Patent Publication Number: US-2023154395-A1

Title: Communication stage and virtual production systems

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO PRIOR APPLICATIONS 
     This application is a continuation-in-part of patent application Ser. No. 18/149,920 filed on Jan. 4, 2023, which is a continuation-in-part application Ser. No. 17/379,578 filed Jul. 19, 2021, which is a continuation-in-part application Ser. No. 16/371,656 filed Apr. 1, 2019, which granted as U.S. Pat. No. 11,099,465 on Aug. 24, 2021, which is a continuation-in-part of patent application Ser. No. 15/891,912 filed Feb. 8, 2018, which granted as U.S. Pat. No. 10,298,877 on May 21, 2019, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/593,711 filed May 12, 2017, which granted as U.S. Pat. No. 9,930,290 on Mar. 27, 2018, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/497,228 filed Sep. 25, 2014, which granted as U.S. Pat. No. 9,819,907 on Nov. 14, 2017. 
    
    
     U.S. GOVERNMENT SUPPORT 
     Not Applicable 
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
     Area of the Art 
     The present disclosure relates generally to communication and entertainment display devices that are see-through and with 3D settings, and specifically videoconferencing display devices applicable to personal computing, group collaboration, and the theatrical stage. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     Videoconferencing is now an application on personal computing devices for over a billion people. The experience enables audio and video communication, but still lacks the sense of being with the person in the same physical space. The experience is further frustrated by a complete negation of simulating the way people communicate in the same room and in person. The parallax problem still frustrates most all videoconferencing from small handheld phones to large multi-screen telepresence rooms. That problem is a camera mounted away from the conferee&#39;s eyes on the screen so people appear to be looking away rather than at the people they intend to converse with. Though numerous technologies have been proposed to resolve this problem the art of using beamsplitters remains the most commercially viable way to align the camera with people&#39;s eyes on screen and maintain perfect display image quality and perfect camera image capturing. Numerous advances in reducing the appearance in size of these systems and improving user acceptance is an area of significant research and invention. Further, improved ways to increase the eye contact between conferees in retrofit camera systems and with a variety of display systems is a primary embodiment of the present invention. The present invention discloses numerous ways to improve eye contact with specialized micro-camera imagers and lenses and unique housing configurations. 
     Another area of great interest is improving the realism of conferencing by freeing the imaged people from the confines of a display frame. Simply when conversing with someone in person they do not have a TV box around them. The display frame is a major distracter while conferencing and this draws a person&#39;s attention to a constant awareness that they are conversing with a person on a TV or computer screen and not in-person. The Pepper&#39;s Ghost Illusion combined with videoconferencing has greatly resolved this problem. Yet, numerous advances are needed to make this optical configuration practical for group communication. Such advances are the subject of this invention to enable specific built environments concealing the optical, display, and other various components. Further, to enable effective videoconferencing lighting in these highly light sensitive environments is disclosed. 
     Direct see-through display technologies are now prevalent. The most well-known are projection screens that are see-through. While these screens have the ability to display a person in the physical room they are rendered nearly useless in corporate communications. This is due to the distraction of a residual projection beam that passes through the screen and illuminates portions of the meeting room environment, such as a table or ceiling. What is seen are two versions of the same image with one on the screen and the other dispersed in the meeting room environment. The present invention resolves these residual image issues by concealing these residual images from the direct view of the local participants. Still further, the present invention teaches how to conceal the projector lens seen through the screen. Another direct see-through display technology is LCD panels with the backlight removed. What is left are dull images of videoconferencing participants, yet the physical environment of the room can be seen behind them aiding in conference realism. The present invention teaches novel ways to dramatically improve the brightness of these see-through displays when used for videoconferencing. Further, an inventive method to provide moving shadows behind these direct see-through displays and the Pepper&#39;s Ghost optical arrangement is taught. 
