HiteVision interactive displays: EDLA Android 16 roadmap, QLED local dimming, NFC fingerprint

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

HiteVision positions its portfolio around interactive whiteboards and interactive flat-panel displays (IFPD) for classrooms, pairing touch UX with device management features that matter to IT teams: NFC-based sign-in, fingerprint authentication, and panel variants described as QLED with local dimming for higher contrast in bright rooms. The goal is to make the board feel like the primary “computer” in a class, not just a big monitor, and to keep onboarding simple for teachers. https://www.hitevision.com.tw/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A key thread is Google EDLA (Enterprise Device Licensing Agreement): a certification path that lets schools run Google services on-board in a compliant way, instead of relying on screen-mirroring from a laptop. That matters for Google Play access, Workspace workflows, and predictable app deployment, especially when devices are shared across periods and users.

On the hardware side they point to large-format touch displays, including a 110-inch class panel with a stated 120 Hz refresh rate for smoother pen tracking and motion, plus an emphasis on high brightness. They also show an 80% automated production line, underlining repeatability in assembly, calibration, and QA for high-volume education rollouts at ISE 2026 Barcelona.

For “big-room” pedagogy and auditoriums, the booth highlights a 163-inch 4K LED display designed to behave like their interactive boards, so the UI, touch habits, and control model remain consistent across LCD IFPD and direct-view LED. The pitch is reducing the learning curve for teachers and the integration burden for IT, while scaling the same collaboration surface into larger spaces you can actually deploy.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQDLgo3NBqo

Muxwave Series F + P32 Transparent LED poster, top power feed, IP65 outdoor media facade

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Muxwave walks through its transparent LED portfolio, centered on an ultra-light “hanging” format (Series F) built for large suspended installs. The demo wall is about 4 m high by 7.5 m wide, with top-fed power and signal routing so cabling stays clean while the feed runs down through the structure. The core idea is keeping mass and depth low enough to enable creative shapes and big spans while still behaving like a real LED display rather than a projection surface. https://www.muxwave.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A key engineering theme is architectural integration: high transparency for shopfronts and atriums, plus enough luminance and refresh stability for camera-friendly content. Muxwave frames this as “full screen” coverage where the LED is distributed across a mesh/film-like module, making the visual layer feel embedded into the space. For outdoor deployments they highlight IP65 weather protection and an on-board LED packaging approach (described in the booth talk as “blue on board”) aimed at robustness in public environments and façades.

They also show a floor-standing poster concept (P32), essentially a 1 m by 2 m transparent LED unit that can be tiled side-by-side into longer ribbons, like a 5 m by 1 m run. The modules are attached to a glass-fronted format, and the logistics are clearly designed for rental and rapid rollout: each unit ships as one set per dedicated transport case. Content ingest is handled by an LED system controller, with upload and playback managed from a phone or laptop for quick campaign turnover.

Beyond the booth hardware, the conversation points to real deployments: retail windows, building façades, and sculptural installs such as circular or “ball” shapes used for wayfinding or landmark signage. One named reference is a large installation at the south entrance area of Fira Barcelona, which helps anchor the product as something that can survive high foot traffic and real public lighting. This interview was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, so the focus is on integrator-ready formats rather than lab prototypes.

The most interesting takeaway is how transparent LED is converging into a practical media layer: low kg/m² loading, thin profiles, modular splicing, and simplified top-power architecture that reduces install complexity overhead. Add IP-rated outdoor variants and controller-based content workflows, and you get a system that can scale from a small 20×10 cm advertising demo up to multi-meter architectural spans, while slowly pushing total project cost down year over year.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kbf-f26X_U

NovaStar Infinity + COEX 5G: PWM+PAM driver IC, 2.9M px per link, Nova Cloud

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

NovaStar walks through its Infinity concept as an end-to-end LED control chain, spanning video processing, sending/receiving, and the LED driver IC layer. The key idea is hybrid PWM + PAM (amplitude) drive, tuned with processing and algorithms to improve low-gray performance, brightness control, black level stability, and refresh behavior without pushing panels into visible flicker regimes. https://www.novastar.tech/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A nice detail is how Infinity is shown as something that can travel across the supply chain: the demo ties the control stack to partner display hardware like a BOE 1.25 mm COB module, and the discussion hints at how driver IC choices and calibration coefficients shape what people call “image quality” on fine-pitch LED. The takeaway is that a lot of the perceived sharpness and uniformity comes from the interaction between bit-depth mapping, grayscale linearity, and how the driver allocates current at very low luminance.

The booth tour then shifts to “LED intelligent playback control” and monitoring, essentially pushing fixed-install LED toward a managed appliance model: TV-style UI workflows, centralized status visibility for processors, and cloud management via Nova Cloud. On the content side, the media-server story is framed around redundancy (one primary plus two backup paths) and scaling across resolutions, which matters for unattended signage and large canvases where a single failure becomes obvious.

Another segment, filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, focuses on thermal compensation: compensating temperature-driven drift to reduce long-run color cast and keep color temperature stable at a more monitor-like level. In practice this kind of control loop is about sustaining chroma consistency over hours of operation, especially when cabinet thermals vary across a wall due to airflow, power density, or mounting geometry.

