Retail and Hospitality
Feature:
Touching music history
18 January 2010
Using Microsoft software and Microsoft Surface units, visitors to the Hard Rock Café in Las Vegas can experience Hard Rock International’s vast collection of memorabilia from John Lennon, Madonna, Michael Jackson and other rock 'n' roll legends.
They can reach out and touch thousands of pieces of rock history, at least in a virtual sense, using Microsoft’s Surface, Silverlight, SharePoint, and Windows technologies. Through a series of devices, ranging from 19-inch touch screens in the restaurant's booths to the multitouch Surface units to the Rock Wall, Hard Rock is using technology to increase the number of people who are able to check out its memorabilia.
Customers can get a closer look by playing with multiple Microsoft Surface units scattered across the reception area, bar and VIP lounge. Once they sit down, they can try out small interactive touch screens in their booths.
With Surface, we're able to bring the vast collection from Hard Rock locations around the world for our customers to see and explore in a whole new way, enhancing their time with us.
Joe Tenzcar, Hard Rock International Then they see the main attraction: the Rock Wall, a showcase of rock history at a larger-than-life size. Images of classic guitars, stage costumes, and platinum and gold LPs float across a massive, 18-foot-wide, 4-foot-tall glass screen. They are the treasures found in Hard Rock International's music memorabilia collection, the largest collection of its kind in the world.
"People make a beeline right for (the technology)," says Greg Thomas, general manager at the Las Vegas Hard Rock. "You could sit here all day and play with this stuff."
"We have over 71,000 pieces of memorabilia in our collection and are the curator of the world's largest music memorabilia collection," says Joe Tenzcar, senior director of technology and CIO, Hard Rock International. "With Surface, we're able to bring the vast collection from Hard Rock locations around the world for our customers to see and explore in a whole new way, enhancing their time with us. You know, my jaw still drops when I walk into this place and see what we're able to do. I'm hoping our guests will have that same experience."
In the lobby, Thomas uses a Surface table to call up a video that features the Hard Rock's first curator. He also works on a jigsaw puzzle depicting the café from the outside. He says he never gets tired of playing with the touch technology. "People love this experience, and it keeps them engaged.”
This all started just over a year ago, when Hard Rock partnered with its brand agency, Duncan/Channon, and Microsoft partner Vertigo to create a new online experience incorporating Silverlight into its Web site.
The result allowed users to get up close and personal with more than 1,000 items through Hard Rock's Memorabilia site. Users could browse the site by featured artist, genre, content type (such as an instrument or vehicle), decade and location. Using Microsoft's Silverlight and Deep Zoom technologies, people could zoom in to see marks on guitars and the fine print in letters and get the background story on each piece.
The customised experience has been extended to Surface units, where people can use their fingers to zoom in and out and explore the collection. "You're seeing every little scratch, every little detail that makes it real," says Eric Havir, senior marketing manager with Surface. "You wouldn't be able to touch this stuff if it was in a museum."
Inside the Hard Rock's main dining area, each booth features a 21st-century jukebox: a 19-inch touch screen that allows customers to vote on which videos should be shown on screens around the café and browse the memorabilia collection. "
Back in the Hard Rock's lobby, Thomas watched a young boy barely tall enough to reach the Rock Wall inspect a Paul McCartney guitar with help from his mother. "The technology we have here connects people to the memorabilia," he says. "But it's still all about the music. Music brings people together."
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