     While holographic effects for the stage have become more common, the technology of inclined foil, plastic, and glass that creates these effects have limited many potential applications. An inclined optic for reflecting a physical room or an image display hidden from the audience view is well known in the art. Unfortunately, the inclined optic has proven to be a great hindrance to the technology&#39;s adoption. The inclined optic, often stretched polyester film, is very delicate and can take days to set-up in venue. The inclined optic also takes up a tremendous amount of space on stage, as well as a display laid on the stage floor. The present invention resolves all these insurmountable issues of the prior art with a unique ultra-compact staging hologram appearing solution. The present invention teaches the removal of the inclined optic and instead allows a vertical optic to reflect an illuminated foreground to create the illusion of stage objects and set behind a motion image. Further, videoconferencing applications are disclosed uniquely integrated into this stage optical configuration, as well as physical mid-ground props. Further, the stage solution is, in one embodiment, permanently attached to the room and expands and retracts as needed for quick set-up. Also, the same configuration is disclosed in small systems that provide life-size people in kiosks, as well as built into conference meeting rooms. 
     Image mapping has become well known for applications of making buildings come to life with amazing animation effects. The use of multiple projectors with mapping software to fit content onto physical objects is a carefully orchestrated projected effect. Using a grouping of imaged mapped projectors the present invention combines videoconferencing with a 3D projected physical set with life-size people among the projected set. The same can apply to recorded presentations creating the effect of a proportional correct human amongst a projected physical object set and both the human and the set are produced by the same imaged mapped projectors. Beyond the theater the invention has been applied to corporate group conferencing rooms where a grouping of imaged mapped projectors create the meeting room environment and the imaged videoconferencing participants. 
     Another primary embodiment of the present invention is to deploy display and communication technologies of the present invention in an enterprise of like units where many sites can all enjoy the same experience. Attention to display size, life-size people and distance to display are all critical when configuring displays for enterprise wide deployment. The present invention is applicable to corporate enterprises, but also in detail reveals the unique challenges deploying in a hotel enterprise. Unique enterprise wide hotel solutions are taught including smart doors where both sides of the hotel room door becomes a vital guest communication, security, and application portal. Also, guests are provided displays designed for the wrist and worn like bracelets, yet can unfold as a mobile phone or tablet. Further, see-through reception desks are disclosed where hotel staff can interact with guests virtually. Lastly, the present invention expands the use of a hotel property management system to interoperate with and manage the functional uses of the present invention displays and display application embodiments disclosed herein. 
     The present invention allows the aforementioned ultra-compact staging hologram device that is permanent in a hotel multi-purpose room, and enables the device to be moved without being disassembled in that room. The costs of setting up and tearing down large event audio/visual equipment are often insurmountable in costs. The present invention provides a concealed staging system, with a massive image display, retracted and hidden in the hotel multi-purpose room. Now clients can save enormously on the costs for setting up and tearing down these events because the audio/visual technology already exists in the hotel multi-purpose room. Further, the present moveable feature enables the hotel facility to place the device in any configuration in a multi-purpose room with and without room dividers. 
     Other embodiments of the present invention to further improve the large venue stage experience is overcoming the insurmountable costs of large event productions since creative agencies are involved in creating custom video content. The present invention teaches a new process to bypass a great deal of the custom content used for large scale video events by providing a client accessible online production program where the client can select from templates and a content library impressive show elements and fully conceptualize the show from their personal computing device. Further, a remote production staff at various locations joins the live show event as extended staff by a collaboration connection and is being able to control all or portions of the event show control system. Also, uniquely described is a temporary studio soundstage using a hotel multi-purpose room where the talent and the producers can see in real-time the production on the final format event display system already located in the multi-purpose room. 
     A further embodiment of the present invention provides consumers, including professionals, a flexible camera housing system where they can create their own camera housing. Cameras components are becoming increasingly miniaturized and the consumer is still limited to the applications of housing the major camera manufacturer provides. This limits numerous potential applications of how a small camera can be used by a consumer. The present invention enables a consumer the ability to access on their personal computing device a library online or downloaded of numerous camera housing 3D models. These models may be 3D printed or modified and the consumer can create their own housings. The consumer then, with a small camera component kit, integrate that kit into the 3D printed camera housing. 
     The invention further discloses applications for large immersive ultra HD displays as used in numerous leisure and working environments. These new displays permit such high resolution that computer images may be resized to small portion of the screen while the user is immersed close up to the large display. Numerous room configurations, furniture configurations, and a unique device to manipulate multiple video sources on a single ultra HD image are disclosed, all of which enables entire new ways of watching large immersive displays in working modes close up and watching modes further away. 
