

Video Conferencing
If you participated in a videoconference anytime before 2007 or so, odds are pretty good you were unimpressed with the quality of the experience. Hard to set up, difficult to tell who was talking, choppy body motions, clipped audio, all were common complaints.
However, with the advent of HDTV displays, superior voice speakers, and improved cameras and control panels, videoconferencing has truly become a mainstream technology. Yet videoconferencing also has a critical architectural component that must be considered because this technology must be integrated into the room or space more so than with voice or data systems. Designs must account for lighting, acoustics, furniture and room size. There are a myriad of factors that lead to videoconferencing success. PlanNet’s experienced team of audiovisual professionals has played a leadership role in hundreds of videoconferencing projects.






