Poster Display Monolith

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As technical program chair for IEEE SoutheastCon 2014, I needed to decide how the short paper posters would be displayed. I wanted something cheap, fast to set-up, and impressive... something that also would give a better traffic flow pattern than the usual line-of-posters arrangement. Thus, I created these 8-foot-tall, 4-foot-wide, freestanding, triangular-footprint, monoliths. Each monolith consists of three 4'x8' sheets of 1/2" thick black sound insulation board (total less than $30) held together by nine 3D-printed clips. A monolith can be assembled or disassembled in a few minutes without using any tools. You mount your posters or other materials on the textured black board surface using standard push pins.

About the author:
ProfHankD
I'm a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Kentucky, best known for things like having built the world's first Linux PC cluster supercomputer in 1994... although around the 3D-printing world I'm probably best known for my HingeBox (which Tested popularized). My research group (Aggregate.Org) really is about improving computing systems by making the various SW+HW components work better together, which we do for many different types of computer systems: supercomputers, digital cameras, ... and now 3D printers. I had some experience with tool and die making using Bridgeport Series I CNCs as far back as the late 1970s, but my 3D printing adventure started in late 2012 with purchase of a MakerGear M2 for my lab to make custom camera parts in support of computational photography research. I now use multiple MakerGear M2 and Wanhao I3 3D printers, several semiconductor laser cutters, a 3040T CNC mill, a programmable paper cutter, and a small vacuum forming machine.

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