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  • Daktronics and SDSU story

    Here is an interesting story on Daktronics and SDSU from an Ohio perspective.  Highlights from the Akron Beacon Journal:

    http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/12858023.htm

    Clock tower puts Beacon in new light

    $500,000 project does more than give time, temperature

    By Bob Dyer

    Beacon Journal staff writer


    The term ``Beacon Journal clock tower'' has just become obsolete.

    This time, you're getting a lot more than a clock. This thing is a scoreboard. Or maybe a video game. We're not exactly sure yet.

    We can flash it, blink it or stream it. We can roll it, scroll it or hold it. We can change the colors. We can even give you full-color animation.

    Yes, you'll still get the time and temperature, just as you have for the last 66 years. But our new $500,000 tower will also provide news, advertisements, event information and whatever else our mad programmers dream up.

    The lower display consists of a four-sided message board, each side 12 feet wide and 3 ˝ feet high. That's where the news and ads will go.

    The upper screens, 7 feet by 3 ˝ feet, will alternate between the time and temp, ``Akron Beacon Journal'' and the logo of the newspaper's Internet partner, Ohio.com.

    Forget the neon lights that went up in 1939 and the gaudier ones that went up in 1955. Forget the floodlights that went up in 1966. Today we're into pixels.

    Each ``bulb'' is actually three tiny diodes -- red, green and blue. Now, an artist would tell you that the three primary colors are red, yellow and blue. But to create the entire spectrum of light, the magic trio is red, green and blue.

    The company responsible for the displays, Daktronics, is the same firm that created the gargantuan scoreboard at Jacobs Field and thousands of other sports and entertainment displays around the world.  .  .  .

    Northern lights

    The new boards came to life in a little town near the Big Sioux River on the plains of eastern South Dakota.

    This is a region where the roads run either directly north and south or directly east and west. A lot of them are dirt, and all of them are flat.

    If you take the biggest one going north from Sioux Falls, you'll arrive about an hour later in Brookings, S.D.

    ``Population 18,504,'' says the sign -- and fully 10 percent of those folks work at Daktronics.

    What on Earth is this sophisticated company doing in the middle of the prairie? Simple. It was a solution to brain drain.

    Brookings is home to the state's largest university, 11,000-student South Dakota State. By 1968, two SDSU engineering professors had grown weary of watching their best and brightest flee after picking up diplomas. So the profs decided to launch a company that would require the services of electrical engineers.

    They incorporated as Daktronics -- a blend of Dakota and Electronics.

    The early projects were rudimentary sports scoreboards and simple electronic voting machines for state legislatures.

    But today, Daktronics is the worldwide leader in programmable displays, a force so powerful that it drove the gigantic Sony Corp. right out of the North American scoreboard business.

    Daktronics has signs and scoreboards all over Las Vegas... at Times Square... at every Olympic venue since 1988... at 1,000 colleges... and at 80 percent of the arenas and stadiums used by professional baseball, football and basketball teams -- including not only the Jake but Cleveland Browns Stadium and The Arena Formerly Known As Gund (aka Quicken Loans Arena).  .  .  .

    Feeling blue

    The company's big breakthrough came in the mid-1990s. Until then, Sony had so ruled the market that the brand name JumboTron had nearly become the generic name for video scoreboard.

    But Sony's big CRTs (cathode-ray tubes, same as traditional televisions) were outrageously expensive, ungodly heavy and lacking in brightness. And they seemed to break down a lot.

    The solution appeared to be light-emitting diodes, or LEDs. But nobody could figure out how to make decent blue ones. The red ones were fine. The green ones were fine. But the blue ones simply weren't bright enough.

    Blue was tricky because blue has the shortest wavelength of visible light.

    For 20 years, all of the biggies -- Sony, RCA, Hewlett-Packard, Matsu****a -- had been pounding away in their research labs, always in vain. Finally, a guy working for little Nichia Chemical Industries in Japan figured it out.

    All of a sudden, you could create a huge full-color display with LEDs.

    Daktronics produced its first LED video scoreboards in 1997, shipping them to the University of Oklahoma, Clemson and Washington State.

    Since then, the company's business has exploded. Daktronics has products in 70 countries and so many orders that it is constructing a 100,000-square-foot addition to the 250,000-square-foot factory it already owns on a 40-acre complex next to Interstate 29.

    How hot is that product line? If Daktronics never gets another order, the factory will be busy through March.

    The operation is already running seven days a week, with three shifts on weekdays.  .  .  .  The project manager for the Beacon's $218,000 order, Trevor Moser, is all of 22 years old, straight out of SDSU.  .  .  .


    Go State!  ;D

  • #2
    Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

    Gotta love any story that puts SDSU and Brookings in such a positive light... but couldn't you give us an open account to use 89? When I went to access the full story, they wanted me to register!
    I am Ed. Fear me.

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    • #3
      Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

      Originally posted by jackrabit1
      Gotta love any story that puts SDSU and Brookings in such a positive light... but couldn't you give us an open account to use 89? When I went to access the full story, they wanted me to register!
      Odd that site didn't require me to register. Usually if a site does require registration I put that at the begining of my post. Don't know what to tell you on that one. ??? Sorry.

      Go State! ;D


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      • #4
        Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

        Fantastic story!

