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Video Display Corp. is a Georgia-based company that makes digital projector display units and cathode ray tubes. It serves the defense, industrial and medical sectors, and has a subsidiary called AYON Cyber Security.
Daktronics is an American company that designs, manufactures, sells, and services video displays, scoreboards, digital billboards, and related products. Founded in 1968 by two South Dakota State University professors, it has supplied displays for the Olympic Games, sports venues, and media networks worldwide.
DEC was a major American computer company from the 1960s to the 1990s, known for its minicomputers and workstations. The full form of DEC is Digital Equipment Corporation, which was founded by Ken Olsen and Harlan Anderson in 1957.
Planar Systems is an American company that makes various types of displays, such as monitors, projectors, and LED video walls. It was founded in 1983 as a spin-off from Tektronix and is now a subsidiary of Leyard Optoelectronic Co.
Learn about the history and evolution of stock market data systems, from chalk boards and newspapers to electronic displays and quotation boards. Quotron was one of the first systems to provide real-time stock prices to brokers in the 1960s.
Nasdaq MarketSite is the commercial marketing presence of the Nasdaq stock exchange, located at Times Square in New York City. It has a giant LED display, two broadcast studios, and an exhibit about the history and global connections of Nasdaq.
Vuzix is a public company that produces and sells computer display devices and software for mobile and immersive augmented reality applications. Founded in 1997, it has developed various products such as video eyewear, smart glasses, and heads up displays for military, gaming, and consumer markets.
The stock split two-for-one on 21 November 2005 [20] and reached a high of $31.07 on 19 April 2006, [20] representing a market capitalization of approximately $1.9 billion. [a] It later declined substantially including a large drop on 26 October 2007. [20] The stock dropped below $3 in September 2008 and it would never close above $3 again. [20]