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Trends and Predictions for 2008

We will be going into more detail on our “Trends and Predictions for 2008” at a number of events to senior industry figures in Q1 2008, for the time being though, here’s our take on what we will see in the digital out of home industry in 2008…

Trends

Predictions

6 Comments (Open | Close)

6 Comments To "Trends and Predictions for 2008"

#1 Comment By Kerstin Laveatz On 8 January 2008 @ 15:05 @670

Hi Adrian,
as provider of digital audio solutions for background music and POS radio/ internet radio systems (by the way all systems reporting status back to the web such as WeAreON), digital signage strangely seems to leave out the aspects of Audio in many respects.
Everybody is playing background music, in retail and hospitality, hardly anybody snchronzizes it with the digital signage output.
Also strange: Audiosystems and services seems to be valued so much less than Videosystems and services, although it’s perceived on a much broader scale.
There also seems to be a shift from using background music to playing foreground music and creating a brand through music.

How do you see the trends on that?
best regards from Hamburg Germany

#2 Comment By Yasmin Hughs On 8 January 2008 @ 15:23 @683

Dear Adrian,

We have seen in you posts several remarks to support devices and appliances instead of PCs.
I will take the liberty of suggesting you to post something especifically on this topic, a small analysis of the products in the market, maybe even some recomendations…
I am sure many non-IT people like me will appreciate it.

Thanks a lot.

Yasmin

#3 Comment By Dave Haynes On 9 January 2008 @ 01:46 @115

Computing devices with no moving parts definitely eliminates much, but not all, the risk of failure in the field. But we’ve all seen power supplies die, so the risk is not completely eliminated. And software, especially hastily written and nominally QA’d software, will stop any appliance in its tracks as quickly as a full-blown PC … maybe quicker.

My concern with the forecast for appliances to conquer the industry is I never see them, other than Cisco’s box. There are little boxes that will play out standard def video, which looks like absolute hell on big or even mid-sized flat panels. And they have nowhere near the horespower to play Flash.

Then there are companies who call small PCs appliances, or package up small form factor PC boards into little cases and call them appliances.

So I am with you on the no moving parts thing, but I am not sure how much is out there that truly qualifies as an appliance. Aopen is showing a fanless micro mini PC at CES this week. With a solid state memory drive and an embedded OS, that’s pretty close to an appliance.

#4 Comment By Bill Barr On 10 January 2008 @ 01:07 @088

You are dreaming in 4D. I have been through many product evolutions, BW TV Color, cable to ATSC tuners, C-band dishes to 18″ dishes and it takes many many years to get to where you are predicting. Sure we can make Linux boxes, but they will not have the functionality of Windows boxes, HDD drives have many many more read/write capabilities than flash drives and flash is poor man’s digital signage. Digital Signage is HDTV content with hardware and software acceleration and that is larger disk drives and on Windows OS who have a better and cheaper codec than MPEG.

Also satellite mulicasting will outpace terrestrial when we get to HDTV. Can you imagine a 10 GB file to 300 medial players on a DSL unicast connection, it would take weeks. Wheras all 300 boxes can get that size of a file in 2 hours via a multicast satellite connection.

#5 Comment By Tim Godwin On 10 January 2008 @ 04:36 @233

I agree with your comments on the new formats within which screens will be implemented. I also agree that Bluetooth has not added clear value to a media/advertising proposition and will therefore fade off the scene.

Having run (and sold) companies in the shopping centre media market for nearly 15 years I think the value of the new format screen implementations is primarily that it allows the digital units to be placed at eye level (like six sheet posters) rather than ‘dropping from the ceilings’ or mounted on bulkheads. As such the proposition then stands and falls on content which will be increasingly ‘moving posters’ only.

There is still the danger, however, that these units will still be seen as ‘wallpaper’ by the brands/advertisers and I, therefore, believe that a major trend in 2008 will be the addition of ‘wow’ factors to screen implementations. In one area this will be reflected by the implementation of more genuine interactivity with the digital installs (ranging from simple touch screen type interactivity to interactive floor and wall projection to sophisticated image capture allowing the consumer to ‘appear’ in the featured advert. In another area this will involve new technologies such as glasses free 3D screens and directional sound.

I fear that only in this way will screen network owners be able to prove the value of digital to brands and perhaps more importantly establish digital at some decent form of premium over posters.

Regards

Tim

ps, if anyone wants to see implementations of the technologies referred to above drop me a line

#6 Comment By Mike Cole On 17 November 2008 @ 14:30 @646

I may be a bit biased here but I agree with Tim, large screens with touch will play an important role in this market. The opportunity to engage customers and measure usage are just a couple of the many benefits interactivity can bring to the party.

Regards Mike