K in Kortrijk, a brand new shopping centre, recently celebrated its grand opening with a week full of special activities. The eye-catcher was without any doubt the High-Definition building projection on the main tower of the shopping centre. In collaboration with ASP BlueSquare, ACT Lighting Design and Prismax, our audiovisual department used their know-how to realise this project.

On each side of the building, we used 2 Barco HD30 projectors with a Coolux Pandora’s Box server system.

The project encountered two major problems:

  1. We had to create a network between the two locations of the projectors and servers.

    • At the south-side, we had an apartment at our disposal, where 2 projectors were placed towards the building, and where the crew was located to manage the whole set-up.
    • At the east-side, we had to build a 9 meter high tower, leaving us with a 200 meters distance from the apartment.

    Thanks to our networking knowledge and experience, we were able to apply the solution that gave the best performance results, at a reasonably low cost.

  2. Furthermore, we had to create a perfect map of the building on the Coolux system. Since every video was created to interact with the building structure, a perfect mapping of the building relief was an absolute requirement.

Take a look at the video below, and see how everything turned out for the best…

The last few months, Create has invested quite a deal to upgrade our full-HD Audiovisual gear. Here is a quick list of some of the equipment that was added to our rental department:

  • Barco HD8, 8500 Ansilumens 1920 * 1080 projectors
  • Sony ex1 Full HD 3ccd camera
  • Pandora’s BOX, Full HD media server, HD sdi, dual DVI in, 3600 * 1200 out
  • 1km gefen fibre optic

secec 2008

We also invested in 4 new Holografic iWindow touch systems. If you are looking for an eyecatcher on a tradeshow, this is what you are looking for.

holografic iwindow

Extra video:

Holografic iWindow projection system, with internal interactive foil

Since a few years full HD widescreens setups have become a standard in the event world. More and more clients require several pip’s combined with powerpoints, dvd’s, HD video’s,….

We have been looking into several solutions lately. In this article we describe the Pandora’ Box from Coolux

Widescreen setup with Barco Viewscape

This is the kind of widescreen setup we are trying to achieve.

Coolux pandora’s box

In Belgium the Pandora’s box is being distributed by Audiovisual Lighting in Lebbeke. Luc is very nice guy and he gave us quite an impressive demo of the Pandora’s box. The Pandora’s box is a so called “media server”, a software solution running on Windows XP, that allows you to control a complete show, in real time.

There is a player and a server version of the setup. The player is a lightweight version of the server-edition, that can be installed on any pc. The server version is a total hardware solution combined with the software.

At this moment, the server consists of a Quad Core highend pc with RAID storage, and a dual-dvi output. (1920 * 1080 per screen). Multiple servers can be combined to create massive wide screen projections.

With the pandora’s box you can totally manipulate your show. Edge blending, frame blending, masking, key effects, real time 3D render, are only the tip of the iceberg of functions that are included.

Pandora’s box can be controlled from the manager software on a laptop (timeline based) or from a Chamsys controller, although we did find the chamsys a lot more difficult.

The Pandora’s Box has proven itself many times in a lot of live events like concerts, live TV-broadcasts, etc… which makes us feel rather confident in the performances of this high-tech beauty.

How will we deal with live inputs, you ask? We need to able to control external Powerpoint-presentations and camera sources. The ages that every second was planned in advance are long past. We need total flexibility on location.

Like every software-based media server, external sources are integrated by capture cards. This causes a tiny bit of delay, but Coolux seems to have done a good job minimizing it. The Pandora’s Box has an optional 2 * HD SDI capture card, that is able to show a full-HD live input with only two frames delay. This is a result, worth comparing to the old Diventix and Barco Viewscape with SD!

For data capture, the Pandora’s Box has a dual DVI/VGA capture card available. All live inputs appear as graphics layers in the control software. Tthe amount of layers depends on the version. We used a 4 video/ 8 graphics layer version which is plenty to deliver excellent support.

We connected a laptop with a Powerpoint-presentation to the Pandora’s Box on a 1024 by 786 resolution. Unscaled it looked quite good, but when we downscaled and upscaled pixels got lost and small fonts became harder to read.

We are talking about powerpoint, so I guess not everyone will use small fonts. If you have two edge blended projectors connected to a server, both running 1024*786, there’s a good chance you will have to downscale your Powerpoint source, otherwise you won’t see your background image and some pixel loss will happen.

If your projectors support higher resolutions, you can run Powerpoints on 1024 * 768 and show them unscaled. According to Coolux the delays are 5 frames max.  So if audio is included in the Powerpoint, you have to be sure to keep the delay in mind on that as well.

Conclusion:

It looks like Coolux has done a great job on the Pandora’s Box. For less then EUR 20 000 you can buy a total hardware/software event solution, including dual HD/SDI capture, dual-dvi capture, soft edge, frame blending, etc… This is a lot cheaper then comparable products, like the Barco Encore and Vista Spyder.

Of course there are still a few issues that need to be solved but the software is constantly being updated, and updates are for free when you buy a server solution.