
The e-sign will work without complex installation or customization, and is operational straight out of the box, without a wire in sight.
For many, it is the most essential of rituals: a strong cup of coffee that sets your wheels in motion. No matter the location, whether at home in the morning or in the office looking through daily reports, while finding your way around the airport or waiting patiently in a waiting room.
Now the same amount of energy it takes to prepare a cup of java can be used to power a real-time digital display – for a whopping 12 months! Onethree is the new digital sign from Visionect, developed on the company's energy-saving electronic paper technology. The latest in the line of Visionect's pioneering e-paper solutions, the Onethree is 99% more energy efficient than other displays. The first of the company's Place & Play family, the sign will work without complex installation or customization, and is operational straight out of the box.
Combining display, mounting hardware and built-in signage software in a single commercial device that is completely wire-free, the breakthrough Onethree brings life to the most demanding surfaces. Installing a real-time display in an elevator or on a glass partition of a busy office is no longer subject to heavy construction works, but is rather a simple matter of placing the display on the wall. Offering paperlike visibility thanks to its 13-inch E Ink® electronic paper screen, display supports all major content management systems, its open Application Programming Interface (API) making displaying content a simple matter of using a website address. All this in an eco-friendly way.
Not only is Onethree's casing made of aluminum and glass, all fully recyclable materials, the device is by far the greenest, most sustainable display on the market. It uses so little energy that a single minute it takes to boil a cup of water provides enough watt hours for a whole year's worth of the sign's uninterrupted functionality.
The product will start shipping in the fall of 2017, with the first limited batch of devices available mid-year.