Hdr Shop 2017-2017
Next Wave: How Technology and User Trends are Reshaping Recreation Center Design Mark Hentze and Mary Chow, will present: “Next Wave: How technology and user trends are reshaping recreation center design at the 2017 Athletic Business Show on November 9, 2017. The presentation will focus on two influences affecting recreation facility design. Technology and how we use it is reshaping user expectations and choices, while pressure to facilitate unstructured play increasingly affects how recreation centers program activity.
Both are influencing building design. Mary and Mark will: • Identify how technology is being incorporated into equipment, building systems and programmed activity to enhance user experiences. • Share examples of how unstructured play/activity spaces can be incorporated into the programming and design of your recreation center. • Show how these two seemingly distinct influences are in fact closely related, and see how this relationship provides clues as to what users are seeking in a modern recreation facility.

The Athletic Business Show is the destination for athletic, fitness, recreation and military professionals seeking innovative solutions, learning about the latest trends, and networking with peers.
It’s prime time for $70 media streamers that offer 4K HDR video and Dolby Atmos audio support: the new Roku Streaming Stick Plus sits alongside the familiar Chromecast Ultra and the new Amazon Fire TV, which I just reviewed last week. Roku has long been the leader in the streaming box market, mostly because it’s been relatively cheap and aggressively neutral: it supports virtually every streaming service you can think of, save Apple’s iTunes. Roku’s search interface shows you movie listings across all those services with prices clearly displayed so you can cross-shop, and it’s rare for any new service to launch without Roku support, given the ubiquity of the devices. The new Streaming Stick Plus seems like the culmination of everything Roku’s been building toward: a tiny device that can plug into any TV setup, completely replace the interface and controls with a single remote, and provide access to a huge catalog of content across a range of services. This is the new default Roku — and by extension, the new default choice for people buying a media streamer for now-common 4K TVs. In most situations, it’ll be fine, but if you’re thinking of upgrading just to watch 4K HDR movies, or you’re trying to get the most out of your home theater, you’ll quickly run into some pretty serious limitations.
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At a glance, there’s not much new about the Streaming Stick Plus: it’s basically a repackaging of the older Premiere Plus box into a much smaller stick design. The stick design was revolutionary once: the first Roku Streaming Stick and the original Google Chromecast reset a lot of assumptions about what a media streamer should look like.
But there’s a reason Google and Amazon quickly moved on to hanging dongle designs: sticks are extremely unwieldy, and the Streaming Stick Plus might be the most unwieldy stick ever. The Streaming Stick Plus is longer than a Chromecast or other stick, and might need an extender to fit properly The Streaming Stick Plus isn’t huge, but at 3.7 inches it’s pretty long.