Provider of network-connected digital signage display software has released its new artistic layout module, a new feature of the Userful Network Video Wall that lets end-users arrange any mix of displays into a wide range of artistic configurations using a browser.
March 6, 2015
Userful Corp., a provider of network-connected digital signage display software, has released its new artistic layout module, a new feature of the Userful Network Video Wall that lets end-users arrange any mix of displays into a wide range of artistic configurations using a browser, the company announced.
Available in the latest version 7.4 release, the artistic layout mode supports any angle rotation and any placement any individual displays within the video wall, even overlapping displays, according to Userful. Customers can also use any size and shape of commercial or consumer display.
Userful lets customers achieve artistic layouts with any display and achieve alignment and bezel correction, as well as and color calibration, through its browser-based control center, the company said, letting end-users deploy and manage a wide range of display designs across up to 25 screens, all powered by a single core i7 PC.
The company says its Userful Network Video Wall is "the first of its kind to deliver 4K content in real time over the network through a single PC."
"We've been looking forward to releasing this feature to the rapidly growing group of industry experts who are embracing our revolutionary network-based approach to video walls. Full artistic control is one of the most exciting aspects of the solution," said Tim Griffin, founder and CTO of Userful. "Until now, many AV and digital signage companies are forced to find different solutions for different types of video walls, one for a two by two, another for a five by five and another still for an artistic layout. With this release, we can now offer one solution able to meet the needs of just about any video wall configuration from small to large--a single solution with the same hardware and software across the board."