PAPERSHOW IS PORTABLE WHITEBOARD, PRESENTATION, MORE
It
all began with the blackboard that lets you write on a large surface
for all to see and that can be easily erased. To this day,
blackboards continue to be found mostly in schools. It's how
teachers communicate their ideas to their students in the classroom
setting. However chalk is can be fairly messy so the whiteboard was
invented in hopes of replacing them. But for schools, blackboards
mostly remain the surface of choice. Whiteboards however have become
very popular in the office environment. Colors are more vivid
against the white surface and there's virtually no mess when using
them. The next logical step was to make the whiteboard go digital
and that's exactly what PAPERSHOW is all about.
The PAPERSHOW system is comprised of three components. The first is
a Bluetooth digital pen that wirelessly transmits what is being
written onto a sheet of special paper which is the second component.
The interactive paper has frames of microscopic points which can be
seen by the pen's infrared micro camera. As you write, the pen uses
them as reference locators making it possible to track its position
which translates into what it is that you are writing. The third
component is the USB key which plugs into any available USB port on
your computer. This acts as a receiver that takes the pen's tracking
information and converts it into whatever you are drawing. The
Bluetooth pen's range is about 20 feet from the USB Key.
The USB receiver also contains the PAPERSHOW software so no
installation is required to use the pen. Just plug it in and begin
writing. When you remove the USB key, nothing remains on the
computer. This is especially nice if you know there's a computer
waiting at your destination. Just plug it in and you're ready to go.
The USB key also has 250 megabytes of memory so that your entire
presentation can be loaded onto the key, making it a truly
transportable device.
PAPERSHOW also has the ability to import any PowerPoint presentation
you create. Just select the import option and your PowerPoint file
will be converted into a PAPERSHOW presentation. Using a color
printer (the printout must be blue so that the pen's camera can see
it), just print the converted PowerPoint file onto the PAPERSHOW
paper. From there, you can control the entire PowerPoint
presentation by simply tapping the pen on any of the paper's
navigation menu items on the right side of the page. Other icons on
the paper let you control the pen's color, line thickness, create
geometric shapes such as circles and squares, and even draw arrows
as well as perfectly straight lines. There's also an Undo and
Privacy which lets you immediately blank the screen display until
you are ready to proceed.
Images you draw onto the paper can instantly appear on a projection
screen, a flat screen TV or on any computer's screen running most
any of the popular web conferencing applications. So people in the
same room or anyone connected to the Internet can immediately see
whatever you draw on the paper.
There are options that let you convert your drawings to a PDF file
and the ability to email whatever it is that you draw. PAPERSHOW
currently works on any Windows PC. A newer version that will run on
both Windows and Macintosh computers is planned for release in the
first quarter of 2010. The PAPERSHOW Kit ($199.99) includes the
Digital Pen, USB key, a sample of Interactive paper, a binder that
can hold the interactive paper via its pre-punched holes, and a
small case to hold the pen and USB key. A different radio frequency
can be selected so as to not interfere in case more than one
PAPERSHOW is being used in the same location. Included are several
different pairs of color rings to match each pen to its
corresponding USB key.
www.papershow.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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