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Virtualizing museum exhibits
Bericht door Anonymous User »Hello all,
I work in the museum / heritage center sector. We would have a large number of exhibits, each running some kind of interactive (usually Flash) for at least 10 hours a day. There would also be user input (either touchscreens, or physical buttons, or some kind of interaction with the interactive).
Would this kind of setup be amenable to virtualisation? Instead of a server room full of computers we could have the exhibits running on one fairly powerful machine, and have automatic failover etc. etc. My concerns would be perhaps network usage (full-screen video possibly running in each instance), and managing the user input back to the server.
I didn't find the right solution from the internet.
References:
https://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=1168467
[url=https://blog.advids.co/20-best-creative-whiteboard-animation-examples/]whiteboard animation[/url]
I work in the museum / heritage center sector. We would have a large number of exhibits, each running some kind of interactive (usually Flash) for at least 10 hours a day. There would also be user input (either touchscreens, or physical buttons, or some kind of interaction with the interactive).
Would this kind of setup be amenable to virtualisation? Instead of a server room full of computers we could have the exhibits running on one fairly powerful machine, and have automatic failover etc. etc. My concerns would be perhaps network usage (full-screen video possibly running in each instance), and managing the user input back to the server.
I didn't find the right solution from the internet.
References:
https://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=1168467
[url=https://blog.advids.co/20-best-creative-whiteboard-animation-examples/]whiteboard animation[/url]