LOGITECH AT BETT 2026
Designing for flow state Technology is an increasingly integral part of classrooms, lecture theatres and seminar rooms, but they can create problems rather than solve them – which is why Logitech has a suite of products designed to enable teachers to focus on teaching.
In modern education, technology is everywhere – but that can be the problem. Lecture theatres, classrooms and seminar rooms are packed with cameras, control panels, AV racks and laminated instruction sheets taped to podiums on how all these products all are supposed to work together. The promise is flexibility: hybrid learning, lecture capture, remote collaboration. The reality, too often, is friction. Every additional menu or forgotten setting pulls educators out of the moment they’re trying to teach. At BETT this year, Logitech laid out a different vision for the connected classroom, one that doesn’t ask teachers to become technicians, but instead meets them exactly where they are with technology they are already comfortable with. Logitech Scribe Scribe is designed for hybrid classrooms where students might be joining via Microsoft Teams or Zoom while a lecturer is working live at the board. Traditionally, pointing a camera at a whiteboard produces a poor experience for remote viewers – glare, illegible handwriting and the instructor constantly
blocking the content. But once Scribe is activated – with a single button press – everything written on the board is captured on a separate digital layer. The presenter’s hand disappears from view. Contrast and clarity are automatically enhanced. For remote participants, the board suddenly becomes readable, visual and engaging, without the lecturer needing to think about camera angles, screen sharing or control panels. “From a lecture standpoint, they've already got a lot going on when they're trying to connect with students and trying to deliver their lesson, to have that additional cognitive load, to remember to go back to a control panel and figure that out or look at the laminated paper with instructions on there, that's taking up too much time and it's going to miss what they're doing,” says Jay Lyons, principal product and portfolio manager for education at Logitech. Logitech Reach Document cameras once sat in drawers beside podiums, while the world went digital. Science experiments, globes, models and art materials are inherently three-dimensional, and they demand a
Wickus Bester, statistical analyst
stockinthechannel.co.ik
54
Powered by FlippingBook