Except for the spiciest bits of The Social Network and the Steve Jobs biography, pretty much everything that happens in a conference room is boring.
Meetings are boring, presentations are boring, and whiteboards are boring. But here's a piece of technology that makes all three more exciting – which admittedly isn't that difficult, but stay with me.
It's called the eBeam Edge, made by Luidia. It's a handwriting capture system that adds an interactive element to whatever you're viewing on your wall, allowing you and your colleagues to annotate a projected image or document, or to sketch something on a whiteboard, and e-mail the results around like a memo.
The eBeam is just one entry in the "interactive whiteboard" category – devices that let you virtually draw on any vertical surface using a special pen and have it captured electronically by a combination of hardware and software. Some of these systems use touchscreens or pressure-sensitive displays, some use interactive projectors, and others use special whiteboards. Luidia's device is simpler and less expensive than those, since it uses things you already have around the office: a regular projector hooked up to a Windows PC.
In the basic eBeam kit (priced between $900 and $1,050 around the web), you get a fat, marker-like stylus and a hardware sensor that connects to your PC via USB or Bluetooth. This sensor, which is about the size of a candy bar, attaches to the wall using a non-permanent adhesive (a couple of 3M Command strips). You just stick it next to whatever flat surface you want to use to make your presentation, then point the projector at that surface. To calibrate it, you tap the stylus on the nine points projected on the wall. The whole setup process takes less than five minutes.