     The invention further discloses novel marketing, speaker, and campaign system that enables mobile vehicles to set-up holographic events quickly and with a minimum crew at temporary events and present a live “holographed” person from a distant location. The prior art of inclined optics to create a reflected hologram has proven to be costly, too involved to set-up quickly, dim and dull in appearance, and too bulky to provide such mobile campaigns requiring rapid deployment at temporary events. The present invention discloses a unique process and device to overcome the substantial prior art limitations using mobile vehicles and a holographic podium with direct projection. 
    
    
     
       DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES 
       The included drawings are for illustrative purposes and serve only to provide examples of possible structures and process steps for the disclosed inventive apparatuses, systems, and methods. These drawings in no way limit any changes in form and detail that may be made to embodiments by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure. 
         FIG.  1    illustrates a prior art diagram of a hotel ballroom with a temporary audio/visual presentation set-up. 
         FIG.  2    illustrates a prior art diagram of a hotel ballroom with a temporary set-up of an inclined optic Pepper&#39;s Ghost illusion. 
         FIG.  3    illustrates a prior art diagram of a hotel ballroom with a reflected room depth illusion using an inclined optic. 
         FIG.  4 A  illustrates a side cut away view of the present stage invention in a hotel ballroom fully retracted and concealed and reveal the décor of the room. 
         FIG.  4 B  illustrates a front view of the present stage invention in a hotel ballroom fully retracted with a matching décor concealment. 
         FIG.  5    illustrates the present stage invention in a hotel ballroom fully expanded and operating with a live person on stage and enabling live people on screen amongst a reflected foreground behind them. 
         FIG.  6    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with illuminated 3D foreground props reflected to form a background. 
         FIG.  7    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with foreground drapes, emissive display, surrounding black, and sectional vertical foreground reflector. 
         FIG.  8    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with foreground roll-up panels, emissive display, surrounding black, and sectional vertical foreground reflector. 
         FIG.  9    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with a continuous vertical foreground reflector and the emissive display producing a life-size person, 3D objects, and a magnification screen (foreground not shown). 
         FIG.  10    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded and the room floor serving as the stage area. 
         FIG.  11    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded where the emissive display starts near floor level and the stage is placed in front of the emissive display. 
         FIG.  12    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with the vertical foreground reflector rolled up and out of view of the audience. 
         FIG.  13    illustrates the present stage invention fully retracted, concealed in the room, and with mechanical mechanism detail. 
         FIG.  14    illustrates the present stage invention of  FIG.  13    fully expanded and with mechanical mechanism detail. 
         FIG.  15    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded and revealing an audience members&#39; scope of view of the foreground, mid-ground objects, screen, and reflected foreground background. 
         FIG.  16    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with a front projection system and the reflected foreground using foreground props. 
         FIG.  17    illustrates the present stage invention with an emissive display near floor height and a concealing drop panel hiding the massive display in a hotel ballroom. 
         FIG.  18    illustrates the present stage invention of  FIG.  17    with a reflected foreground staging kit that is assembled in front of the emissive display. 
         FIG.  19    illustrates the present stage invention with 3D projection aligning video conferenced people on stage and amongst foreground props. 
         FIG.  20    illustrates the present stage invention content production and distribution to various size displays and maintaining life-size proportionality both in live and recorded playback modes of use. 
         FIG.  21    illustrates the present stage invention utilizing multiple rear projectors. 
         FIG.  22    illustrates the present stage invention with both a live person on stage interacting with an imaged person on the screen of the emissive display. 
         FIG.  23    illustrates the present stage invention with a basic diagrammatic layout of a live telepresence production. 
         FIG.  24    illustrates the present invention with a polarized light reduction system. 
         FIG.  25    illustrates the present invention configured for corporate communications in a meeting room with a reflected foreground behind the imaged conference participants. 
         FIG.  26    illustrates the present invention with a life-size person kiosk display with a reflected foreground consisting of high intensity light bars in the foreground. 
