Year in review: From truckside displays to
digital museum labels and smart urban furniture, e-paper was the technology on everyone's lips in 2016.
Not exact matches
What appears to be a straightforward piece of driving electronics can make all the difference when it comes to the success of deploying
digital bus stops, information boards,
museum labels, wayfinding signs or truckside displays.
The result is a
museum label that is exactly what the industry had been waiting for, the AMLABEL
Digital Gallery Display developed on electronic paper.
Joining the Sydney traffic signs are, among other, e-paper
museum labels, truckside displays, and the company's flagship product Joan, a
digital door
label and meeting room scheduling solution with impeccable energy efficiency.
Traffic signs Truckside displays
Digital bus stops
Museum labels Information boards Smart shelf
labels
Through the use of existing Wi - Fi networks and a customized CMS platform designed from the ground up, AMLABEL
Digital Gallery Display allows
museums to manage and display gallery and exhibition object content in real - time, without the cost of printing paper
labels.
Through the use of existing Wi - Fi networks and a customized CMS platform designed from the ground up, the
digital gallery display allows
museums to manage and display gallery and exhibition object content in real - time, without the cost or delay of printing paper
labels.
The blank canvas to quickly develop versatile
digital solutions through custom applications:
museum labels, door signage, parking signs, arrival information boards and more.
The result is a
museum label that is exactly what the industry had been waiting for: the AMLABEL
Digital Gallery Display developed on electronic paper technology.
The installation comes as part of a wave of smart signage on electronic paper ushering
museums into the 21st century, be it through in - gallery
digital labels or through visitor - led interactive screens.
In response
museum label - making techniques have begun to change and evolve with the times and with new technology, writes Ross Parry in his paper on
digital label systems.
Among them are electronic paper
museum labels, a
digital replacement to existing paper gallery cards.
The Jazz
Museum at the Old Mint held a sampling of the sometimes naughty, little - known collages that jazz great Louis Armstrong made in the final two decades of his life, as well as Satch Hoyt's tambourines linked into chains attached to mirrors to form endless columns, or halved and assembled into crosses reminiscent of the city's famous ironwork; and there were two installations by Dario Robleto, one featuring preserved, mounted butterflies with antennae made of audio tape delicately perched on the edges of the fossilized inner - ear bones of whales, and the other a collaboration with the record
label Dust - to -
Digital to preserve early gospel music.
Launched in 2017, the Take It or Leave It
digital archive extends the life of this significant exhibition, with a gallery of artwork images and the associated didactic
label texts from the installation at the Hammer
Museum; essays, artist biographies, and a bibliography and chronology from the Take It or Leave It exhibition catalogue; and a variety of other resources meant to encourage further research.
digital archive extends the life of this momentous exhibition, with a gallery of artwork images and the associated didactic
label texts from the installation at the Hammer
Museum; essays, artist biographies, and a chronology from the Now Dig This!