Finally, NovaStar highlights its COEX 5G distribution approach versus “1G” Ethernet workflows: roughly 2.9–2.95 million pixels over a single link, which can cut processor count and dramatically reduce cable runs. The side-by-side cabling examples make the point clearly: fewer physical links and fewer failure points, while still fitting into an ecosystem where multiple vendors align around the same next-gen transport and configuration tooling together

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uSZWAnFOzY

Vivalyte Phantom Mesh + Dynamic Lightbox + DMX Neon Flex, NovaStar/Colorlight video mapping

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Vivalyte walks through a toolkit that sits between LED display hardware and architectural lighting, where “video-driven light” and “pixel-controlled line light” start to blur. The Phantom Mesh concept is a see-through LED mesh aimed at glass, façades, and staging, with the demo focusing on two transparency/definition tradeoffs: around 6.2 mm pitch for a denser image, and around 10 mm pitch for higher optical transparency. It’s designed to scale into large-format surfaces via small mechanical connection pieces and modular sections, so you can build long runs without turning the build into a heavy video-wall project. https://vivalyte.com/solution/phantom-mesh/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A practical detail is how the mesh is driven: it behaves like a conventional video endpoint, so standard LED control ecosystems like NovaStar or Colorlight can feed it, and then your choice of media server or mapping stack (Pixera, MadMapper, etc.) handles content workflows. In the booth, they describe variants with different power-box placement (top vs top+bottom), plus an exhibition-oriented mesh prototype intended to mount into common booth frame systems like Aluvision and beMatrix, targeting faster rigging and cleaner alignment on show builds too.

The other thread is Vivalyte’s “Dynamic Lightbox” idea: combining printed fabric (or other translucent layers) with a low-resolution LED backplane (they mention P20) to add motion, highlights, and day/night effects without the “raw LED screen” look. Instead of replacing print, the LED becomes a controllable light engine behind the graphic, so you keep sharp printed detail while selectively animating regions, gradients, and glow. This segment was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, and it fits the broader trend of hybrid media surfaces that need to read well at close range and still scale to big areas here.

For ceilings and interiors, the stretch-ceiling demo shows a layered approach: an acoustic layer, then backlight bars, with tunable-white control from about 1800 K to 6500 K over DMX. The “big pixel” approach they mention (large controllable zones) is a reminder that not every surface needs high spatial resolution; for circadian-style ambience, smooth CCT transitions and uniform diffusion matter more than tight pitch here.

Finally, the Neon Flex lineup is positioned as architectural “line media” rather than faux neon: silicone extrusion with internal LEDs, DMX pixel control, and even a fully 3D-bendable variant with about 25 mm pixel pitch for richer chases and effects. They also point to a two-part construction in the 40F series (cover + strip) to hide starts/ends and enable seamless continuous lines, which is exactly the kind of detail that decides whether an install reads as a clean architectural element in the real world, not a segmented strip here.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJgxvubpVFU

OnSign Digital Signage CMS: Nexmosphere Sensors, Quividi Analytics, Amazon Signage Stick, Mosaic AI

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

OnSign positions its platform as a cloud-based digital signage CMS for managing distributed screen networks: upload media, build layouts, schedule playlists, and publish to one or many players with tag- and rule-based targeting. A practical detail is the player-side caching model: content is synchronized and stored locally so playback can continue through temporary connectivity loss, while admins keep control from a web console. https://www.onsign.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A big part of the story here is how signage turns into an interactive endpoint when you connect retail and venue hardware. The demo shows Nexmosphere-style triggers such as presence detection, RFID (with antenna), and magnetic or “product-lift” sensing, where removing an item from a shelf can cue a specific creative on the nearest display. This bridges CMS scheduling with real-world events, useful for planograms, end-caps, and guided shopping flows in store.

Captured at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, the walkthrough also highlights how OnSign fits into modern DOOH and retail media patterns: screens in-store for programmatic ad slots, menu boards, corporate comms, public transport info, and in-vehicle or rooftop displays for taxi or transit media. The publishing workflow shown is classic enterprise signage—divide the canvas into zones, assign destinations, and restrict playback by daypart, weekday, location, or metadata tags so the same creative behaves differently by context.

Audience measurement appears as a separate but connected layer: a camera can detect approximate viewer counts, “looking vs not looking,” and coarse demographics like gender and age range, then feed that into proof-of-play and campaign reporting. OnSign mentions integration with Quividi-type analytics so advertisers can correlate ad playback with observed attention, and optionally trigger content based on demographic ranges rather than only time-of-day logic.

The AI angle is less “content magic” and more operational reliability: OnSign’s Mosaic concept takes periodic screenshots (shown as every ~12 minutes) and uses automated checks to flag black screens, popups, or frozen playback. Add in AI-assisted grouping, alert rules like CPU thresholds, and QR-driven interactivity (scan-to-landing-page plus on-screen feedback), and you get a CMS that’s pushing toward closed-loop monitoring and smarter orchestration across fleets of screens.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xsbu6Chq_q4

Pixelhue PixPro A | AV-over-IP + LED controller in one, 16×6 splicing, PD3 4K

Posted by – February 10, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Pixelhue walks through PixPro A, positioned as an all-in-one AV-over-IP platform that merges a video decoder/encoder pipeline with an LED controller in the same box, so an LED wall can be driven directly without stacking separate processors. The pitch is a single integrated control layer for distributed video, splicing, and LED output, aimed at command/control and large canvas display workflows. https://www.pixelhue.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A core theme is doing high image quality over standard 1GbE instead of requiring 10GbE, while still targeting very low end-to-end delay for operator use. In the demo they switch into a KVM mode and call out sub-2 ms latency, which is the key spec when you want “mouse-feels-local” interaction on remote sources. This is paired with a “visualized digital center” style management interface for monitoring, routing, and layout control in a control-room context.