        Hehe, I used to live in an apartment building in NYC that Daktronics still probably rents from... used to see their name when picking up packages all the time... small world.

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        • #5
          Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

          Yet another Daktronics and SDSU story:

          http://msn.foxsports.com/nba/story/5092598

          Fans give thumbs up to NBA's new shot clocks


          Associated Press

          SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) - Derrick Talton clearly could tell that Utah Jazz forward Mehmet Okur sank his foul shot during a recent NBA game at the new Charlotte Bobcats Arena.

          The season ticket holder wouldn't have been so sure last year, when the shot clock mounted atop the backboard at his end of Charlotte Coliseum obscured his view of the opposite end of the court.
          Talton sees nothing but net this season, thanks to new see-through shot clocks recently given a thumbs-up by the league.

          "It makes a big difference," Talton said. "Now you can see if they make it - which you couldn't last year."

          The shot clocks, developed by South Dakota-based scoreboard maker Daktronics Inc., were born of an idea from a New Jersey Nets season ticket holder, said Steve Hellmuth, the NBA's senior vice president of operations and technology.

          The fan e-mailed NBA commissioner David Stern, wondering if there was a technology that could improve his view at Continental Airlines Arena. Hellmuth said the new design is a big improvement, especially for fans in lower seats that typically sell out.

          "All of a sudden, they're seeing the entire action on the court," Hellmuth said.

          The previous shot clocks were encased in metal boxes.

          The new two-sided, backboard-mounted clocks measure 2 1/2 feet square and feature light-emitting diodes (LEDs) sandwiched between two clear pieces of polycarbonate. The 13-inch red shot-clock numbers, and 7-inch amber digits showing time left in the period, can be read from both sides. . . .

          The NBA tested the new shot clocks during last year's Memphis Grizzlies games at FedExForum. The Philadelphia 76ers and Bobcats installed them this year, and Hellmuth said the Houston Rockets and Miami Heat are looking at replacing their clocks this season.

          He expects all NBA teams will be using them within the next three years.

          "We're encouraging teams to do it," Hellmuth said. "At some point, we might require the teams to go to it."

          Mark Steinkamp, marketing and sales support manager for Daktronics, said the company has been working with the NBA on the project for a couple of years. It wasn't just a matter of replacing metal with a clear surface, he said.

          Engineers had to redesign the circuitry to which the LEDs connect, Steinkamp said.

          "It's just nicer looking," he said. "It doesn't look as bulky. It looks more high-tech."

          Daktronics workers also had to make sure the clocks - which cost several thousand dollars - were built to withstand the rigors of an NBA game, said Randy Uehran, a Daktronics project engineer.

          Their tests involved hurling basketballs at them from half court and shooting others from a cannon designed by students at South Dakota State University. . . .

          Because the new shot clocks are only 3 1/2 inches thick, the league had to add smaller, sideline-facing versions to the poles behind the backboards so players shooting from the corners can see the countdown.

          "That's also there for the fans as well," Hellmuth said.

          Hellmuth said the clocks are designed to hold a camera and cable mounts. He said the angle they provide has become a signature shot for high-definition television broadcasts.

          The new technology also is trickling down to the college ranks.

          Steinkamp said Kansas, Indiana, Cincinnati, South Dakota State and Virginia Commonwealth have installed the new shot clocks for this season, and other schools are looking into it.



          Go State! ;D




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          • #6
            Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

            according to the daktronics website frost arena is suppose to get the transparent shot clocks. But they were not there for the first four games.

            http://www.daktronics.com/dak_news.cfm?articleID=437

            In addition Daktronics will provide transparent shot clocks for basketball, delay of game clocks for football, locker room clocks, and the control systems to operate the new equipment, including All Sport® control consoles, statistical interfaces, Venus® 7000 controllers, V-Link® video processors and video cameras. New wrestling, swimming and softball scoreboards, and an upgrade to the baseball scoreboard, are also included in the project.

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            • #7
              Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

              Originally posted by Jacks_NL
              according to the daktronics website frost arena is suppose to get the transparent shot clocks.  But they were not there for the first four games.

              http://www.daktronics.com/dak_news.cfm?articleID=437

              In addition Daktronics will provide transparent shot clocks for basketball, delay of game clocks for football, locker room clocks, and the control systems to operate the new equipment, including All Sport® control consoles, statistical interfaces, Venus® 7000 controllers, V-Link® video processors and video cameras. New wrestling, swimming and softball scoreboards, and an upgrade to the baseball scoreboard, are also included in the project.
              Transparent shot clocks are in place now. Great opening for introduction of players Thursday. New boards are incredible. A little hard to see the score from the south side upper level bleacher seats.
              We are here to add what we can to life, not get what we can from life. -Sir William Osler

              We do not see things as they are, we see things as we are.

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              • #8
                Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

                Originally posted by jackmd

                Transparent shot clocks are in place now. Great opening for introduction of players Thursday. New boards are incredible. A little hard to see the score from the south side upper level bleacher seats.
                Disagree to the extent that it seemed to me that everything came to a screeching halt when they showed that little historical clip between the visitor's introductions and the Jacks introduction. The player's names were also hard to read, and unless you've followed SDSU basketball (as my wife has not) you had no idea what was going on.
                "I think we'll be OK"

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                • #9
                  Re: Daktronics and SDSU story

                  I liked it.


                  Go State! ;D

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