The display brand decision carries more downstream consequence than most buyers account for. Panel performance matters. But the software platform, the support network and the integration capability of the chosen brand will shape how that investment performs across its entire operational lifespan.Samsung, LG and Sharp each hold significant s… Read More
Picture a Queensland cafe owner who has watched competitors install digital menu boards and decides to do the same. The screens go up. The content looks sharp. Then summer arrives and the window-facing display becomes unreadable in afternoon sun because the panel brightness was specified for indoor ambient lighting, not for a north-facing shopfront… Read More
The most common assumption buyers bring to an interactive whiteboard comparison is that one brand wins across all use cases. The search for the best interactive whiteboard proceeds as though best is a fixed quality rather than a relationship between a product and the environment it will serve. That assumption leads to research that confirms whichev… Read More
A small restaurant group in South Australia invests in digital menu boards for two locations. The hardware looks good. The installation goes smoothly. Then the manager tries to update a price across both sites at the same time and discovers the content management system requires individual login and update for each screen. What looked like a straig… Read More
In many organisations, teams still weigh print against digital. While both serve a purpose, their limitations are not the same.This difference becomes clearer with use. What appears simple at first often changes as information updates increase.Recognising operational implications helps organisations avoid false assu… Read More