Archive

Archive for the ‘Live Data’ Category

Updates to News Services

June 30th, 2010

Recently we made a change to how our News is delivered to our Live Content Elements. Due to this change, there may be some instances where your news may appear to become stale and not update. If this occurs, simply reboot your appliance, or restart the Rise Display Network Service on your Appliance, and everything will begin updating normally. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact our Support Team at support@risevision.com.

Thanks!

Live Data, Support

Digital Displays at Li Koon Chun Finance Learning Centre

May 6th, 2010

Customer Overview

Established in 1967, the University of Toronto Mississauga provides undergraduate and graduate studies and is the second largest division of the University of Toronto, Canada’s largest university. The university is set upon a park-like campus on the Credit River, approximately 33 kilometers west of Downtown Toronto.

The Hazel McCallion Academic Learning Centre, UTM’s library, is a central place for the students to meet and study. Tucked inside this library is the Li Koon Chun Finance Learning Centre, a new, state-of-the-art facility. Programming is provided on a variety of topics related to the stock markets and financial literacy for students, faculty, and staff of UTM. The Centre offers 32 computer stations and four Bloomberg terminals for student use and training purposes. In addition, the Centre is used as a unique classroom for students in the department of management.

Project Summary

“There are a couple of finance courses and an international business course held in the Centre,” explains Michael Meth, the Centre’s director. “The management program is one of our biggest supporters, but because of our location in the library, we reach a lot of people on our campus.”

Because of this reach, it was important to the University that the Centre offered cutting-edge communication solutions. That’s where Rise Display comes in.

“The service level, the pricing, and the fact that our needs were met were the factors in choosing Rise,” says Mr. Meth. “We were told that we were Canada’s first eight-color stock ticker. That was a neat thing that Rise got to innovate with us.”

The Rise Solution

The University of Toronto Mississauga had already selected an AV integration partner to provide the Sharp LCD screens for the room, and asked Rise to help define the rest of the digital signage solution along with the ticker. Rise worked closely with IT to build a media player that would support running a 2×1 video wall plus a separate single LCD screen from a server room nearly 1000 feet away. After the media player, video distribution system and LED ticker hardware components were defined, the creative staff went to work designing the content to give a broad overview of the markets worldwide.

The Final Result

The LED ticker, and all three LCDs, were installed and running for the Fall 2008 ribbon-cutting to greet the room’s donor and the media. A wall of windows lets library patrons see the technology from all angles. “The digital signage lets us push through market news, North American Exchange stock quotes and index data, and a live video feed from the Business News Network,” Mr. Meth says.

Mr. Meth has also found an effective way of utilizing the ticker at night, when the stock market is closed but the library is still open.

“We keep the closing prices running, but we also start running sports scores,” he says.

“I think people are pretty impressed by the digital signage,” says Mr. Meth. “People will often stand by the window and watch what’s going on the ticker and displays. Overall, they’ve been very favorably received.”

Digital Signage Software, Live Data

Temporary outage this morning…

March 29th, 2010

We had an incident today with one of our servers, where we discovered an issue with a database that required our attention ASAP. The corrective action resulted in the website and several players becoming frozen and unresponsive and upon discovering this, we quickly cancelled the corrective action. The outage occurred for 30 minutes from roughly 11:10 am EST until 11:40 am EST.

Everything is now up and running smoothly, however if you have any questions, please feel free to contact our support team via email at support@risevision.com.

We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience that this may have caused.

Digital Menu Boards, Digital Signage Software, LCD Displays, Live Data, Software-as-a-Service, Support

Incorporating Flight Arrival and Departure information on your Digital Signage

October 27th, 2009

I was just talking with Derrek Wright of Conducive Technology about their product offering. They are making Flight Arrival and Departure information available via widgets to Digital Signage owners and have already deployed solutions with two of our Network Operators!

Here is an example of their widget at work SFO Departures. If you are interested in learning more about them or incorporating into one of your projects, click here for the details on how to get started.

Digital Signage Software, Live Data, Software-as-a-Service , ,

Incorporating live data into your digital signage.

July 28th, 2009

Incorporating live data such as sports scores, news headlines, stock quotes, and weather into your digital signage content is a great way to make your display a destination and keep your visitors entertained.  Most digital signage software providers offer services or integrate with 3rd party suppliers to offer this real-time information at a cost or supply tools to incorporate generic RSS feeds.

Example of screen design using live data from Rise Vision

Example of screen design using live data from Rise Vision

Many end users question costs for licensed data because they can go grab similar information for free from Google or Yahoo for free.  Why is this free – because those websites are trying to attract your traffic for the pay-for-clicks revenue.  So while those data services may be free to you as the visitor someone is paying for you to view that data.  If you read the user terms for these websites many of them specifically say it is for personal use and not allowed for public display so do your homework if you opt to go this route.  Another fear with using “free” data from the web is that it could be unreliable or go away at any time.  What is to prevent that website from changing their design and removing the data service you are using.

In summary using live data is a great way to make your display stand out, just make sure you use a legitimate, authorized source so you don’t find yourself with blank spots on your screens or even worse a letter from the owner of that information demanding restitution.

