MultiTouch Ltd. develops first multitouch Twitter Wall

http://mms.businesswire.com/bwapps/mediaserver/ViewMedia?mgid=255125&vid=4&download=1

MultiTouch to Produce Official 2011 International CES Twitter Wall; Visual, Moving Twitter Spheres Display Tweets in Real Time; Users Can Access Photos; Positional Speakers Deliver High-Quality Audio

FOR RELEASE ON: MONDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2010

HELSINKI –MultiTouch, Ltd., developer of the world’s first modular multi-touch LCD screen for large-scale displays, today announced the release of the industry’s first large-scale multitouch, multi-user Twitter wall application. The MultiTouch Twitter Wall consists of at least six MultiTouch Cell 46 Advanced displays, 46 inches wide, in a 3 x 2 (three long, two high) configuration that visually displays tweets from selected hashtags and keywords. Users of the MultiTouch Twitter Wall can open tweets, represented on a rotating sphere, by touching a profile image and moving, or resizing, the tweet on the display. The MultiTouch Twitter Wall offers alternate views on the spheres that enable images from Flickr to be displayed, searchable with a keyword, as well. Using Panphonics Sound Shower® directional loudspeakers, the MultiTouch Twitter Wall can further engage users with positional audio from tweets and other content displayed.

MultiTouch will produce the Official 2011 International CES Twitter Wall in Las Vegas, January 6-9, in the North Hall lobby of the Las Vegas Convention Center, with the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), which will incorporate Twitter feeds from CES – including the official #CES tag – as well as 2011 CES news from show attendees, bloggers, and exhibitors, and will curate stills and video content from the show as well. Photos and videos of the MultiTouch Twitter Wall are available, respectively, at http://multitouch.fi/about-2/photos/ and http://multitouch.fi/about-2/videos/.

Surface computers linked via internet allow for new 'mixed-presence' collaboration

Surface computers linked via internet allow for new ‘mixed-presence’ collaboration — from ZDNet.com By Chris Jablonski

Researchers at Purdue and the University of Manitoba (in Canada) have developed software that enables users to use tabletop-sized touch displays to analyze complex datasets interactively over the Internet for business and homeland security applications.

The team created a software framework called Hugin that allows for more than one display to connect and share the same space over the Internet. They describe it as a “novel layer-based graphical framework for mixed-presence synchronous collaborative visualization over digital tabletop displays.”

The large displays of surface computers like the one Microsoft introduced in 2007 already allow for multi-user collaboration, but until now, they haven’t been connected for over the internet for mixed-presence interaction.

Top 10 finalists from Slate's 21st Century Classrooms -- Nov-2010

Also see:
Modernizing the American Classroom — at Digitized.com by David Pierce

Slate is holding a contest to redesign and modernize the American classroom. A ton of interesting ideas have come out, and they’ve whittled the submissions to the Top 10. All are incredibly smart, and most involve a lot of integrated and intelligent technology.

ACM Interactive Tabletops and Surfaces -- Conference Program

http://www.jawbone.com/product-jambox-videos

IK Multimedia introduces iKlip: A universal mic stand adapter for iPad

— originally found at Bob Sutor’s blog

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Video for Table Connect

Video of Table Connect product

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First mock-ups of the final table! — from iphonetable.blogspot.com; originally from DVICE.com
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…lag-free full HD 1080p HDMI wireless video/audio transmission is now a reality.

— from WHDI Kits Explored: Asus WiCast, brite-View HDelight; thanks to Crudbasher’s Wireless HDMI Comes of Age for this item!


Diagram showing an integrated transmitter implementation of the WHDI standard…

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Technology integration for elementary schools — from Edutopia.org by Grace Rubenstein
High-tech teaching tips for little tykes.

The digital-technology revolution was slow to infiltrate the ranks of America’s public high schools and slower still to trickle down to the ranks of our elementary institutions. But the good news is that high-tech teaching is finally providing a potent shot in the arm to the elementary learning process. Exhibit A is Forest Lake Elementary School, in Columbia, South Carolina. Its classrooms hum with energy as the young students tap out blog posts, operate interactive whiteboards, and take part in other tech-enabled lessons.

Here are tips from Paulette Williams, technology-integration specialist and veteran teacher, on how to make the most of digital tools in elementary schools.

West Michigan schools catch up to ‘digital kids’ with new technology— from mlive.com by Kym Reinstadler |  The Grand Rapids Press

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