitors assembled into a video wall | |
HEADQUARTERS: Irvine, Calif.
PRODUCT: Software for creating "video walls" by distributing images across interconnected computer monitors
PRINCIPALS: Jeff Greenberg, CEO
INVESTORS: None; privately held
EARLY CUSTOMERS: Stanford University Medical School
BACKGROUND: Hiperwall is a spin-off of the University of California at Irvine. The technology was developed at UC Irvine's California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, or Calit2.
A Hiperwall system can display a single image or multiple images, and users can move, zoom, and otherwise manipulate images on the wall. In addition, users can share the content of desktop PC screens--financial trading data or maps, for example--with other people in a room by displaying them on a wall. Target markets for the system include control rooms (for airlines and utilities, for example) and scientific and medical imaging.
However, the company has only a few employees, lacks venture capital or other funding, and has yet to land its first bona fide customer. Prospective customers should ask about overall cost and how Hiperwall will support its technology. Working in Hiperwall's favor is a recent OEM agreement with Samsung Electronics, which is now distributing and supporting the Hiperwall technology in its LCDs.
URL: www.hiperwall.com