         FIG.  27    illustrates the present invention with a high intensity light bar construction. 
         FIG.  28    illustrates the present stage invention fully expanded with a conferenced person imaged on the screen in the mid-ground and reflected foreground objects in the background. 
         FIG.  29    illustrates the present invention utilizing a glass vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  30    illustrates the present invention utilizing a rigid plastic vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  31    illustrates the present invention utilizing a sectional vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  32    illustrates the present invention utilizing a gradient vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  33    illustrates the present invention utilizing multiple layers of reflective optics to increase brightness. 
         FIG.  34    illustrates the present invention with a weighted thin film plastic used for a vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  35    illustrates the present invention with a stretched frame retaining a thin film plastic used for a vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  36    illustrates the present invention with a stretching method for a thin film plastic used for a vertical reflector. 
         FIG.  37    illustrates a prior art multi-screen conference system with a camera aimed through a rear projection screen hole. 
         FIG.  38    illustrates a prior art camera box blocking a substantial part of the screen. 
         FIG.  39    illustrates a prior art large hanging camera intruding on the screen. 
         FIG.  40    illustrates the present invention with a screw mount lens. 
         FIG.  41    illustrates the present invention with a modified rectangular sensor board enabling a micro stem camera assembly. 
         FIG.  42    illustrates the present invention with a transparent wire system. 
         FIG.  43    illustrates the present invention with a micro head and separate image processing electronics board. 
         FIG.  44    illustrates the present invention as a final assembly of a micro stem camera. 
         FIG.  45    illustrates the present invention isolating images from a mega pixel imager and not using distorted lens portions. 
         FIG.  46    illustrates the present invention of a megapixel sensor configured for capturing and image processing numerous video signals for output. 
         FIG.  47    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera concealed as a table top gooseneck microphone. 
         FIG.  48    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera retractable into a working surface. 
         FIG.  49    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera detachable from a working surface. 
         FIG.  50    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera on a stand. 
         FIG.  51    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera adjustable for various proportions of images of people on screen. 
         FIG.  52    illustrates the present invention with a flip micro stem camera hinge to move the camera out of view of the display screen. 
         FIG.  53    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera used with a two conference display configuration. 
         FIG.  54    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera used with a three conference display configuration 
         FIG.  55    illustrates the present invention of a micro head camera detachable from a hole in a display screen. 
         FIG.  56    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera affixed to a display screen wireless means to transmit video and power. 
         FIG.  57    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera affixed to a screen and powered by light energy from the display screen. 
         FIG.  58    illustrates the present invention of micro stem camera where the stem is concealed with a strip display with content seamlessly merging the main display and strip display. 
         FIG.  59    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera used with a bottom mounted short throw projector. 
         FIG.  60    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera used with a top mounted short throw projector. 
         FIG.  61    illustrates a prior art system of a camera placed in a hole of a front projection screen and light from the projector impinging on the camera lens. 
         FIG.  62    illustrates the present invention of a camera mounted in a hole of a front projection screen and the lens protected from being impinged with the light from the projector. 
         FIG.  63    illustrates the present invention of a micro stem camera with a shield to protect the lens from being impinged by the projector. 
         FIG.  64    illustrates the present invention with a large high resolution display used in a mode of close up viewing and creating a smaller image in the larger screen and using a portion of the screen for videoconferencing lighting. 
         FIG.  65    illustrates the present invention with a micro stem camera and multi person conference display maintaining proportional life-size images. 
         FIG.  66    illustrates the present invention in hotel guest room and used in a work mode. 
         FIG.  67    illustrates the present invention in a hotel guest room with a display repositioned to a work mode area in the room. 
         FIG.  68    illustrates the present invention positioned in an area of a hotel room and operating in a work mode of use. 
         FIG.  69    illustrates the present invention with a table connector cubby. 
         FIG.  70    illustrates the present invention positioned in an area of a hotel room and operating in a watch mode of use. 
         FIG.  71    illustrates the present invention having multiple sources of content delivery and collaboration. 
         FIG.  72    illustrates the present invention configured in a multipurpose meeting room with a close up work mode and a group conference work mode of use. 
