How do jumbotrons work




















A Jumbotron is basically nothing more than an extremely giant television, and if you have ever been to Times Square or a major sporting event, you have seen one. The word Jumbotron is a registered trademark belonging to the Sony Corporation, the developers of the world's first jumbotron that debuted at the World's Fair in Toyko. However, today jumbotron has become a generic trademark or common term used for any giant television.

Sony got out of the jumbotron business in While Sony did trademark the Jumbotron, they were not the first to manufacture a large scale video monitor. Sony creative director and project designer Yasuo Kuroki is credited with the development of the jumbotron.

Kuroki joined Sony in His design efforts with two others led to the familiar Sony logo. The Ginza Sony Building and other showrooms around the world also bear his creative signature.

After heading advertising, product planning, and the Creative Center, he was appointed director in Planning and development projects to his credit include Profeel and Walkman , as well as Jumbotron at the Tsukuba Expo. Early jumbotrons used CRT cathode ray tube technology. Early jumbotron displays were actually a collection of multiple modules, and each module contained at least sixteen small flood-beam CRTs, each CRT produced from a two to sixteen pixel section of the total display.

The early jumbotrons and other large scale video displays obviously were massive in size, ironically, they were also in the beginning low in resolution, for example; a thirty foot jumbotron would have a resolution of only by pixels. Newer jumbotrons have at least HDTV resolution at x pixels, and that number will only increase. The first jumbotron cost sixteen million dollars to manufacture and was fourteen stories tall, with dimensions of fourty meters wide by twentyfive meters high.

The name jumbotron was decided upon by Sony because of the use of Trini. Jumbotrons both Sony official and generic versions are used in sports stadiums to entertain and inform the audience.

They are also used to bring close-up details of events that the audience might otherwise miss. The first large-scale video screen and video scoreboard used at a sports event was a Diamond Vision model manufactured by Mitsubishi Electric and not a Sony jumbotron.

The largest Sony brand Jumbotron ever manufactured, was installed in the SkyDome, in Toronto, Ontario, and measured 33 feet tall by feet wide. Mitsubishi's Diamond Vision video displays have been recognized five times by Guinness World Records for being the largest jumbotrons in existence. Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Use precise geolocation data. Select personalised content. Examples of classic hero component, with background image, with navbar and many other combinations.

To learn more read Card Docs. This is a simple hero unit, a simple jumbotron-style component for calling extra attention to featured content or information. It uses utility classes for typography and spacing to space content out within the larger container.

Header with background image might help to outstand your call to action elements by catching the eyes to some beautiful image in the background.

To provide a proper contrast it's highly recommended to use a mask. You can change the color and the opacity of the mask by manipulating RGBA code. You also must set the height of the background image, otherwise, the component will collapse. In the example below, we set the height to px. We use flexbox utilities to center the content vertically and horizontally.

If you need to set a different height of the background image for large and small devices it's better to set it via regular CSS instead of inline CSS. You can stick the navbar to the top of the window by using. Thanks to this whenever you scroll the page the navbar will be always visible.



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