A list of some sources of data can be found at http://creativenation.blogspot.com/2009/07/syndicated-content-news-sports-etc-for.html

Digital Signage Software, Live Data , ,

Ticker tape adorns Wachovia building

May 25th, 2007

news-Wachovia_thumbCHARLOTTE — The newest addition to Uptown Charlotte’s streetscape is a ticker tape above the new Wachovia Securities’ office.

“Who would’ve imagined a ticker tape in Uptown Charlotte?” asked Charlotte Mayor Pat McCrory.

Now you can find out all of the latest news and stock information by taking a trip to the corner of College Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

[Now you can find out all of the latest news and stock information by taking a trip to the corner of Church Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.]
Now you can find out all of the latest news and stock information by taking a trip to the corner of Church Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.
Charlotte is the second largest financial center in the country, next to New York City.

“It reminds me a little bit of Times Square in New York, but only better,” said Wachovia Chairman and Executive Officer Ken Thompson.

“We are replacing New York City, Ken, I hate to tell you that. We’re taking over and we’re proud of it,” joked McCrory.

A pre-grand opening ceremony was held Tuesday night.

“This office puts a face on Wachovia Securities in Uptown Charlotte,” said Marcia Tillotson, who helps direct the Uptown Wachovia Securities office. “A lot of brokerage firms for years have been buried in the high rise buildings. This puts us at street level. It gives us visibility and exposure for our brand.”

Wachovia customers can meet with financial planners at the new state of the art facility to discuss their futures. Some consider it a symbolic opening to the Queen City’s future.

“It shows how much our city has grown and how much it’s going to continue to grow in the future,” McCrory added.

The office won’t be officially open for another couple of weeks.
Contacts:

Todd Hemme

Rise Vision, Inc.

913-538-6988

todd.hemme@risevision.com

Alison Harris

Harris Media Services

207-829-4500

alison@harrismediaservices.com

Live Data

Trading Spaces, B-School Edition

October 30th, 2006

news-Trading-Spaces_thumbIn one, students take on the roles of either analysts or traders, with the analysts forecasting the earnings per share for several fictitious companies and then broadcasting these forecasts to traders, who are responsible for managing a portfolio of those stocks as well as bonds.

Still, in these days of desktop access to financial information, the trading rooms may be on their way to the land of anachronisms. At Carnegie Mellon, one of the first schools to open a trading room, the trading room was dismantled after the school decided a physical space devoted just to trading was unnecessary once the school began requiring all students to own a laptop.
The Atmosphere of the Floor

Sanjay Srivastava, who was a professor at Carnegie Mellon when he and a colleague developed the trading simulator software FTS (Financial Trading System) in the late 1980s, said simulations can now be run from any large classroom.

One downside of the dismantling, Srivastava says, was that the trading room had also served as a focal point for students interested in trading careers. That type of enthusiasm is difficult to recreate, he says, which is why the rooms serve a purpose more than just for show.

The University of Iowa’s Tippie College of Business used to have a trading lab, but a representative says that with advancements in technology, having the space devoted to just one purpose became unnecessary. Now trading courses are taught in computer classrooms where trading programs share hard-drive space with specialized accounting and other software programs.
Beyond the Books

Srivastava says Pittsburgh-based FTS has about 60 active university users, about 20 in a trading room setting, with the remainder using it to create a virtual trading room via the Web. Srivastava says he has seen an uptick in business over the past few years as more trading rooms are built, but the biggest change, he says, is where the inquiries are coming from.

Previously, the typical adopter of FTS was a professor interested in using technology in the classroom to teach concepts not well-suited to textbooks. More recently, he’s seen more interest from university deans, development officers, and other administrators.

Indeed, a session at last year’s annual meeting of the Association for Collegiate Business Schools and Programs included a session on trading labs conducted by a representative from Rise Softools (now Rise Vision), a Kansas City-area provider of electronic display solutions. The session description highlighted how trading labs are becoming “powerful tools” in both recruitment and fund raising.
Your Name in Lights

Rise Vision’s Lance Wipf says several Rise clients have found trading labs to be investments with unusually high returns. The money spent to build the lab (which can range from a hundred thousand to a few million dollars) is recouped within a few years by the increased donor contributions and increased exposure for the school.

Many schools have found that trading labs can provide a tangible focus for a capital campaign, as alumni who have gone on to make their fortunes in finance have proven willing to fund campus trading rooms, especially when naming rights come as part of the package.

One of the earliest donations in the $17 million capital campaign currently under way at the University of Richmond’s Robins School of Business was from University trustee Stephen M. Lessing, managing director and head of client relationship management for Lehman Brothers, who pledged $900,000 for the Lessing Capital Markets Trading Room. At the University of Rhode Island, an alumnus donated $250,000 for the creation of the Bruce S. Sherman Trading Room, part of a $10.6 million facility renovation at the College of Business.
Contacts:

Todd Hemme

Rise Vision, Inc.

913-538-6988

todd.hemme@risevision.com

Alison Harris

Harris Media Services

207-829-4500

alison@harrismediaservices.com

Live Data