The PD3 transceiver family is shown as the building block: compact encode/decode endpoints with HDMI I/O, a quick device-ID/check button, and the ability to repurpose a unit as encoder or decoder depending on configuration. There are variants labeled PD3 2K and PD3 4K, with models that include multiple HDMI inputs/outputs so you can do input backup and fast switching for redundancy. The video was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, which fits the AV-control and LED ecosystem angle.

On the canvas side, PixPro A demonstrates multi-window splicing up to 16×6, effectively treating many sources as one composited surface for an LED wall or a large multi-display array. That points to typical use cases like situational awareness, SOC/NOC visualization, and surveillance viewing, where you need flexible layout presets, fast recall, and consistent timing across tiles. The “13 million pixels” comment reinforces that they’re targeting large total pixel budgets and wide canvases.

The competitive framing is against established enterprise AV-over-IP vendors, but with a focus on lowering network and deployment cost by staying on 1GbE while keeping 4K capability and interactive latency low. Technically, it sits at the intersection of IP video distribution, matrix switching, LED processing, and KVM-over-IP, with emphasis on integrated control and failover-friendly HDMI routing. It’s a practical look at how AV-over-IP is being packaged for LED walls and control-room operation here.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_XKyNlwVwQ

Joan ePaper workplace displays: room/desk booking, 13-inch touch, color visitor badges

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Joan is positioning workplace management as a tight loop between calendar data, physical space, and low-power displays: rooms, desks, visitors, and internal comms all driven by the same scheduling layer. The demo shows how ePaper becomes “always-on” signage without needing power or network cabling at the mount point, while still staying current via cloud sync and device-to-cloud updates. https://getjoan.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A standout hardware piece is the large-format, battery-powered e-ink wall display: it mounts like a picture frame, can be lifted off the bracket, then locks back in, running roughly a year per charge before topping up over USB-C. The same idea scales down to the classic meeting-room door plates, where battery life depends on size and update frequency, with touch for ad-hoc booking and front lighting on some models for better readability.

On the room side, the range spans compact door schedulers through a bigger, secure-mount 13-inch touchscreen option that can act as a room overview and on-the-spot booking terminal, including PoE mounting where permanent power is preferred. The “what you see is what you need” UI is built around real-time status, meeting metadata, and quick actions, while keeping the display stack efficient enough for ePaper refresh behavior and long sleep cycles.

For desks, the platform leans into hybrid office realities: interactive maps for desk discovery and booking, visibility of who sits where, and add-ons like desk indicators that show occupancy status and can even integrate charging. Visitor management extends that same workflow into reception with reusable full-color ePaper visitor tags that update wirelessly (Bluetooth Low Energy), so check-in becomes “select badge → push identity card layout,” without burning through disposable print stock.

Late in the interview (filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona), Joan also frames AI as reducing “click work”: instead of building a narrow chatbot feature, they describe an MCP-style integration approach so a user can request a coordinated office day—booking a whole team’s desks, a room slot, and supporting logistics—through an assistant interface. The core idea is that Joan sits as the bridge between digital intent (Teams/Google Calendar) and physical execution (signage, wayfinding, check-in), so the office behaves like a programmable system rather than a set of disconnected tools.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3–b1hrvhg

CVTE interactive flat panel + 15MP AI camera + PCAP 100 touch + AI pen classroom workflow

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

CVTE frames its “Dream Future” theme around a young engineering culture and a very practical goal: make interactive display hardware easier for schools and meeting rooms to deploy, maintain, and actually use day to day. In this walkthrough, the focus stays on interactive flat panels as a classroom hub, combining touch, compute, and camera so teachers can run lessons, annotate content, and support hybrid learning without stacking extra boxes and cables. https://www.cvte.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

On the panel side, the discussion highlights mainstream Rockchip-based compute for responsive UI and low-latency ink, plus a built-in 15MP camera aimed at distance learning and lecture capture. The camera stack is positioned around everyday pro-AV features like zoom, autoframing, speaker tracking, and “smart gallery” style multi-view, with optional external USB cameras to solve real room geometry problems (for example, putting a lens at the front of the class while the main screen sits behind the teacher) for better sightlines and framing.

Touch and optics are treated as separate “feel” and “look” choices: a PCAP capacitive model is described as a “big iPad” aesthetic for finger-first interaction, while IR touch remains a cost-effective path for large-format classrooms. The PCAP unit is quoted at 50 touch points today with a roadmap toward 100 touch points, and the kid-focused display leans on optical bonding (reduced parallax, better contrast in bright rooms) plus low blue-light certification to support longer sessions with less eye strain at close range.

A second product direction targets family education and kindergarten use, with details that matter in real homes: a plug-in camera module with a physical privacy lid, safety-conscious chassis angles, and content that mixes learning with motion-based activities. The demo includes a camera-driven “jumping game” concept to turn movement into an input modality, which is a nice reminder that computer vision can be part of engagement design, not only a conferencing feature, at ISE 2026 Barcelona.

Finally, CVTE positions itself as a large-scale ODM/OEM engine behind many overseas education-display brands, while also showing adjacent ecosystem pieces like adjustable stands, ergonomic student furniture, and mobility-focused classroom layouts. The AI angle stays grounded in teacher workflow too: an “AI pen” concept is described as a remote interaction tool so the teacher can move around the room while still controlling the panel, which ties computer vision, UI control, and classroom management into one coherent usage model.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2XYqcIcNDE

AIPC Local LLM Box, ARFirst PC + AI box ROCm Ryzen 7 780M, Ryzen AI Max+ 395 126 TOPS, 128GB, 10GbE

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

AIPC shows two takes on ARfirst compute: a portable, AR-ready AI PC and a compact local-inference box aimed at running large language models without cloud dependency. The smaller system is positioned like a self-contained workstation with USB-C DisplayPort output for direct headset or display connection, plus enough GPU compute to handle everyday office workloads and light gaming in a single device.


