Interactive Way to Teach-Whiteboard
A whiteboard is an interactive screen connected to a PC and
multimedia projector. The computer image is projected on board and one just has
to move his finger on whiteboard screen and the mouse cursor will follow. If
you tap twice with finger then it will perform as double click as one does with
a normal mouse. The surface of the board can be used to all major computer
actions. One can also draw images on the whiteboard with the pen provided which
later can be saved. They can also be mailed or printed later.
The whiteboard electronics comes with an Optical Character
Recognition, which can recognized your writing and save it in computer.
Whiteboard are perfect for schools and meeting rooms or any application that needs
visual communication or collaboration over the internet. Imagine a workspace
where communication flows freely between individuals and groups - whether
you're in the office or thousands of miles away.
Collaborate with colleagues or clients by creating a
conference session that takes seconds to setup - and you can do it all from
your own office, saving valuable travel costs and time.
A whiteboard electronic plain paper to interact. It uses
resistive technology, which means there is a small air gap between two sheets
of resistive material inside the board. When you press on the Board with your
finger or an ordinary dry-erase marker, a contact point is registered and its
coordinates correspond to the same area on the computer screen.
Whiteboards are already been used in lots of foreign
universities. These facilities have been used in a variety of disciplines such
as computer science, mathematics, history, communications, psychology, music,
economics, and Japanese language.
Collaborate with colleagues or clients by creating a
conference session that takes seconds to setup - and you can do it all from
your own office, saving valuable travel costs and time.
A whiteboard electronic plain paper to interact. It uses
resistive technology, which means there is a small air gap between two sheets
of resistive material inside the board. When you press on the Board with your
finger or an ordinary dry-erase marker, a contact point is registered and its
coordinates correspond to the same area on the computer screen.
Whiteboards are already been used in lots of foreign
universities. These facilities have been used in a variety of disciplines such
as computer science, mathematics, history, communications, psychology, music,
economics, and Japanese language.