         FIG.  73    illustrates the present invention configured in an office and intended to be used in a close up work mode of use and a watch mode of use. 
         FIG.  74    illustrates the present invention configured as a multi-mode use display and eye aligned camera technology for eye contact. 
         FIG.  75    illustrates the present invention configured as a multi-mode use display and enabling multiple streams of image content to be seen. 
         FIG.  76    illustrates the present invention configured with a surrounding light for videoconferencing. 
         FIG.  77    illustrates the present invention with multiple options for audio speakers. 
         FIG.  78    illustrates the present invention configured as a stretched film augmented reality environment that enables eye contact while videoconferencing. 
         FIG.  79    illustrates the present invention configured as a stretched film augmented reality environment and the interaction of 3D objects by both the presenter and the viewers. 
         FIG.  80    illustrates the present invention configured as a stretched film augmented reality environment in a videoconferencing mode where imaged people appear in the middle of the room. 
         FIG.  81    illustrates the present invention configured as a stretched film augmented reality environment and maintain life-size proportionality of imaged persons. 
         FIG.  82    illustrates the present invention configured as a stretched film augmented reality environment and controls for selecting various modes of use. 
         FIG.  83    illustrates a prior art stretched film optical configuration used for stage holograms. 
         FIG.  84    illustrates a prior art stretched film optical configuration used for stage holograms with projector impinging the inclined optic. 
         FIG.  85    illustrates the present invention stretching film by panel pull sections and bowed edge member stretching system. 
         FIG.  86    illustrates the present invention clasping a film edge for stretching. 
         FIG.  87    illustrates the present invention for stretching film as one round tube pulling member. 
         FIG.  88    illustrates a display side view with a reflective panel used for eye contact while conferencing and a black backboard with a visible border. 
         FIG.  89    illustrates a display front view with a reflective panel used for eye contact while conferencing and a black backboard with a visible border. 
         FIG.  90    illustrates a side view of the present invention reflecting a display for eye contact while conferencing and an eliminated intrusive visible black border. 
         FIG.  91    illustrates a front view of the present invention reflecting a display for eye contact while conferencing and an eliminated intrusive visible black border. 
         FIG.  92    illustrates a top view of the present invention reflecting a display for eye contact and a camera hood that does not intrude beyond a user&#39;s viewing angle of the reflected image. 
         FIG.  93    illustrates the present invention of a smart hotel room door with a hallway side. 
         FIG.  94    illustrates a side view of the present invention of a smart door and how the hallway side is connected to an in-room side. 
         FIG.  95    illustrates the present invention of a smart hotel room door with an in-room side. 
         FIG.  96    illustrates the present invention of a smart door and content distribution to displays on both sides of the door. 
         FIG.  97    illustrates the present invention of a videoconferencing see-through display based on rear projection with a micro stem camera and a top mounted projector. 
         FIG.  98    illustrates the present invention of a videoconferencing see-through display based on rear projection with a micro stem camera and a bottom mounted projector. 
         FIG.  99    illustrates the present invention with residual projection beam physically blocked. 
         FIG.  100    illustrates the present invention with a residual projection beam light-absorbing material. 
         FIG.  101    illustrates the present invention with a residual projection beam light blocked by louvers. 
         FIG.  102    illustrates the present invention with a residual projection beam light being washed out by a bright light source. 
         FIG.  103    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light and the light of the lens of the projector. 
         FIG.  104    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light in a ceiling soffit and the light of the lens of the projector. 
         FIG.  105    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light in a ceiling soffit and the light of the lens of the projector and an extended table. 
         FIG.  106    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light with light absorbing material and the light of the lens of the projector behind the screen stand. 
         FIG.  107    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light by means of a hanging light fixture. 
         FIG.  108    illustrates the present invention with a rear projection configuration that conceals the residual projection beam light with light absorbing material and the light of the lens of the projector behind the screen stand. 
         FIG.  109    illustrates the present invention configured as a rear projection see-through stage with a concealing of a projector lens. 
         FIG.  110    illustrates the present invention with see-through projection screen that can be front, rear or both projection. 
         FIG.  111    illustrates the present invention configured as portable videoconferencing stage system with the stage built upon stage road cases and the projector lens hidden from view behind the stage. 
