Jun 15

John Curran of mCosm

This week we have a guest blogger: John Curran, CEO of mCosm, our affiliate company.

PCs today are commodities with little differences between brands except for logos and prices. When it comes to interactive kiosks, however, product selection is both complicated and critical to project success. For a good example of how to choose the right kiosk, check outside the meeting rooms at a large New England university. (I can’t name it here, but you know the school.)

Unattended kiosks should be sturdy, easy to install, and have consistent BIOS for the life of a project. For this project, a software company supplied the university with an event-management system. This involved installing small custom kiosks to serve as automated “room card” displays outside each of the meeting rooms in a conference area of the university’s student center. Thanks to the EMS, students walking down the hallways could tell at a glance what meetings were in progress.

university conference room  digital signage

Micro Industries Touch&Go Pricechecker used as Conference Room Digital Signage

The original kiosks were the only units available with the application programming interface (API) needed to integrate with the EMS. But they also had a drawback—they used 5V DC power and had to be within eight feet of an electrical outlet. The prohibitively high cost of installing additional outlets meant that most of the kiosks were situated beyond eight feet. Not surprisingly, this led to continual hard-drive failures. Worse, performance was very slow and the kiosks were prone to overheating. The kiosk vendor didn’t offer repair services, either.

Looking around for an alternative to these troubled room-card kiosks, the university settled on the Pricechecker unit from Micro Industries. Our retail kiosk might sound like an odd solution for an academic setting, but it worked extremely well. The Pricechecker is a hardened kiosk with a patented passive cooling system to keep it from overheating. Power Over Ethernet Plus means it can be placed as much as 300 feet away from an outlet. The Pricechecker also has consistent BIOS to ensure that the applications won’t be affected when new units are added.

The university developed a simple graphical user interface (GUI) to replace the first application. (It helped that the EMS had a well-documented API.) Today, the university says, its Pricechecker kiosks not only provide rock-solid performance, they’re also less expensive and have larger, brighter displays than the original units.
Clearly, not all kiosks are created equal. A kiosk that combines ruggedness, performance, style and price come only from a company that designs, manufactures and sells it directly to the user—a company like Micro Industries. Give us a call sometime.

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Apr 27

Craig Johnson, Executive Director, and Victoria Prizzia, Exhibit and Interpretive Planning Director, of Interpret Green, Philadelphia, stand beside the Interactive Nature Now Table at DEEC.

Visit the sprawling new DuPont Environmental Education Center (DEEC) at the Russell W. Peterson Urban Wildlife Refuge along the Riverwalk at Wilmington, DE, and you’ll see much more than just water, sky and wildlife. Interactive exhibits and multimedia presentations there highlight the history of the marsh and focus on three of its natural residents—the osprey, snapping turtle and raccoon.

Designing the exhibits that encourage observation, exploration and investigation of the plants and wildlife fell to an interesting, green-savvy bunch from nearby Philadelphia. Interpret Green is a team of educators, artists, media developers and exhibition professionals. The group’s website states that the challenge at DEEC was to design a visitor-centric environment that “cultivates curiosity, inspires interaction, enhances personal meaning, and encourages learning and deeper questioning.”

That’s a big job, certainly. But Interpret Green accomplished it in part by using an all-in-one Touch&Go Messenger 65L from Micro Industries in a novel way. They turned it into a tabletop display, one big enough to provide a full-color, high-definition, interactive aerial view of the marsh and surrounding areas.

I admit, nobody here at Micro had thought about flipping a 65-inch Touch&Go unit onto its back like a turtle. We figured retailers would use the displays for interactive consumer kiosks, digital signage, store maps, advertising, messaging, product information, demos and television. Our friends at Intel were just as surprised as we were by how they use the 65L at DEEC. Seeing the Messenger 65L there became an “aha” moment for one of Intel’s Roving Reporter bloggers.

“It’s really a simple concept,” he wrote. “You take a large touchscreen digital sign/computer and lay it flat on a stand. Suddenly, the world changes.”
It just goes to show that even the manufacturer doesn’t always know how a good product will be used. We’re glad Interpret Green and DEEC showed us something new. When you think about it, a 212-acre wildlife refuge with a $10.9 million, four-story, 13,500-square-foot facility and extensive trail system has a very big story to tell. Naturally, they needed a big, handsome digital display to help tell it. And since the story is continually updating, Interpret Green chose mCosm to remotely manage and monitor the computers to make sure they are always current, operational and performing up to speed.

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