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

On the handheld/keyboard form factor, the demo unit is specced around AMD Ryzen 7 with Radeon 780M graphics, 32 GB RAM, up to 2 TB storage, and Windows 11 Pro. The pitch is practicality: built-in pointing control, active cooling airflow channels, and an estimated ~8 hours of monitor-style use, with different keyboard layouts possible beyond the US version shown.

The bigger story is the “AIPC” local AI box built around AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 395, quoted at 126 TOPS, paired with Radeon 8060-class integrated graphics and configured up to 96–128 GB memory with 2 TB SSD. The point of the high memory ceiling is straightforward: bigger parameter models, larger context, more KV-cache headroom, and fewer compromises when you try to run heavier Qwen/Llama-class checkpoints locally rather than streaming tokens from a hosted API.

The workflow shown is very “local model ops”: a Windows environment with a model marketplace/manager (Nova Studio) to download, start/stop, and swap models, then run offline prompts (including quick multilingual queries) with no internet access. They also demo voice recording and TTS voice cloning to produce speech in another language using the recorded sample, framing the box as a 24/7 agent machine for coding, research, and multimodal generation with predictable cost and privacy characteristics.

Filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, the interview leans into platform tradeoffs: comparisons to Mac Studio and NVIDIA “AI boxes,” plus the AMD ROCm vs CUDA ecosystem discussion, and the practical I/O checklist (HDMI, 10GbE Ethernet, high-speed external storage). The core claim is that this class of high-TOPS APU + large unified memory makes “biggish” local LLM work feel less like a lab setup and more like a normal desktop routine, at a fixed hardware price.

I’m publishing about 60+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6KHnxFN3ZM

Looking Glass 86 HLD + faytech: 4K hololuminescent signage, IR touch, AI avatars

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Looking Glass and faytech are showing a new way to deploy “holographic” digital signage without changing your content pipeline: the 86-inch Hololuminescent Display (HLD). The idea is to move the 3D effect into the optical stack, so the playback device and CMS still see a standard 4K screen, while viewers see a person or product rendered on a fixed spatial stage with convincing depth. https://lookingglassfactory.com/86-hld


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

In the demo, a simple iPhone video of Looking Glass CEO Shawn is played back as an MP4 through a normal signage workflow, yet it reads as a life-size presence inside the display volume. Because the system behaves like a regular monitor over HDMI or DisplayPort, you can feed it from Windows, macOS, BrightSign-style players, or a workstation GPU, and keep using familiar tools for scheduling, color grading, and campaign variants such as tinting and mood shifts for the same scene here.

The conversation frames HLD as a “magic problem” product: it’s meant for retail, lobbies, endcaps, digital-out-of-home, and museum-style storytelling where attention and dwell time matter, not for precision depth measurements. It’s also designed for group viewing without glasses or per-viewer tracking, and the production units are targeted around 400–500 nits for brighter storefront conditions. This video was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, where the emphasis is clearly on deployability at scale today.

They also switch to an interactive mode that combines the holographic stage with an IR touch overlay, running a Unity application on a compact PC (shown on an Intel NUC). Touch input lets users browse product variants and manipulate “in-box” lighting and styling across the whole volume, which is a useful mental model for POS configurators, virtual shelves, and guided product education where the UI stays 2D-simple while the presentation feels spatial now.

The faytech partnership is positioned as the practical integration layer: custom bezels, kiosk enclosures, and fit-and-finish for AV rollouts, plus accessory options as needed. Looking Glass says production units will integrate a 4K camera, microphone, speakers, and touch, which opens the door to telepresence-style “beaming,” guided museum narration, or AI-avatar front-of-house experiences (their earlier Uncle Rabbit demo gets a mention), while keeping the core promise: treat it like a 4K display, get a 3D effect next.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RQQXGGrsDU

Newline Interactive DV Premier+ COB 216in 4K, STV+ 115in 24/7 signage

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Newline Interactive is positioning its range around two big AV building blocks: large-format direct-view LED for “main wall” impact, and commercial LCD/IFP for everything else in the room. The highlight is a 216-inch 4K COB DV wall (shown here at 1.25 mm pitch) aimed at meeting and briefing spaces that want a seamless 16:9 canvas with finer LED packaging, tighter pixel geometry, and cleaner black uniformity than older SMD builds. https://newline-interactive.com/eu/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

On the signage side, the STV+ family is framed as a 24/7 digital signage display line that scales from 43-inch up to a flagship 115-inch 4K panel. The emphasis is on continuous runtime, IP control for fleet operations, ultra-thin bezel styling, and onboard Android for lightweight playback, plus compatibility with Newline’s Signage Pro platform for typical landscape/portrait deployment in corporate, retail, and public-facing venues.

For collaboration rooms, the demo pivots to “all-in-one” interactive screens with integrated UC hardware: camera, microphone array, and quick access workflows like NFC card login. ARVA Pro is positioned as the infrared touch option, while Vega Pro shifts to PCAP for a more glass-like feel, paired with Google EDLA certification so Teams/Google Workspace deployments can stay inside a managed Android app ecosystem. Vega Pro also leans into meeting capture with an optional 4K AI camera, an 8-mic array, and built-in speakers for a single-device install.