         FIG.  112    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen made of plastic. 
         FIG.  113    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen made of glass. 
         FIG.  114    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen made of laminated glass. 
         FIG.  115    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen made of optical element fabric. 
         FIG.  116    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen made of plastic film. 
         FIG.  117    illustrates the present invention utilizing a see-through projection screen or see-through mirror made of film plastic and an optically bonded film extension. 
         FIG.  118    illustrates the present invention of a see-through rear projection screen configured as a wide format speaker&#39;s podium with a partially concealed screen. 
         FIG.  119    illustrates the present invention of a see-through rear projection screen configured as a wide format videoconferencing speaker&#39;s podium. 
         FIG.  120    illustrates the present invention of a see-through rear projection screen configured as a retractable and rolling videoconferencing speaker&#39;s podium. 
         FIG.  121    illustrates the present invention of an environment shadow projector applicable to all types of see-through display systems. 
         FIG.  122    illustrates the present invention of the method for creating a shadow in the background environment of objects seen on a see-through display. 
         FIG.  123    illustrates the present invention of a videoconferencing imaged mapped projection system for the stage. 
         FIG.  124    illustrates the present invention of a videoconferencing imaged mapped projection system for the stage with props familiar to common stage sets. 
         FIG.  125    illustrates the present invention of a videoconferencing imaged mapped projection system for a corporate meeting room. 
         FIG.  126    illustrates the present invention of a transparent emissive display large enough for a standing person&#39;s image with an environmental back light for illuminating the emissive display. 
         FIG.  127    illustrates the present invention of a transparent emissive display configured to show life-size videoconference images of people with an environmental back light for illuminating the emissive display. 
         FIG.  128    illustrates the present invention of a wrist display with a curved shaped memory for being held on the wrist. 
         FIG.  129    illustrates the present invention of  FIG.  128    of a wrist display with a flat memory and to be used as a small tablet or mobile phone. 
         FIG.  130    illustrates the present invention configured as a two-tier multi-purpose videoconference room. 
         FIG.  131    illustrates the present invention configured as a large center table multi-purpose videoconference room. 
         FIG.  132    illustrates the present invention configured as a videoconference production studio. 
         FIG.  133    illustrates the present invention configured as an eye contact meeting room with two modes of use and seen in a multipurpose room mode. 
         FIG.  134    illustrates the present invention configured as an eye contact meeting room with two modes of use and seen in a telepresence conference room mode. 
         FIG.  135    illustrates the present invention configured with hanging light panels that align alongside a hanging flat panel display. 
         FIG.  136    illustrates the present invention of a floor resting group conferencing light that is leaned against the wall. 
         FIG.  137    illustrates the present invention of a floor resting group conferencing light that is freestanding. 
         FIG.  138    illustrates the present invention configured in a modular media center with modular sections for lights, speakers, and decorative panels. 
         FIG.  139    illustrates the present invention configured in a modular media center for two side-by-side displays with modular sections for lights, speakers, and decorative panels. 
         FIG.  140    illustrates a side view of the present invention of a modular media center for flat panel displays. 
         FIG.  141    illustrates the present invention of a modular media center for reflective display eye contact systems. 
         FIG.  142    illustrates the present invention of a reflective display eye contact system positioned on a desk with a micro stem camera. 
         FIG.  143    illustrates the present invention of a reflective display eye contact system positioned on a desk with a micro stem camera and the display is a dockable tablet. 
         FIG.  144    illustrates the present invention of a standing videoconferencing production studio. 
         FIG.  145    illustrates the present invention of a see-through eye contact system integral with a service counter. 
         FIG.  146    illustrates the present invention of a see-through reflective display conference kiosk system. 
         FIG.  147    illustrates the present invention of a see-through emissive display and conference kiosk system. 
         FIG.  148    illustrates numerous embodiments of the present invention integrated with a hotel property management system. 
         FIG.  149    illustrates the present invention with a forward projection screen and layered video images. 
         FIG.  150    illustrates the present invention with a display suspended in a risen stage mode. 
         FIG.  151    illustrates the present invention with a display suspended and lowered to floor height. 
