Skip to main content

Barco launces new platform for the LCD video wall market

Barco Unisee is an LCD video wall with a single uniform view designed to provide faster installation, easier servicing and increased reliability. It has been designed for control rooms, corporate lobbies, experience centres, brand showrooms and meeting rooms. The bezel-less LCD video wall offers an uninterrupted viewing experience as well as higher colour and brightness uniformity both inside the display and over the entire wall. In addition, its new mounting structure eases installation, servicing, and
February 9, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

20 Barco Unisee is an LCD video wall with a single uniform view designed to provide faster installation, easier servicing and increased reliability. It has been designed for control rooms, corporate lobbies, experience centres, brand showrooms and meeting rooms.

The bezel-less LCD video wall offers an uninterrupted viewing experience as well as higher colour and brightness uniformity both inside the display and over the entire wall. In addition, its new mounting structure eases installation, servicing, and upgrading.

The NoGap technology reduces the visual impact of the inter-tile gap, enabling users to spread content over multiple video wall tiles without the disturbance of a bezel.

Sense X − Barco’s automatic, colour and brightness calibration system – aims to ensure that the complete wall produces a balanced image at all times.

UniSee Connect, the software platform, assigns and calibrates the panels and acts as the single point of connection for remote diagnostics and control.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Machine vision - cameras for intelligent traffic management
    January 25, 2012
    For some, machine vision is the coming technology. For others, it’s already here. Although it remains a relative newcomer to the ITS sector, its effects look set to be profound and far-reaching. Encapsulating in just a few short words the distinguishing features of complex technologies and their operating concepts can sometimes be difficult. Often, it is the most subtle of nuances which are both the most important and yet also the most easily lost. Happily, in the case of machine vision this isn’t the case:
  • Just Zip it! Lindsay takes to the road
    October 10, 2018
    Greater vehicle connectivity is going to have huge implications for traffic management. David Arminas climbed aboard a Lindsay Road Zipper to see what this might mean in future As vice president of barrier specialist QMB Canada, Marc-Andre Seguin is sanguine about the future for moveable barriers. On the one hand, it looks good. The oft-stated advantage of moveable barriers is that the systems are cheaper to install than adding a lane or two to a highway or bridge. Directional changes to lanes can boost
  • Industrial patch panel industry first
    May 23, 2012
    Belden has introduced a new Modular Industrial Patch Panel (MIPP) to its Belden and Hirschmann product lines that achieves what the company claims is a new first for the industry. The MIPP, which is a termination panel for cables that need to be connected to active equipment such as switches, industrial Ethernet devices and any other device with an Ethernet link, combines copper and fibre management into one solution. This makes installation quick and easy, saving time and significantly reducing set-up cost
  • Less travel aggravation to blunt Aggieland fans’ motivation
    June 17, 2016
    Returning travel times to normal within two hours of the end of a major football game was the challenge facing College Station, Adam Lyons explains how this was achieved. College Station, TX, also known as ‘Aggieland’, is located right in the middle of the Dallas/Fort Worth, San Antonio and Houston triangle making the city accessible to over 14 million Texans within less than a four-hour drive. One of the biggest draws to this area is Texas A&M University (TAMU) and the Aggie football games in the fall, mea