Screens at Scale is a reference for people who plan, install, or operate large-format and collaboration displays — video walls, LED walls, oversized panels, interactive whiteboards, glass and transparent boards, and the screens that live in meeting and collaboration spaces. It is written as field notes rather than marketing: the focus is on the decisions that actually shape whether a big display works in its setting, holds up under daily operation, and earns the space and budget it takes.
Everything here is described in plain, qualitative terms. The goal is to give facilities teams, AV planners, IT leads, and anyone newly responsible for a large display a working vocabulary and a clear sense of the trade-offs involved. Articles are revised on a rolling basis as display technology and the practices around installing and running it continue to change.
This site does not review products, rank manufacturers, or recommend specific brands or models. No company has paid to appear here. There is no sponsored content, no advertising, and no affiliate arrangements of any kind. The site takes no position on which hardware a reader should buy.
This site does not publish pricing. The cost of a large display depends heavily on size, pixel pitch, mounting and structural work, content systems, and the terms of a given project — a number printed without that context would mislead more than it would help.
This site does not try to cover every product category or every edge case. It covers the concepts, operational realities, and decision points that a planner most needs to understand in order to ask good questions, set realistic expectations, and live with a large-format installation over its full service life.
The articles on this site were last reviewed in June 2026. Display technology and the practices around large-format and collaboration screens evolve steadily, and some details will drift from current reality over time. Treat this site as a starting point for orientation and a framework for thinking through the problem — not as a substitute for current product specifications, updated standards, or direct consultation with the people who will actually build and support an installation.