Interactive Displays
Touch-enabled flat panels and collaboration displays engineered for classrooms, training rooms, and modern meeting spaces where the screen is a working surface, not just a viewing surface.
What the system does
20-point multi-touch
Multiple users can write, draw, and interact on the same display simultaneously without latency. Capacitive or infrared touch technology engineered for natural pen-and-finger interaction.
Native whiteboarding
Built-in whiteboard software with infinite canvas, multi-page support, shape recognition, handwriting-to-text conversion, and save-to-PDF or save-to-Teams export with one tap.
Wireless screen sharing
AirPlay, Miracast, Chromecast, and platform-native sharing for guests and BYOD devices. No cables, no dongles, no waiting. Multi-source split-screen for side-by-side comparison.
Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms certified
Native integration with Microsoft Teams and Zoom for video collaboration. Touch-enabled meeting controls, in-meeting whiteboarding, and full participant interaction from the display surface.
Instant-on Android compute
Built-in Android compute eliminates the need for a separate PC for basic whiteboarding and content review. External PC slot (OPS or USB-C) for full Windows or macOS workflows when needed.
Enterprise device management
MDM integration, remote firmware updates, usage analytics, and centralized policy management across an entire fleet of displays. Designed for IT teams managing 10 to 1,000+ units.
Inside a typical build
Component selection varies by project scope, environment, and budget. The list below reflects products and platforms commonly deployed for this solution category.
Display hardware
- 4K interactive flat panels — 55", 65", 75", 86", and 98"
- Capacitive touch (premium feel, fine pen accuracy) or IR touch (cost-effective)
- Anti-glare and anti-fingerprint surface treatments
- Tempered glass with 7H+ scratch resistance for classroom use
- Interactive flat-panel series
Compute & operating system
- Built-in Android (typically v11+) for native whiteboard and basic productivity
- OPS (Open Pluggable Specification) PC slot for full Windows compute
- USB-C compute connection for Mac and modern laptops
- Centralized device management via MDM or vendor cloud portal
Collaboration software
- Native vendor whiteboard apps (Samsung Flip, ViewBoard, EShare, etc.)
- Microsoft Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms certified bundles
- Wireless presentation receivers (ClickShare, Mersive Solstice)
- Cross-platform note export — PDF, image, OneNote, Google Drive, Teams
Mounting & accessories
- Wall-mount, mobile cart, height-adjustable trolley, or floor-stand options
- Pen and eraser accessory holders integrated with mounting
- Camera and microphone bars for video collaboration use cases
- Cable management and power distribution for clean classroom integration
Interactive display size guide
Where this gets deployed
K-12 classrooms, university lecture halls, and training centers replacing chalkboards and projectors with interactive surfaces that support lesson recording, student response, and content export.
Corporate L&D rooms, onboarding spaces, and skills training facilities where instructor-led sessions benefit from collaborative whiteboarding and session recording.
Hospital multi-disciplinary team rooms, medical education spaces, and clinical training centers where case discussions and procedure planning happen around a shared screen.
Ministerial briefing rooms, intelligence analysis spaces, and command training environments where multiple stakeholders annotate plans and maps together.
Architecture studios, engineering review rooms, and product design spaces where teams sketch, annotate CAD reviews, and iterate on concepts together at the screen.
Executive workshop rooms, strategy planning spaces, and innovation labs where senior teams want a working surface, not just a passive presentation screen.
Interactive Displays — common questions
What size interactive display should we buy for a typical classroom?
For a standard 25 to 35-student classroom, 75 to 86 inches is the standard. The driver is back-row legibility — text needs to be readable from the furthest seat. The general rule is: maximum viewing distance in meters should not exceed display size in inches divided by 8 to 10. So a 75 inch display works up to roughly 7.5 to 9 meters back-row distance, and an 86 inch up to 8.5 to 10 meters. For lecture halls and large spaces, 98 inch displays or LED video walls become necessary.
Capacitive vs infrared touch — what's the practical difference?
Capacitive (similar to a phone or iPad screen) gives the most natural pen feel, sub-millimeter accuracy, and better palm rejection. It costs more and is the standard for premium classrooms and design studios. Infrared (IR) touch uses sensors at the edge of the screen and works with any object including fingers and styluses. IR is significantly cheaper, supports more simultaneous touch points, and is the standard for budget-conscious deployments. For most classroom and training use cases, IR is more than sufficient. For design studios where fine annotation matters, capacitive is worth the premium.
Do we need separate computers, or do the built-in Android apps suffice?
Built-in Android is sufficient for whiteboarding, web browsing, video playback, basic productivity, and wireless screen sharing — which covers most classroom and meeting use cases. Add an OPS (Open Pluggable Specification) PC slot when you need full Windows, specialized education software, or domain-managed user accounts. The OPS slot lets you upgrade compute independently of the display, so you can run a 5-year display with a 3-year refresh on the PC inside it.
How does the display work with Microsoft Teams Rooms?
Teams Rooms certified interactive displays include front-of-room camera, microphone, and Teams Rooms compute as an integrated bundle. Touch-enabled meeting controls, in-meeting whiteboarding with native Microsoft Whiteboard sync, and full participant interaction from the display surface. The same hardware can be used in non-Teams modes — Android whiteboard, BYOD presentation, HDMI source — by switching mode from the touch panel. For Zoom Rooms certified hardware, the integration is similar with Zoom Whiteboard.
Can multiple students or participants write on the display at the same time?
Yes. Standard 20-point touch supports up to 20 simultaneous touch contacts, which means around 4 to 10 students can write at the same time (each using one or two contact points). Premium models support 40-point touch. For larger collaboration, the wireless screen sharing feature lets students contribute from their own devices to the shared display, removing the physical access limit entirely.
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