Digital signage solution
...
Our CAST solution allowing to broadcast personalized messages on a set of screens is available in REDDITCH
1 Plug the CASTBox's to your screens
HDMI / USB / WIFI / No A/C
2 Create a Message
From an image, a video, or using a custom template ... (the possibilities are endless)
Choose the screens you want to display on
You can also define the period concerned (start and end).
4 Spread and monitor
Publish your content in a few seconds, monitor your screens.
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
MESSAGE EDITOR
BROADCAST TO SCREEN
Launch the demo
3£ Ex. VAT per day by connected screen
Our technology is based on the latest secure protocols SSL, HTTPS, CAPTCHAv3, ENCRYPT, SNAPSHOTS in order to guarantee you a robust service. Our technology is hosted in France at GANDI.
A cache system allows the service to be maintained in the event of an Internet outage. Our servers are backed up regularly.
Our support service is available 6 days a week from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., by phone, e-mail or instant messaging.
Redditch is a town, and local government district in north-east Worcestershire, England, approximately 15 miles (24 km) south of Birmingham. The district has a population of 85,000 as of 2019. In the 19th century it became the international centre for the needle and fishing tackle industry. At one point 90% of the world's needles were manufactured in the town and its neighbourhoods.[7] In the 1960s it became a model for modern new town planning. The first recorded mention of Redditch (Red-Ditch, thought to be a reference to the red clay of the nearby River Arrow) is in 1348, the year of the outbreak of the Black Death. During the Middle Ages it became a centre of needle-making and later prominent industries were fish-hooks, fishing tackle, motorcycles and springs, the last of which was notably undertaken by Herbert Terry and Sons. Redditch was designated a new town on 10 April 1964,[8] and the population increased dramatically[when?] from 32,000 to around 77,000. Housing developments such as Church Hill, Matchborough, Winyates, Lodge Park and Woodrow were created to accommodate a large overspill from the industrially expanding Birmingham. Redditch was built as a "flagship" town using new methods and new town planning: all the main roads (mostly new dual carriageways as well as a ring road for the town centre) were banked to reduce noise to the new housing estates, and the whole of Redditch was landscaped.
Source credits : Wikipedia / Unsplash