ETC Eos-family controls have set the bar for professional-quality lighting around the globe. Now ETC is raising that bar even higher with expanded control outputs, new portable controllers, lowered pricing, and a powerful new software package.
The Eos Titanium (Ti) and Gio consoles, as well as the RPU3 (Remote Processor Unit), just became more powerful. Their motherboards have been changed, which allows currently shipping products to output up to 32,768, without co-processing. Desks with the new motherboard have three display-port outputs instead of DVI ports. Any older Ti, Gio, and RPU3 products (with DVI connectors) can upgrade to a total of 16,384 outputs, and both hardware variants can upgrade in 1,024, 2,048, or 4,096 increments.
“The output upgrades are now even more affordable,” explains ETC Eos Controls product manager Anne Valentino. “Users needing to increase their system capacity can upgrade through a lower-cost pricing structure. Anyone wanting to expand their output can contact an ETC dealer for more information.”
ETC’s Nomad and Nomad Puck mini-controllers are the perfect companions for on-the-go lighting. They connect to any computer, turning it into a lighting controller than can run both Eos/Element and Cobalt software, so users get the best of both worlds. ETC is now expanding the product family to include Nomad 512 and Nomad Puck 512.
At the LDI trade show, November 21 – 23, in Las Vegas, ETC will demo Eos-family software version 2.3. The new software includes the implementation of open sound control and adds new functionality to effects. It also introduces new color controls that provide multiple options for color spaces, new tinting tools and live color-fade options.
See ETC at PLASA Focus: Orlando, February 17 – 18, 2015.
WWWwww.etcconnect.com
ETC Eos-family controls have set the bar for professional-quality lighting around the globe. Now ETC is raising that bar even higher with expanded control outputs, new portable controllers, lowered pricing, and a powerful new software package.
The Eos Titanium (Ti) and Gio consoles, as well as the RPU3 (Remote Processor Unit), just became more powerful. Their motherboards have been changed, which allows currently shipping products to output up to 32,768, without co-processing. Desks with the new motherboard have three display-port outputs instead of DVI ports. Any older Ti, Gio, and RPU3 products (with DVI connectors) can upgrade to a total of 16,384 outputs, and both hardware variants can upgrade in 1,024, 2,048, or 4,096 increments.
“The output upgrades are now even more affordable,” explains ETC Eos Controls product manager Anne Valentino. “Users needing to increase their system capacity can upgrade through a lower-cost pricing structure. Anyone wanting to expand their output can contact an ETC dealer for more information.”
ETC’s Nomad and Nomad Puck mini-controllers are the perfect companions for on-the-go lighting. They connect to any computer, turning it into a lighting controller than can run both Eos/Element and Cobalt software, so users get the best of both worlds. ETC is now expanding the product family to include Nomad 512 and Nomad Puck 512.
At the LDI trade show, November 21 – 23, in Las Vegas, ETC will demo Eos-family software version 2.3. The new software includes the implementation of open sound control and adds new functionality to effects. It also introduces new color controls that provide multiple options for color spaces, new tinting tools and live color-fade options.
www.etcconnect.com
Australian Distributor: Jands www.jands.com.au
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