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Warwick university quadruples Mersive Solstice order

The University of Warwick in England has expanded its deployment of Mersive Solstice Pods to over 90 units.

The units are available in Oculus, a flagship building that benefits from one of

the UK’s most advanced suites of AV equipment, and in a variety of learning spaces across its campus.

The university made the deployment to allow students and staff to share content seamlessly from any device in meetings and teaching sessions without risk to the security of the IT infrastructure.

Warwick University at first deployed just 14 Mersive Solstice Pods in the Oculus building but the Pods proved so popular that it has now adopted Mersive technology as its standard wireless presentation solution and rolled the Pods out into existing buildings around the campus, to teaching spaces, conference rooms, meeting rooms and social learning areas. The teaching and social learning spaces of a new Faculty of Arts building are currently being planned, with Mersive technology integral to the design of the space.

Warwick University initially sought a wireless Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) solution for staff and students in the Oculus building. The specific challenge was to allow any user to bring any device into its AV-equipped spaces and share content instantly onto the screen. The vision of university IT service owner Jonathan Owen was that any presenter, with any background and any device, could walk into any space and get their content up on the display, whether it would be a standard touch-enabled screen in a small room or the impressive four-screen video wall in the atrium.

Owen commented: “Having evaluated several options, Mersive Solstice clearly stood out. From the local user’s perspective, the interface was much more intuitive than the alternatives. For us as an IT management team, Solstice is a true enterprise-grade solution offering central management of licensing and deployment.”

The BYOD approach paid off, and has now been extended to existing teaching spaces as well as new areas as they are opened. University of Warwick IT services owner Jonathan Owen attributed the quick adoption of Solstice at least partially to the familiar user interface. “The student community picked up on the user interface almost immediately. The point and drag interface of the Solstice app is familiar from mobile devices lowering the barrier of entry to users,” he said. “We are excited by the continuing development of Solstice by Mersive and are rolling out new features as they are added.”

For example, the university has deployed the new Solstice Multi-Room feature, added in the 3.0 release, allowing separate teaching and meeting spaces to be connected through Solstice Pods. This feature also allows multiple Pods in the same space to share content so that individual discussion groups within a class can share conclusions with the whole class.

The University of Warwick has also implemented interactive digital boards to help new guests navigate the facility, and each room has a screen outside that can show availability. With Solstice’s room scheduling via calendar integration feature, introduced with 3.1, administrators can easily use the Solstice API to tie on-screen Solstice schedule information into existing infrastructure like these screens without having to purchase any additional hardware. The flexibility of Solstice’s software-based architecture allows the university to keep its content collaboration solution up to date and ready to integrate with any new systems that may get introduced into the technology landscape.

Mersive founder and CTO Christopher Jaynes added: “Our guiding metaphor in developing Solstice was to allow users to throw content into a session digitally as easily as they could throw pieces of paper onto a table. The feedback from the University of Warwick proves that this vision has been realised.”

He added: “Educational customers are really important for us. They share more information between themselves and colleagues than almost any other class of users. Universities like Warwick are also really creative – we are seeing new use cases coming out of higher education all of the time.”

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