There’s also a practical deployment angle: a non-Android “C series” path for IT teams that prefer a pure display plus external compute, with OPS slot-in PC or a Chromebox doing the heavy lift. Newline also shows a smaller, battery-powered 27-inch mobile display concept (Google EDLA, around a 4-hour battery) to make casting and touch interaction portable for education and ad-hoc collaboration. This walkthrough was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, so the product mix is clearly tuned for European integrator and channel demand.

Taken together, the story is less about one hero SKU and more about covering the full signal chain in modern spaces: COB direct-view LED (pixel pitch, 4K, 16:9), large-format LCD for signage (4K UHD, IP control, 24/7), and interactive flat panels for UC (EDLA, Android, OPS, PCAP vs IR touch, NFC login, casting). If you’re designing standardized meeting rooms or digital signage fleets, it’s a coherent set of endpoints that can share management patterns while matching the “right display tech” to the viewing distance and use case.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZ472LjeNeg

EXCO Vision ISE 2026 Best of Show Zeus, XR LED volume + narrow-pitch rental, concave/convex stage

Posted by – February 9, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

EXCO Vision shows how an LED vendor can cover both in-camera VFX and fast-turn rental builds without treating them as separate engineering problems: the same “batch + pitch” discipline is used to keep a ceiling, main wall, and floor aligned for white point, gamma, and color matching across an LED volume. That consistency matters when you’re doing virtual production with real lenses, real shutters, and real reflections. https://www.excovision.net/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

In the interview, the flagship topic is an LED backdrop custom designed for virtual production, where the goal is to replace a grey/green stage with an emissive background that the camera can capture directly. EXCO Vision describes indoor brightness around 3,000 nit and refresh up to 30,000 Hz for the shown configuration, aiming to reduce flicker/banding at challenging shutter angles while keeping contrast high via black-surface LED design for camera.

From the product naming used by EXCO Vision, Zeus and Apollo sit in the XR/virtual shooting family, with marketing that leans on high refresh and high grayscale for smoother motion rendering and better moiré control at narrow pixel pitches. The Zeus line is also notable because it was listed as a Best of Show winner at ISE 2026 by TVBEurope, which signals it was evaluated in a broadcast-facing context rather than pure signage. The video is filmed at ISE 2026 Barcelona, where LED volumes, tracking, and real-time rendering are now standard talking points across broadcast, cinema, and live event work.

Alongside VP, the booth walk highlights a rental-oriented setup described as a narrow-pitch rental platform that can be deployed as ceiling, wall, and floor in the same pitch and batch. The practical angle is modularity: straight builds plus concave/convex sections, including tunnel-style layouts, so you can create immersive spaces without sacrificing calibration continuity across the full surface.

On company context, the transcript states EXCO Vision was founded in 2017, manufactures in Shenzhen, and is backed by shareholders that include Youku as a major investor tied to film/TV production activity in China. Their stated plan is broader reach beyond China and the US, targeting more European rollouts during 2026 as XR stages and rental hybrids become more common in regional production pipelines across Europe

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3AQMm4NeOc

Logitech Rally AI Camera Pro + Rally Board + Sight: RightSight 2 framing, Meet Android, Teams Rooms

Posted by – February 8, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Logitech’s booth focuses on making meeting-room video behave more like a directed shoot: on-device AI combines image analysis with audio cues to keep the right faces in frame, without the operator “driving” PTZ all day. The new Rally AI Camera Pro and Rally AI Camera sit above the familiar Rally lineup, targeting bigger spaces where speaker handoffs, whiteboards, and side conversations can break basic auto-framing. https://www.logitech.com/en-us/products/video-conferencing.html


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

Rally AI Camera Pro is aimed at complex rooms with a dual-camera concept: a wide context view plus a PTZ view with hybrid zoom, so the system can keep a stable “room read” while still punching in on a presenter. Logitech ties this to RightSight 2 modes (grid, group, speaker) and to multi-camera deployments that conferencing platforms can manage for consistent composition as people move.

The tour also revisits Rally Bar as a core appliance for mid-size rooms, where dual lenses, tuned optics, and DSP are used to get the most out of 1080p cloud calls by feeding them cleaner, sharper source video. The underlying point is that better sensors and more processing headroom still matter even when the transport codec is the bottleneck, because improved exposure, color, and noise behavior survive compression more cleanly.

On the interactive side, Rally Board is shown in two flavors: an Android-based appliance that runs Google Meet natively, and a Windows-based Microsoft Teams Rooms variant for organizations that can’t put Android endpoints on their network. Both keep touch workflows for whiteboarding and content sharing, and Logitech hints at depth/IR sensing to build a 3D room map for more reliable tracking plus privacy-aware background masking. This segment was filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, giving a useful snapshot today.

Finally, Logitech Sight tackles the long-table problem by adding a tabletop viewpoint that’s “almost 360” (about 315° to avoid shooting the front display), with built-in microphones and direction-of-arrival cues to help remote participants see and hear whoever is speaking at the far end. In a dual-Sight layout, coverage can stretch along longer tables and produce multiple participant tiles (up to eight) so discussion feels less like a single wide shot and more like a set of close conversational angle.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAAYpAS0DWU

BOE at ISE 2026: Curved COB, Chip-on-Glass, MPD 0.6mm LED, Magic LED eye comfort, Spectra 6 ePaper

Posted by – February 8, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

BOE’s booth tour focuses on how packaging and drive architecture are reshaping fine-pitch direct-view LED: full flip-chip COB with black film encapsulation, common-cathode driving, and increasingly glass-based approaches that aim for better thermal behavior and more uniform luminance. The walkthrough starts with a curved COB concept that relies on an ultra-thin module to make bending feasible, with a stated curvature limit around a 600 mm radius for concave or convex installs. https://www.boe.com/en/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

After that, the comparison ladder makes the tradeoffs concrete: a “standard” COB around 1.25 mm pitch is framed as a cost-led choice (about 600 nits and 5,000:1 contrast, using Nova control), while a 0.9 mm “ultra” step pushes toward roughly 2,000 nits and 20,000:1 with tighter seam management and a higher-end control path that can drive more cabinets per controller to reduce cabling and power distribution complexity. This segment is filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, and it’s useful as a quick reference for why pitch alone is not the only quality lever in retail and corporate AV.

