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News
AMX Unveils Major Product Innovations at CEDIA 2006
Backed by Fully RoHS and WEEE Compliant Range (13/4/2006)
Stand B11, CEDIA Expo 2006
AMX will use Cedia 2006 to deliver a major
boost to dealers and installers serving the residential market.
A raft of new products designed for residential applications will
be unveiled for the first time in the UK, along with 'Visual Architect',
the biggest development the industry has seen in design programming
software.
The revolutionary, VisualArchitect dramatically
slashes the time required to generate touch panel designs, program
hardware, create system diagrams and produce a quotation to a matter
of minutes. This new software is being offered completely free of
charge, with registration, to AMX dealers and installers.
New products include two new stylish handheld
remote control units, AMX's smallest Modero touch screen panel and
new MAX digital content servers, designed specifically for the residential
market.
In addition to the new product offers, AMX
will use the exhibition to promote total compliance of its entire
product range with EU directives, RoHS and WEEE, concerned with
removing hazardous substances from electrical equipment and minimising
their impact on the environment.
VisualArchitect is set to have a major impact
on the productivity of system designers, programmers and installers,
enabling them to execute tasks in a fraction of the time. Targeted
at single room applications, VisualArchitect based systems can be
combined with simple programming from an experienced AMX programmer
to form larger integrated systems.
System design begins by simply dragging and
dropping icons of AMX interfaces and the other hardware being used
into a work area. A few additional menu-driven steps generate all
of the files for the system - including third-party device modules,
IR codes, system macros and touch panel interface designs. VisualArchitect
enables programmers to easily identify Dynamic Device Discovery
enabled products from manufacturers other than AMX and integrate
these products into the system without any additional programming.
The program automatically backs up all job
files with the system reports that are critical to the installation
and integration process. It also enables dealers to print out detailed
instructions, a list of AMX products, third-party device mapping
and macro definitions.
The new residential products being shown
at CEDIA include the Mio Modero R-1 and R-2 handheld remote controls,
which utilise infra-red and RF control technology respectively.
Both units have been developed in direct response to customer requests
for a remote control that is ergonomically designed to fit comfortably
in the palm of the hand and complement current home electronics
systems and control technologies.
The Mio Modero R-1 is an ideal solution for
residential environments where infrared control of a specific number
of integrated devices is required. Using RF (radio frequencies),
the R-2 can transmit signals through walls, ceilings and other materials
up to 100 feet indoors/300 feet outdoors, enabling it to control
devices from more than one room. The remote controls are available
with a matching charging station.
The handheld remotes are complemented by
a 5" widescreen Modero touch screen user interface panel, AMX's
smallest, feature-rich, touch panel, offering the same advanced
features and functionality as the company's existing Modero panels,
but in a smaller, more discrete form. The 5" Modero is the perfect
solution for the small spaces found in home foyers, hallways, kitchens,
bedrooms and bathrooms.
Further benefiting installers serving the
residential market is the introduction of two new content servers
targeted specifically at this sector. The new MAX-HT content servers
are the world's first multimedia servers engineered specifically
for direct placement in acoustically demanding environments such
as home cinemas. Similarly, the MAX Audio/Video Player (AVP) is
the industry's first product to combine an Audio/Video Module (AVM),
which displays content from a multimedia server, with a high-end
DVD player for ad hoc viewing.
The RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances)
directive aims to restrict the use of certain hazardous substances
in electrical and electronic equipment. This directive will ban
from the EU market new electrical and electronic equipment containing
more than agreed levels of lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium,
polybrominated biphenyl (PBB) and polybrominated diphenyl ether
(PBDE) flame retardants being sold in the EU from 1 July 2006.
The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment
(WEEE) directive aims to minimise the impacts of electrical and
electronic equipment on the environment during their life times
and when they become waste.
www.amx.com
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