Cannes Lions TouchWall
One of the advertising industry’s oldest and most prestigious events is the Cannes Lions, a trade show and awards show ending this weekend in the south of France. There’s always lots going on at Cannes, even this year when the economy is on the ropes, attendance is down, and the lavish partying for which Cannes is know has become unseemly. Since it’s such a big event, it’s still a great opportunity for agencies to showcase what’s next for the industry.

Without a doubt the most exciting vision was brought to Cannes by the LA agency Schematic, as part of their sponsorship of the show. Ever technologically forward, they developed for the show a huge multi-touch wall that visitors could use to explore the schedule and maps of the event, find other event attendees and build an instant social network, etc. The interface was very much the futuristic depictions from Minority Report, further proof that the technology and computing visions from that film are becoming more viable every year.

One of the coolest features of the wall was that it could recognize people’s identities via an RFID chip embedded in their show badge. This enabled people to get personalized content and emails sent to them without having to enter any information. A lot of this information, such as walking directions to a particular restaurant were extremely useful, especially since almost everyone at a show like Cannes Lions has a Blackberry or iPhone or some other mobile email device.
This video, which is an interview and demo from John Barton, the lead architect on the project, probably gives the best sense of how the wall worked of any I’ve seen.
I also found some cool images posted by the team that show a little of the behind-the-scenes. This one shows some test imagery and you can see the basic desktop PCs that run it, where the cover is removed at the bottom. But more interesting, if you look closely you can see the 6 different projection images that are edge-blended together because color calibration is not completed.

While this sort of system is probably not going to be cost-effective for other companies to deploy at tradeshows in the near future, it’s an interface that certainly rivals the multi-touch set piece that CNN got so much attention for in their election coverage.
Whether or not large format multi-touch pervades day-to-day computing like Minority Report predicted, one thing that is for sure is that we are going to be seeing more and more of these large multi-touch systems in public spaces and other locations (like TV studios) where the still considerable investment required makes sense in an ROI analysis.
posted by josiah at 10:13 AM
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At Operand, we design and develop interactive experiences for a living but we are also users of them. Throughout our daily lives we search for and use every digital experience we can find that we consider “interactive”. Our work and blog are founded on our somewhat unique view of what interactivity means. In brief, we think it's bigger and more expansive than most other people seem to. We have define six levels of interactivity and blog about digital interactive experiences within art, architecture, advertising, exhibits, and elsewhere that we feel succeed at elevating interactivity.
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August 28th, 2009 at 5:16 pm
That wasn’t test imagery. That was actually thirteen feet of Quake3 running at 125fps. I wept tears of joy that night.
November 5th, 2009 at 2:49 pm
[...] of the final projects he describes is The Cannes Lions Touchwall, a 5′ x 12′ screen that constitutes a digital watering hole ~ the wall offers many [...]