The “highest end” theme is then tied to chip-on-glass (COG): placing LEDs directly on glass is presented as the route for going below what COB typically targets, while keeping a slim module and consistent optical behavior. In parallel, BOE shows Micro Pixel Device development (MPD) at around 0.6 mm pitch with a quoted cabinet depth near 2.4 cm, positioned as a prototype path to thinner, tighter LED walls where mechanical depth and heat paths often set the real limits.

A standout demo is “Magic LED,” described as using pixel-level distortion to reduce real electrical brightness (example given around 800 nits) while preserving a perceived high-brightness look closer to a higher mode (example referenced around 2,000 nits), aimed at eye comfort and lower energy draw. There’s also a glossy surface film approach that makes an LED wall read more like LCD/OLED from a distance by masking division lines, plus a quick look at modular serviceability (magnetic tiles, visible power/drive components) and how SMD, COB, and COG raise the production hurdle in different ways.

Beyond LED, BOE pivots into wider display categories: an interactive LCD with a new polarizer/film for improved off-axis viewing, and local dimming with 288 zones to manage contrast and power by content. The ePaper area highlights Spectra 6 full-color with a noted operating range of roughly -25 to 60°C and battery operation, alongside the familiar multi-second refresh behavior. The tour ends with semi-outdoor LED (example referenced at 4,000 nits and ~1.9 mm pitch) plus a sensor cluster concept for fleet management—temperature, ambient light, water/rain logging, door and impact/vandal alerts—before closing on factory sustainability and recycled-content efforts as part of BOE’s manufacturing story.

I’m publishing about 60+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9RKZ3V3k2I

Leyard Planar at ISE 2026: Komodo 0.7mm LED + 8K COB MicroLED wall + IP65 floor + megapixel HELIOS

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Leyard Planar walks through a booth built around end-to-end LED video wall engineering, where mechanics, mounting tolerances and pixel-level calibration matter as much as the diodes. The theme is “own the stack”: structural frames, cabinet geometry, surface protection and processing are treated as one system rather than separate parts. https://www.planar.com/products/led-video-walls/planar-komodo-series/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

On the creative side, you see LED used as architectural material: a 1.3 mm pixel-pitch floor rated IP65 for liquid ingress, with anti-slip and optional pressure-based touch interaction for wayfinding or branded experiences. The True Curve concept pushes that idea further with a 1.8 mm module that follows a physical form via a laser-cut back plate, locating pins and magnetic positioning, so designers can build repeatable curves without fighting seam alignment at every edge.

For large canvas installs, the conversation shifts to fine-pitch COB MicroLED where durability and thermal behavior become practical deployment issues. A 16:9 8K wall is described as four 4K viewports stitched into one surface, using a hard epoxy coating to handle knocks in public areas while keeping radiant heat low. The wall shown is around 0.9 mm pitch in a 12×12 cabinet layout with XYZ structural adjustment to minimize visible joins, filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona.

Installation flexibility shows up again in cabinets offered in multiple heights (from 250×250 up to 250×1000 mm), letting integrators tile around doors, elevators and control interfaces instead of forcing rectangular voids. A slim, portrait-format faceted curve wall is quoted at roughly 35 mm depth, up to 2,000 nits brightness, and uses off-board power to reduce cabinet weight and on-surface heat while enabling redundancy, a useful pattern for a mission-critical control room.

The flagship focus is the Planar Komodo fine-pitch lineup, highlighted here at true 0.7 mm with ~22-inch diagonal cabinets for dense pixel count in smaller footprints, aimed at premium home cinema, simulation and gaming. Keywords include COB MicroLED, DCI-P3 wide-gamut color, 120 Hz sources, high refresh, plus genlock and pixel-lock. The tour also contrasts standard SMD with MicroLED-in-Package (MIP) for sharper uniformity, and ends on 2.6 mm transparent LED at about 70% translucency for glass and window installs, keeping the “build the whole system” idea intact.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyAqysPqf7E

QOMO wireless 4K doc cams, 100x optical zoom, SimpleBoard modular OPS workflow

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

QOMO’s collaboration stack in this video is built around making capture, annotation, and sharing feel “plug-and-present” instead of “IT project”. The demo mixes wireless document cameras (8MP/4K-class imaging) with higher-end optical models that prioritize autofocus stability, sensor detail, and real-time viewing for classrooms, boardrooms, and public-sector briefing spaces. https://qomo.com/products/interactive-displays/bundleboard-i/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A big theme is optics as a UX feature: the optical document camera shown can hold focus on fine textures and objects with deep zoom (called out at up to 100x), while gooseneck positioning and one-touch autofocus make it practical for live demos rather than only static shots. The preview-screen form factor is also aimed at presenter ergonomics, so you can verify framing without turning to the projection surface.

