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Svalbard Museum's New Interactive Installation Wows Visitors with BrightSign Technology

Discover the Arctic's past, present, and future in an interactive, multilingual journey. Visitors are raving about the immersive, engaging exhibits.

This picture is clicked in the museum. In front of the picture, we see the dinosaur exhibited in...
This picture is clicked in the museum. In front of the picture, we see the dinosaur exhibited in the museum. Behind that, we see an iron railing. Beside that, we see two people walking. Beside them, we see a white wall and windows. At the top of the picture, we see lights.

Svalbard Museum's New Interactive Installation Wows Visitors with BrightSign Technology

The Svalbard Museum in Longyearbyen, Norway, has unveiled a captivating new interactive installation, powered by BrightSign technology. This innovative exhibit, directed by Eystein Markusson, takes visitors on a journey through the Arctic's history, present, and future.

BrightSign's BrightAuthor:connected and BrightSignOS ensure smooth content deployment and offline playback, even in the remote Svalbard environment. The installation incorporates Nexmosphere sensors, RFID triggers, and responsive LED spheres, creating immersive experiences. Visitors can explore motion-triggered wildlife zones and marvel at a 13m dual-projection wall displaying the Northern Lights in synchronised 4K, all managed by BrightSign's HD5 and XC2055 players.

The installation's multilingual narration, facilitated by directional audio zones, caters to diverse visitor groups. Director Eystein Markusson reports a significant boost in visitor engagement across various age and cultural backgrounds, attributing this success to the BrightSign-powered digital signage.

The Svalbard Museum's new interactive installation, driven by BrightSign technology, is transforming the visitor experience. With its engaging, multilingual content and immersive exhibits, the digital signage is drawing in and captivating a wide range of visitors, as noted by director Eystein Markusson.

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