an introduction to eos

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An Introduction to Eos

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An Introduction to Eos. What is EOS?. Why have we developed Eos?. To provide fully integrated control To provide simple, yet powerful control. How was Eos developed?. By answering the question ‘In the 21st century, what are the best control philosophies and best practices?’ - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An Introduction  to  Eos

An Introduction to

Eos

Page 2: An Introduction  to  Eos

What is EOS?

Page 3: An Introduction  to  Eos

Why have we developed Eos?

• To provide fully integrated control

• To provide simple, yet powerful control

Page 4: An Introduction  to  Eos

How was Eos developed?

• By answering the question ‘In the 21st century, what are the best control philosophies and best practices?’

• With input from Experts

• “From the ground up”

Page 5: An Introduction  to  Eos

State of the Market

The market wants:

• An approachable user interface

• Addresses all of the needs of conventional lighting

• Addresses all of the needs of a moving light desk

• Works out of the box

Page 6: An Introduction  to  Eos

Designer Comments

It just takes too much time.

• Different needs from those of the programmer and production electrician

• Complain that moving light consoles speak such a different language

• They have no vocabulary for speaking to their programmers

…So it all just takes too much time.

Page 7: An Introduction  to  Eos

Programmer Comments

It just takes too much time.

• Takes too long to do basic functions• Takes too much time to mark lights• Takes too much time to set timing

values

…. It all just takes too much time.

Page 8: An Introduction  to  Eos

Production Electrician Comments

It just takes too much time.

• Want to keep track of the rig in Lightwrite, Excel or FileMaker Pro data bases, plus the show file itself

• All three data bases have to be individually maintained

…It just takes too much time.

Page 9: An Introduction  to  Eos

Why is Eos of interest to designers?

• Approachable and comfortable language

• Flexible displays designed with the needs of the designer in mind

• Independent “desktops”

Page 10: An Introduction  to  Eos

Why is Eos of interest to programmers?

• Complete integration of command line and direct action controls

• Consistent, predictable access to functions

• Elegant playback logic

• Power and flexibility of soft displays with tactile feedback

Page 11: An Introduction  to  Eos

Why is Eos of interest to production electricians?

• Fully integrated applications for network configuration

• Integrated system risers via magic sheets

• Meaningful (and configurable) error messaging

• Integrated focus and work notes

Page 12: An Introduction  to  Eos

Unique Features

Page 13: An Introduction  to  Eos

Configurable Touch Screens with Tactile Response Controls

Page 14: An Introduction  to  Eos

Hue and Saturation Color Picker

Page 15: An Introduction  to  Eos

Central Information Area (CIA) and Encoders

Page 16: An Introduction  to  Eos

Tactile Response Encoders

Page 17: An Introduction  to  Eos

Ten 100m motorized faders with 30 pages of control

• Faders can be configured as playback faders, submasters or grand masters

Page 18: An Introduction  to  Eos

Query Functions

• Question your rig and show file and various conditions that the lights are in or could be in to find available fixtures for specific purposes.

Page 19: An Introduction  to  Eos

Take Note!

• Advanced note taking

• Accepts text notes, audio notes, jpegs or other media allowing integrated record keeping

Page 20: An Introduction  to  Eos

Networked for the Future

• ETCNet 2 for legacy installations

• Our new Net3, …powered by ACN.

Page 21: An Introduction  to  Eos

System Components

• Up to 12 devices can be connected, including:– Consoles– RPUs– RVIs

–RRFUs–Laptops with a client dongle

Page 22: An Introduction  to  Eos

Basic System

Switch

Page 23: An Introduction  to  Eos

Advanced System

Page 24: An Introduction  to  Eos

EOS