On the display side, SimpleBoard is positioned as an OS-less interactive panel that stays hardware-neutral: you add the compute you want (OPS/PC module, Windows box, etc.) and standardize touch + display without forcing a fixed Android image. In this segment filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, they pair it with a Windows module and conferencing/collaboration workflow (Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet) plus a 4K camera for more consistent room video.

Interactivity is covered two ways: audience response keypads (IR-based) that integrate tightly with PowerPoint for live voting and lesson “gamification”, and a separate wireless presentation link for meeting rooms where you can’t (or shouldn’t) join the corporate LAN. The QShare/Q-series transceiver concept is simple: HDMI or USB-C in, direct wireless out to the display, with USB used for power, so guest presenters can share content without network onboarding.

BundleBoard i then shows the “all-in-one” route: Android 14 with Google ecosystem support and Play Store access, plus whiteboarding and fast UI response for multi-app workflows. The mobile 32-inch interactive screen rounds it out as a battery-backed, wheeled endpoint with a built-in camera and a physical privacy shutoff, aimed at ad-hoc huddles, training corners, and flexible classrooms.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0g6rxhKRT4

Absen at ISE 2026: XL COB P1.5/P1.8 + CL COB contrast + JDH transparent + iCon foldable AIO LED

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Absen walks through a set of LED display building blocks that map nicely to real retail and venue constraints: viewing distance, budget per square metre, impact resistance, and how much “black level” you can hold under mixed ambient light. The XL COB focus is interesting precisely because it is not chasing ultra-fine pitch; P1.5 and P1.8 COB aims at affordable near-field sharpness while keeping the practical advantages of a resin-coated surface for durability, cleaning, and handling in public space. https://www.absen.com/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A second thread is physical deployment: the double-sided KDS P2.6 uses flip-chip SMD in a slim (claimed 38 mm) profile, which matters for hanging weight, ceiling loads, and clean sightlines in transport hubs and mall atriums. Double-sided LED also changes content strategy: independent brightness per side lets you tune for glare, daylight, or interior mood without running two separate structures.

COB gets pushed beyond “just protection” with textured COB, where the encapsulation layers add a material-like finish (wood or marble effect) that reads more like interior architecture than a typical emissive wall. The premium COB highlight is the fine-pitch CL-class concept (0.9 / 1.2 pitch mentioned) with very high contrast (30,000:1 stated), 1,200 nit typical brightness and 1,600 nit peak, plus the “cool to the touch” angle that usually points toward flip-chip plus common-cathode style power architecture and tighter thermal control for long duty cycles.

Filmed at ISE 2026 in Barcelona, the transparent JDH series demo shows why transparent LED keeps showing up in storefront and façade briefs: you can run bright outward-facing content (about 2,000 nits mentioned) while preserving daylight, visibility, and a less “blocked off” feeling from the inside. It also becomes a passive shading layer, reducing harsh sun while still allowing the space to read as open rather than walled in.

The all-in-one iCon/ICON approach ties it together for integrators who need fast deployment: standard 110/136/163-inch classes, integrated control and audio, and a foldable chassis idea that is less about spectacle and more about logistics (fit in an elevator, move between floors, redeploy for events). The key takeaway is that the LED “canvas” is only half the system: resolution targets, processing load, and content workflow (including AI-assisted generation for higher pixel-count canvases) are what decide whether the installation communicates clearly or just glows.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eUM3RaPm4Hc

Cisco AI workspaces at ISE 2026 PoE AV, Room Navigator sensors, Meraki MT15 + Splunk dashboards

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Cisco frames the booth tour around “AI-powered workspaces” as a stack that starts with collaboration endpoints but quickly expands into building telemetry and operational analytics, so IT and facilities can make data-driven decisions on space usage, comfort, and energy. The core idea is to reduce friction for hybrid work while keeping deployments platform-flexible (Webex native, or re-registered for Microsoft Teams, while still being able to join Zoom and Google Meet). https://www.webex.com/us/en/devices/desk-series/cisco-desk-pro.html


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

On the collaboration side, the Desk Pro Gen 2 is positioned as more than an executive desktop: with a wide-angle 4K camera and touch workflow for whiteboarding and control, it can drop into a small huddle room as an all-in-one endpoint, with tighter framing and digital pan/tilt/crop for cleaner participant views in a compact room.

For larger spaces, the tour highlights “distance zero” meeting design using side cameras to give a cross-table perspective when discussion flows laterally, so remote participants see natural eye-lines instead of a single front-wall shot. Audio is treated as a sensor array too, with the ceiling beamforming mic concept (64 mic elements forming 8 adaptive beams, with echo handling per beam) to keep pickup stable even when the active speaker is several meters away in a busy space.

The workplace layer is where Cisco connects collaboration hardware to smart-building signals: Room Navigator-style touch panels surface temperature, humidity and air-quality context where people actually sit, while the video system can add people-count and presence data. That gets blended with network indicators like Wi-Fi association trends for occupancy, then extended with purpose-built sensors like the Meraki MT15 for CO2 and air-quality metrics that affect focus and comfort in real workdays.

