UN unveils the world’s largest e-paper sign

The wall-sized digital information display was unveiled recently at the UN headquarters in New York. MpicoSys, Pervasive Displays and E Inks developed the technology using 231 e-Ink displays. Queen Máxima of the Netherlands and UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon officially unveiled the “eWall” during a general assembly of the UN last week. The wall was part of a renovation of a lounge by the Office of Metropolitan Architecture. It provides delegates with scheduling, news and other information, conveyed by high-resolution large-scale images or pictures that fade seamlessly into an unobtrusive wall when the system is turned off. “The eWall is an intricate combination of architectural, display and network engineering that stands about 6m wide with 231 tiled 7.4″ displays,” said a spokesman for the three companies. “These are arranged in a grid of 33 displays across by seven displays high. “With an overall resolution of 26,400×3,360 pixels the eWall is the largest E Ink-based ePaper display in the world. Yet it consumes little power to operate.” It uses E Ink’s Pearl film, Pervasive Displays display modules and MpicoSys’ electronics and control software. MpicoSys chief executive Peter Slikkerveer said: “We handled the electronics, software and mechanics and see this as the start of a new generation of e-paper products for information signage. The technology is similar to that used for Amazon and Kindle ebooks. “It’s a reflective black-and-white display: we didn’t want it to be too obtrusive but gently pervasive. It is the most paper-like technology and can be seen in ambient light.” Pervasive Displays’ founder Scott Soong said: “This delivers information without disturbing architectural harmony. With zero power to display the information, it is good for green buildings.” E Ink Holdings’ head of signage business Harit Doshi said: “The eWall is an example of E Ink enabling designers to deliver information where they never thought possible.” E Ink Holdings was founded 21 years ago by Taiwan paper-making and printing group YFY. Dutch company MpicoSys creates low-power, mini electronic systems. Pervasive Displays provides ultra-low-power, e-paper displays and reference designs....

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Open days to boast UK first kit combinations

Managing director Andy Spreag said: “Visitors will be able to see print and finishing in the same place. On the first day people will be able to bring their own files and put an Agfa Anapurna through is paces. “This will be the first time people in the UK will see the Mimaki JFX-500 industrial UV flatbed printer partnered with Zund cutting and finishing technology. It will also be a first for the Mimaki SUV printer and to see Agfa kit teamed up with Zund machines.” He added: “A unique element is the showcase of i-Sub Digital’s exclusive range of Digi-Foil products. Digi-Foil allows users of the Mimaki UJF range of UV printers to produce foiled effects identical to traditional hot and cold foiling processes, but as one-offs.” Spreag said the addition of foiled effects to mock-ups and proofs printed with the Mimaki UJF range would “increase the commercial opportunity” for printers. “Previously, being unable to apply traditional foils to mock-ups, proofs and short-run production jobs without incurring the cost and time penalties of having dies made and time on the presses has been a frustration across all print sectors. Not any more,” he added. Open days on 9-10 October at Agfa’s Leeds headquarters will centre around live demos of the Anapurna M2050 flatbed UV printer featuring six colours and white ink. The day will include automated finishing of print produced on the Anapurna on the Zund cutting system. A second set of open days, in Crewe, Cheshire on 16-17 October, will involve six “demo hubs”: a Mimaki JFX-500 industrial UV flatbed printing partnered with Zund cutting and finishing; Mimaki textile printing; New Mimaki SUV and latex printers; Mimaki solvent printers; Mimaki desktop UV decor printers; and Mimaki cutting solutions. The final open days, at Zund in St Albans, Herts, on dates to be confirmed in November, will flag up the latest Zund cutting and finishing systems. “You might have printers with the capacity to produce many hundreds of metres of print every hour, but without the ability to finish the print ready for delivery, whatever print capacity you have at your disposal is never going to be fully utilised,” said Spreag. Hampshire Flag Company recently installed a Zund G3 XL3200, said managing director Graham Wilkinson: “We have calculated that we would need to employ three more members of staff to cut textiles to replace the Zund machine when it is operating at maximum output.” Spreag said: “The open days have been designed to provide a clear insight into the opportunities for growth in the emerging markets that are being serviced by the latest developments in wide-format digital print equipment.” Contact I-Sub on 01536 415511...

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UN unveils the world’s largest e-paper sign

The wall-sized digital information display was unveiled recently at the UN headquarters in New York. MpicoSys, Pervasive Displays and E Inks developed the technology using 231 e-Ink displays. Queen Máxima of the Netherlands and UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon officially unveiled the “eWall” during a general assembly of the UN last week. The wall was part of a renovation of a lounge by the Office of Metropolitan Architecture. It provides delegates with scheduling, news and other information, conveyed by high-resolution large-scale images or pictures that fade seamlessly into an unobtrusive wall when the system is turned off. “The eWall is an intricate combination of architectural, display and network engineering that stands about 6m wide with 231 tiled 7.4″ displays,” said a spokesman for the three companies. “These are arranged in a grid of 33 displays across by seven displays high. “With an overall resolution of 26,400×3,360 pixels the eWall is the largest E Ink-based ePaper display in the world. Yet it consumes little power to operate.” It uses E Ink’s Pearl film, Pervasive Displays display modules and MpicoSys’ electronics and control software. MpicoSys chief executive Peter Slikkerveer said: “We handled the electronics, software and mechanics and see this as the start of a new generation of e-paper products for information signage. The technology is similar to that used for Amazon and Kindle ebooks. “It’s a reflective black-and-white display: we didn’t want it to be too obtrusive but gently pervasive. It is the most paper-like technology and can be seen in ambient light.” Pervasive Displays’ founder Scott Soong said: “This delivers information without disturbing architectural harmony. With zero power to display the information, it is good for green buildings.” E Ink Holdings’ head of signage business Harit Doshi said: “The eWall is an example of E Ink enabling designers to deliver information where they never thought possible.” E Ink Holdings was founded 21 years ago by Taiwan paper-making and printing group YFY. Dutch company MpicoSys creates low-power, mini electronic systems. Pervasive Displays provides ultra-low-power, e-paper displays and reference designs....

