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Wednesday, March 04, 2026
Registration Now Open For 2026 InfoComm Show In Las Vegas
ProSoundWeb: Registration is officially open for the 2026 InfoComm Show, produced by the Audiovisual and Integrated Experience Association (AVIXA), that’s slated for June 13–19 (exhibits June 17–19) at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Nevada.
I was fortunate enough to attend InfoComm last summer in Orlando, and it was a really cool experience! It was the first time I had been to a conference focused on the entertainment industry, and while I didn’t really see a whole lot of the presentations throughout the conference, I did spend a lot of time walking around on the show floor for the two or so days that I was there. There were a lot of cool demonstrations of new technologies, such as GLP’s Mad Maxx and Sony’s Spatial Reality Display. There was also a cool demonstration from Christie on their projection mapping technology. The standout from the conference was the focus on spatial reality displays across the board. Google also introduced their own behemoth of a display, with all the slots for demonstrations filling up on the first day of the conference. The display I was able to see, Sony’s, offered a look at a technology that I thought was a lot further off than it was. It managed to lock onto my eyes and successfully create a 3D image floating several inches above the screen’s surface. I personally thought that the technology offered a lot of potential for applications in the entertainment industry, as previsualization becomes ever more prominent.
I was fortunate enough to attend InfoComm last summer in Orlando, and it was a really cool experience! It was the first time I had been to a conference focused on the entertainment industry, and while I didn’t really see a whole lot of the presentations throughout the conference, I did spend a lot of time walking around on the show floor for the two or so days that I was there. There were a lot of cool demonstrations of new technologies, such as GLP’s Mad Maxx and Sony’s Spatial Reality Display. There was also a cool demonstration from Christie on their projection mapping technology. The standout from the conference was the focus on spatial reality displays across the board. Google also introduced their own behemoth of a display, with all the slots for demonstrations filling up on the first day of the conference. The display I was able to see, Sony’s, offered a look at a technology that I thought was a lot further off than it was. It managed to lock onto my eyes and successfully create a 3D image floating several inches above the screen’s surface. I personally thought that the technology offered a lot of potential for applications in the entertainment industry, as previsualization becomes ever more prominent.
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