Splunk is presented as the unifying data platform for security, observability, and facilities dashboards, including edge reduction via Splunk Edge Hub so raw sensor chatter becomes normalized, usable time-series before it hits the cloud. The tour also nods to Power over Ethernet as a physical infrastructure strategy (up to 90 W on a single cable) for lighting, desk power, and automation triggers, making reconfiguration easier and shifting more of the workplace into software-defined control for work.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCF_bb7LpVQ

TSL Hummingbird NDI routing control, tally mapping, presets, Linux VM broadcast panels

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

TSL Products’ Hummingbird control family is shown here as a way to treat NDI streams like “real” broadcast sources: discover endpoints, build routes, and drive operator workflows from the same control surface used for SDI routers and SMPTE ST 2110 systems. The key shift is adding NDI routing control into a broadcast-grade control layer, so tallies, salvos/presets, and structured operational logic can sit on top of an IP media fabric without forcing operators into a totally new interface. https://tslproducts.com/ndi


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

A practical takeaway is how NDI’s value proposition changes once control is no longer the weak link. NDI can move high-quality video and audio over standard 1 GbE networks, which makes it attractive for cost and deployment density, but many broadcast teams historically ignored it because it didn’t “feel” like a routed, automated plant. By binding NDI into the same routing and monitoring paradigm as baseband, Hummingbird makes it easier to scale from a few sources to a large device estate without losing operational discipline.

The video also highlights the human-factors side of control: hard-button panels still matter in fast, mission-critical production because operators can work by touch while watching program or multiview. In this setup, those panels become NDI-aware, so button presses can trigger NDI routes, tally mapping, and preset management with the kind of immediacy expected from decades of SDI. NDI endpoints still handle encode/decode in their own hardware or software (CPU, FPGA, and similar), while Hummingbird focuses on orchestration, routing intent, and state.

Under the hood, this is enabled by newer NDI SDK capabilities for discovery/monitoring/control and receiver-oriented management, which is why the demo is positioned as a “now it’s possible” moment rather than a brand-new transport. Filmed during ISE 2026 in Barcelona, it lands in the wider AV-over-IP trend at the show, but from a broadcast angle: predictable routing, tally correctness, and operator speed are treated as first-class requirements rather than optional extras.

There’s also a deployment story: Hummingbird’s control logic is largely software-based, and the move toward a portable Linux platform opens up on-prem VM installs (for near-instant response) as well as data-center and cloud footprints where it makes sense. The point is less about running switching “in the cloud” and more about making control portable across Hyper-V/VMware-style environments, appliances, and hybrid sites, while keeping latency for control actions in the millisecond range when the media plane is local.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqIlhJp9b0s

Moorgen Smart Home: KNX/Zigbee keypads, dial controllers, proximity UI, track lighting

Posted by – February 7, 2026
Category: Exclusive videos

Moorgen sits in that interesting overlap between smart-home control hardware and industrial design: wall keypads, remotes, and rotary “dimming knob” controllers that feel like architectural material choices, not gadget add-ons. Under the styling, the ecosystem targets whole-home scenes (lighting, shading, HVAC, audio) with integrations that commonly show up in high-end residential projects, including KNX, Zigbee, and a proprietary control layer for unified commissioning. https://www.moorgen.de/


HDMI® Technology is the foundation for the worldwide ecosystem of HDMI-connected devices; integrated with displays, set-top boxes, laptops, audio video receivers and other product types. Because of this global usage, manufacturers, resellers, integrators and consumers must be assured that their HDMI® products work seamlessly together and deliver the best possible performance by sourcing products from licensed HDMI Adopters or authorized resellers. For HDMI Cables, consumers can look for the official HDMI® Cable Certification Labels on packaging. Innovation continues with the latest HDMI 2.2 Specification that supports higher 96Gbps bandwidth and next-gen HDMI Fixed Rate Link technology to provide optimal audio and video for a wide range of device applications. Higher resolutions and refresh rates are supported, including up to 12K@120 and 16K@60. Additionally, more high-quality options are supported, including uncompressed full chroma formats such as 8K@60/4:4:4 and 4K@240/4:4:4 at 10-bit and 12-bit color.

In this walkthrough, the focus is on tactile interfaces: a Philippe Starck-designed remote that docks magnetically, and a keypad concept that treats the wall plate like a UI surface rather than a simple switch. One panel uses a proximity sensor to wake up as you approach, then exposes configurable “modes” with subtle animations, making scene recall feel closer to a UI interaction than a mechanical toggle, right here.

The rotary controller (“dialer”) is presented as a 0–10 continuous control surface, useful for dimming curves, motor speed, color temperature, or any parameter you’d map to an analog value. Paired with architectural lighting, it becomes a quick way to move between presets (day, evening, night), aligning physical haptics with scene logic instead of burying it all in an app mode.

There’s also a motorized magnetic track lighting demo: the fixture travels along the track, rotates 360°, and supports beam-angle adjustment, which hints at tighter coupling between control UI and luminaire behavior. Decorative luminaires appear alongside this, including pieces associated with Zaha Hadid Design, and table-lamp concepts like a double-tap coaster light that returns to a charging dock when you place it back on base, reducing cable clutter.

The video was filmed at ISE 2026 Barcelona, and it frames Moorgen as a portfolio built for designers and integrators: different faceplate “series” (including Monaco/Supercar themes, Denmark finishes, and Swarovski collaborations), plus a central touchscreen panel and even a watch-like controller for quick commands. The takeaway is less about one hero product and more about a consistent interface language—proximity, haptic feedback, rotary control, and scene-based automation—applied across a whole interior space.

I’m publishing about 75+ videos from ISE 2026, check out all my ISE 2026 videos in my playlist here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7xXqJFxvYvjUiepj5jbL6aIt6QB9jeCk

This video was filmed using the DJI Pocket 3 ($669 at https://amzn.to/4aMpKIC using the dual wireless DJI Mic 2 microphones with the DJI lapel microphone https://amzn.to/3XIj3l8 )

“Super Thanks” are welcome 😁

Check out my video with Daylight Computer about their revolutionary Sunlight Readable Transflective LCD Display for Healthy Learning: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U98RuxkFDYY

source https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1thN4g99qY