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Open days to boast UK first kit combinations

Managing director Andy Spreag said: “Visitors will be able to see print and finishing in the same place. On the first day people will be able to bring their own files and put an Agfa Anapurna through is paces. “This will be the first time people in the UK will see the Mimaki JFX-500 industrial UV flatbed printer partnered with Zund cutting and finishing technology. It will also be a first for the Mimaki SUV printer and to see Agfa kit teamed up with Zund machines.” He added: “A unique element is the showcase of i-Sub Digital’s exclusive range of Digi-Foil products. Digi-Foil allows users of the Mimaki UJF range of UV printers to produce foiled effects identical to traditional hot and cold foiling processes, but as one-offs.” Spreag said the addition of foiled effects to mock-ups and proofs printed with the Mimaki UJF range would “increase the commercial opportunity” for printers. “Previously, being unable to apply traditional foils to mock-ups, proofs and short-run production jobs without incurring the cost and time penalties of having dies made and time on the presses has been a frustration across all print sectors. Not any more,” he added. Open days on 9-10 October at Agfa’s Leeds headquarters will centre around live demos of the Anapurna M2050 flatbed UV printer featuring six colours and white ink. The day will include automated finishing of print produced on the Anapurna on the Zund cutting system. A second set of open days, in Crewe, Cheshire on 16-17 October, will involve six “demo hubs”: a Mimaki JFX-500 industrial UV flatbed printing partnered with Zund cutting and finishing; Mimaki textile printing; New Mimaki SUV and latex printers; Mimaki solvent printers; Mimaki desktop UV decor printers; and Mimaki cutting solutions. The final open days, at Zund in St Albans, Herts, on dates to be confirmed in November, will flag up the latest Zund cutting and finishing systems. “You might have printers with the capacity to produce many hundreds of metres of print every hour, but without the ability to finish the print ready for delivery, whatever print capacity you have at your disposal is never going to be fully utilised,” said Spreag. Hampshire Flag Company recently installed a Zund G3 XL3200, said managing director Graham Wilkinson: “We have calculated that we would need to employ three more members of staff to cut textiles to replace the Zund machine when it is operating at maximum output.” Spreag said: “The open days have been designed to provide a clear insight into the opportunities for growth in the emerging markets that are being serviced by the latest developments in wide-format digital print equipment.” Contact I-Sub on 01536 415511...

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Roland DG launches VersaCAMM VS-i series

The new VS-i series is available in three widths, including the 762mm VS-300i, the 1,371mm VS-540i and the 1,625mm VS-640i, and is equipped with Roland’s latest Eco-Sol MAX2 inks, which were previously only available on the SolJet Pro4. Rob Goleniowski, business manager – sign and graphics, Roland DG UK, said: “The pro-level ingredients are filtering down through the family. With the new Eco-Sol MAX2 inks, the VersaCAMM VS-i is like a mini SolJet Pro4. “It’s got the latest output quality and the combo of the new inks and printhead gives it a bit of a speed increase over the old VS series; the maximum speed on the VS-640 was 23.1sqm/hr, compared to 26.9sqm/hr on the new VS-640i.” He added that the VS-i series was cheaper at launch than its predecessor, with a new VS-640i costing from £15,499, a full £2,500 cheaper than the VS-640, which had a list price of £17,999 at launch. Goleniowski said this had been achieved through economies of scale and manufacturing efficiencies. Users can choose from nine available colours (CMYK, Lc, Lm, Lk, white, metallic) in either four, seven or eight-colour configurations, including: dual CMYK; CMYK, Lc, Lm, Lk; or CMYK, Lc, Lm plus either Lk + white, Lk + metallic, or white + metallic. Goleniowski highlighted the new light black ink as another enhancement. “We’ve never had light black before on a versaCAMM,” he said. “And the new white ink has got higher density and opacity, while the new metallic has more of a metallic sheen, which gives glossier, more vibrant metallics.” The higher density of the white and metallic inks is said to have enabled a 1.5x increase in production speed for white and up to twice the speed for metallic versus the previous model. Maximum four-colour CMYK print speed is 25.9sqm/hr for the VS-540i and 26.9sqm/hr for the VS-640i in banner print mode at 360x720dpi, dropping to 5.7sqm/hr and 5.9sqm/hr respectively at 1,440x720dpi. Maximum four-colour CMYK vinyl print speed is 9.82sqm/hr for the VS-300i, 12.2sqm/hr for the VS-540i and 13.1sqm/hr for the VS-640i, falling to 3.66sqm/hr, 4.3sqm/hr and 4.4sqm/hr respectively at 1,440x720dpi. Additional enhancements include front-loading ink cartridges and the ability to adjust cut settings during operation. Maximum cutting speed is up to 300mm/second. Pricing for the three models starts from £10,499 for the VS-300i, £13,999 for the VS-540i and £15,499 for the VS-640i; Eco-Sol MAX2 ink costs £85.99 per 440cc cartridge, except white and metallic which cost £74.99 and £169.95 per 220cc cartridge respectively. All models come with the latest version of Roland’s VersaWorks RIP, which has an in-built Pantone spot colour library and predictive ink usage calculator, one-year on-site parts and labour warranty, and a place on and introductory or...

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