The Dallas Cowboy’s new stadium, the largest National Football League stadium ever built, features Cisco Connected Sports technologies and expandable seating for up to 100,000 fans, with 300 luxury suites. The new stadium opened on June 6 with a concert by George Strait.
Designed by HKS Sports and Entertainment Group and built by Manhattan Construction, the $1.1 billion stadium features a retractable roof, the largest retractable end zone doors in the world, and the world’s largest HDTV, a $40 million monster that stretches from one 20-yard line to the other.
Cisco says it’s the most technologically advanced entertainment venue in all of North American football. The Cisco StadiumVision system integrates high-definition video, digital content and interactive fan services into one seamless next-generation network.
Some of the features include:
- Cowboys staff can centrally manage all the venue’s available video assets, including broadcast, cable, satellite and in-house feeds, to displays over a single IP infrastructure.
- Some 3,000 TV displays feature customized HD video game footage and real-time, relevant information.
- StadiumVision can customize displays to keep fans entertained pre-event, in event and post-event, by showcasing video and content such as out-of-town games and scores, team trivia, weather, traffic and news, in addition to the action on the field.
- Fans in one of the over 300 luxury suites can choose from video options made available via a touch-screen Internet Protocol (IP) phone.
- The 550 digital concession menu boards will provide the flexibility to update or deliver targeted promotions on the fly.
Cisco says the combination of the Cisco Connected Sports solution, StadiumVision, network security and IP Phones, makes the Cowboys Stadium a highly adaptable venue, giving the organization the ability to attract and easily accommodate an unprecedented variety of major events from one day to the next, including marquee events to concerts and conferences, with ease.
Today, Apple will upgrade the iPhone with the 3.0 version of its operating system. The new era could literally begin with a home run, says the NY Times.
MLB.com, which sells the popular At Bat application for the iPhone and iPod Touch, said it will add live feeds of some games for no additional charge, at least for now. Owners of the $9.99 application will at first get to see two games each day, chosen by MLB.com. The games are subject to local blackout restrictions—and your iPhone, remember, knows where you are.
Thursday’s 2:20 p.m. game between the Cubs and White Sox will be the first to be streamed live on the At Bat application; the Tigers-Cardinals game at 8:15 p.m. will follow.
Business Insider suggest 10 teams for elimination. Some are losing money. Some are in cities where the fans just don’t care. Some perennially suck, draining talent from potentially competitive teams.










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