The Series A is a new product category that has emerged over the past few years.
This is an LED poster that needs only your digital media and a power source and is ideally suited for indoor public display in retail locations that demand ultra-fine to fine-pixel resolution for close-proximity viewing.
At roughly the height and width of an exceptionally tall person, a single Series A poster will command the attention of anyone walking by or through a shop or restaurant. An acrylic overlay helps protect the Series A from a little too much attention from the hands-on crowd.
Pixel density ranges from 151,825 and increases to 251,255 pixels per square meter. Refresh rates are a smooth 1920 Hz in panels that can be positioned alongside each other and share content like an extended desktop.
Install the Series A to a wall using 4 corner anchors or suspend it from a ceiling bracket. Choose from portrait or landscape or anything in-between. If your venue or rental department calls for something portable, check off an adjustable floor stand and a carry case to protect the Series A between shows.
Media is handled by a NovaStar Taurus TB6 controller. That means either a LAN or WiFi connection for most applications or even 4G. Video and image files reside on an 8 GB card and if a network of displays is being deployed across the city or around the world, content can be centrally-administered through an annual
NovaStar VNNOX cloud publishing account.
Investing in an LED poster will provide a predictable return for most any business that is compelled to rotate printed media through seasonal buying cycles, product promotions and sales. If no greater use of the Series A is made beyond replacing ordinary static posters, the cost of that printing and installation is known and each of those events can be used to fully amortize this purchase.
By now, you should be viewing your old static signage with the same sense of quiet resignation that someone feels after finally throwing out their fax machine. It was really great to have for all those years but now everyone just emails.