Hi Linda,
My friends at Blast Theory have just shipped a huge touch table based exhibit
to Red Cross museum in Geneva:
https://twitter.com/blasttheory/status/261439322534862848
https://twitter.com/blasttheory/status/248484482238271491
We (Cogapp) did a project at the British Library two years ago with
projections (from under and from above) on huge tables, using not touch but
"magic magnifying glasses" to interact with them:
http://www.cogapp.com/our-work/british-library-magnificent-maps
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinflickr/4565339142/in/set-72157623961339544
Favourite photo:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/gavinflickr/4564707157/
We also implemented a pair of quite large touch tables as part of our work for
the Great North Museum in Newcastle:
http://www.cogapp.com/our-work/great-north-museum (see image 4)
http://vimeo.com/24712635 (video shot during development!)
The Churchill War Rooms in London have a famously long interactive table, by
Small Design - IIRC it uses a touch strip along each side.
http://www.iwm.org.uk/exhibitions/churchill-war-rooms/the-churchill-museum
(see image 2)
HTH,
Ben
On 06/11/2012 15:04, Linda Ellis wrote:
> Does anybody have any examples of places (not just cultural venues) using Touch tables or large(ish) scale interactive touch screens to engage users?
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