         FIG.  152    illustrates the present invention configured as a moving and retracting stage. 
         FIG.  153    illustrates the present invention with a moving and retracting stage and repositionable in a divided multi-purpose room. 
         FIG.  154    illustrates the present invention of temporary studio soundstage using a hotel multi-purpose room. 
         FIG.  155    illustrates the present invention of an online client created event show. 
         FIG.  156    illustrates the present invention a remote production collaboration and control system. 
         FIG.  157    illustrates a prior art cubicle privacy barrier. 
         FIG.  158    illustrates the present invention of an image display serving as a privacy bather and mounted to a floor resting stand. 
         FIG.  159    illustrates the present invention of an image display serving as a privacy bather and mounted to a desk mount. 
         FIG.  160    illustrates the present invention of a camera component kit and process for a consumer to select, create, and 3D print their own camera housing. 
         FIG.  161    illustrates the present invention of holographic podium campaign. 
         FIG.  162    illustrates the present invention of a multi-viewer, switcher, and scaling device for close up viewing of ultra HD displays 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     The following description is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention and sets forth the best modes contemplated by the inventor of carrying out his invention. Various modifications, however, will remain readily apparent to those skilled in the art, since the general principles of the present invention have been defined herein specifically to provide a realistic and life-like audio and visual communication experience. 
     Videoconferencing applications are now easily accessible to anyone with a personal computing device and the Internet. Notebooks, mobile phones, PCs, tablets, and more all have microphones, cameras, speakers, and software to enable a videoconference. While videoconferencing accessibility for consumers and businesses has greatly increased, they still rely on audio-only communication and rarely engage video communication. The reasons are many, but the chief of the issues remains low quality internet access causing poor video quality and poor human factors. While all the embodiments of the present invention would benefit from increased bandwidth and a high quality connection the embodiments herein disclosed are related to human factors and resolving the issues of poor camera angles and people&#39;s images contained inside of a TV frame. Specifically, ways to align cameras closer to the eye level of the people seen on screen is a primary emphasis and also, in more elaborate configurations, removing the people on screen and placing them within a room environment. The hallmark of life-like conferencing is to place the image of the remote participants inside the room environment that is shared by the local participants and thereby simulating as if all participants are in the same room. This is applicable to small offices, homes, meeting rooms, and even on the stage for live concerts and corporate events. 
     Disclosed herein are devices, methods, and related systems resolving the above mentioned problems with videoconferencing. The present invention enables a superior experience so that participants will want to use the technology and not be frustrated by poor human factors, people looking off and away while engaged in a conversation, and imaged participants stuck on a TV set or a computer screen. The inventive motive described herein is to enable videoconferencing to simulate a natural in-person conversation in order to make videoconferencing a viable and valuable communication option for consumers, business people, and even audiences at events. Unfortunately, the history of videoconferencing has had several false starts with major corporations claiming they have achieved “telepresence” when in reality they simply where marketing TVs with cameras on top. Consumers have become increasingly savvy and are alerted to marketing puffery. Sophisticated users now demand innovation that will provide natural life-like communication. 
     For clarification and simplicity the present invention describes a “videoconferencing transmission system” as any and all ways participants in one location can hear and see remote participants at a remote location and likewise the same for the remote participants with the local participants. It should be expressly understood that for the sake of definition, a videoconferencing transmission system includes any type of audio pick-up device and related system for voice, any type of audio producing device and related system to produce a voice, any type of image pick-up device and related system for capturing images of people, any type of audio and image processing to transmit audio and video, and any type of transmission system. Hence, this definition as expressed in the claims of this invention should be understood to include analog-based videoconferencing, satellite-based videoconferencing, specialty-broadcast based videoconferencing, corporate class codec appliance-based videoconferencing, and personal computing device, and software application videoconferencing. Included is conferencing in where video may be presented only one way and audio both ways. The totality of the definition above includes all known and future developed means for participants at one location to see and hear participants at a distant location. Also, any known and future developed features to enhance this communication such as, but not limited to, multipoint, multicast, encryption, cloud-based architectures, peer-to-peer schemes, server-based and router-based systems are all under the generic designations “videoconferencing transmission system” and “videoconferencing.” So unless otherwise, specified all the above is included and is modifiable by one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the unique embodiments disclosed herein. Further, industry nomenclature should not confuse this definition and all words such as “telepresence,” “video-chat,” “video-collaboration” and the like are all encompassed by the designations “videoconferencing transmission system” and “video conferencing.” 
