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Corporate boardrooms, office hallways, building lobbies, shopping malls,
museums, and hotel conference rooms all have one thing in common: visitors
who need information. Whether the dot com dreams materialized or not, the
impact on creative office space and environments completely captured the
world. The sophistication of clients, employees, visitors, attendees, and the
general public at large have all increased—they expect the future now.
Luminoz Commercial Interior Screens deliver that future in ways that impress
and often surprise the intended audience.

The Scenario: Corporate conference room, large beautiful windows overlooking
magnificent city views, prime office real estate and costly corporate clout.
The Problem: A major client is coming for a conference room video
presentation. Do you draw the curtains, turn off the lights and hope that
everyone can read their documents and see their notes? To make matters worse
the conference table is very long, with the screen in the center. Who gets
assigned the "good view seats"? Will the people on the far ends of the table
be able to see? Does all this technology look crammed in the space or like
an afterthought? While stepping in front of the screen to write or point at
specific images will the view be blocked? Will the presenters be blinded by
the projector as they try to make eye contact with the clients? The list
goes on: maintenance, cost, function, durability.
Luminoz focuses on the technology of its screens so that they address these
common projection display problems:
Wide Viewing Cones:
There's not a bad seat in the house whether you are seated front and center
or at the far end.
High Gain/Brightness:
You can leave the lights on, because brighter screens work well in bright
rooms. We can even make screens for indirect sunlight on store front
windows, places more demanding than the average boardroom.
Contrast Options:
Select our enhanced contrast screens to bring out the deeper blacks and
whiter whites of your data and video content.
High Resolution:
Resolution matters. Since 1998 projectors have been progressing in a manner
similar to what we've come to expect from the computer industry. This
translates into more features for less money, all on a rapid schedule. High
resolution photos, digital video, and other content rely on a chain of high
resolution hardware or source equipment. It is a vital part of the chain
that these images are projected on high resolution screens.
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