     Disclosed herein are numerous embodiments incorporating an image display. Unless otherwise specified any and all types of display technologies are applicable including any variation of resolution, refresh rate, 2-D, 3-D, and color. A vast array of self-contained light emanating displays are applicable such as, but not limited to, LCD, LED, OLED, CRT, plasma, and the like. Also, many image displays are built as modules and connected to form a variety of sizes and shapes. Certainly, any type of modular connected image display is applicable to the present invention and when connectably combined forms a single image display. Of course, it is preferred that such modular image displays, whether self-contained light emanating or rear projection, conceal seams between modules. Also, unless otherwise specified, an image display should also be understood to include any type of projection system front, rear, or any type of projection pathway and optical components, including any type of projector image engine and any type of projection screen. Also, a specific embodiment may include two or more types of display technology to achieve a configurational objective. For example, an LED image display on stage may be used for a videoconference, yet a projection screen is used for a stage magnification screen. 
     Likewise, the videoconferencing camera technology may be any type of image pick-up device and optical system. This includes any type of image pick-up device such as, but not limited to, CCD and CMOS, including any type of lens system, multiple lenses, multiple sensors, imaged processing, and 3-D. Further, any type of speakers and microphones are applicable to any configuration of the embodiments of the present invention. Lastly, the present invention illustrates embodiments as applied to various rooms, venues, and environments. It is to be expressly understood that any particular configuration of the embodiments is applicable to any room, venue or environment. If, for example, a type of room is disclosed such as a hotel multipurpose ballroom in no way limits the present invention and should be applied to any room with similar characteristics, such as a large room at a university, a church, or on a corporate campus. Further, unless otherwise specified, the present invention&#39;s embodiments are applicable to any type and size of device or system whether it is small enough to fit in the hand or massively large and fills an arena. 
       FIG.  1    is a prior art illustration of a large hotel multipurpose room  2  with a common audio/visual configuration of a front projector  8  projecting onto a front projection screen  6  positioned near a display wall side of the room  3 . Further, a temporary stage  12  is set-up so a speaker  10  can converse with those sitting in an audience sitting zone  14 . The sitting zone  14  is where an audience resides and they may be in theater rows, around dining tables, standing or any other position depending on configuration of an event. An advantage to this room configuration is that front projection takes up little floor space in the large hotel multipurpose room  2 . Disadvantages to this system are numerous. A series of a ceiling light  4  offers ambient light throughout the room  2 , yet washes out the front projection screen  6 . Typically, the audio/visual equipment are trucked in by a production company with exorbitant costs for logistics and planning for the event. Further, wear and tear of the facility becomes an issue as contractors set-up and tear down heavy equipment on a regular basis. Another major problem is that the speaker  10  is seen below the front projection screen  6  so as to not block the projector  8 &#39;s projected image. Lastly, it offers little compelling presentation value since flat two-dimensional images are seen with poor black levels on the front projection screen  6 . 
     Prior art  FIG.  2    illustrates the same large hotel multipurpose room  2  configured with a common Pepper&#39;s Ghost stage illusion with an inclined stretched plastic film  26  to form a substrate that is transparent so an audience (not shown) sitting in the sitting zone  14  can see the speaker  10  standing the temporary stage  12 . The front projector  8  is positioned on massive truss frame  20  and aimed to a floor resting front screen  18 . The floor resting front screen  18  is reflected by the inclined stretched plastic film  26  and has a virtual reflected image  24  appearing on the stage with the speaker  10 . This Pepper&#39;s Ghost stage illusion has proved to be impractical for large hotel multipurpose room  2  for a variety of reasons. The chief reason is the total system consumes a huge amount of the room  2  limiting the number of people that can be in the room. In some situations it could easily consume one half of the room. Another issue is the set-up construction time and complexity of the systems. It can often take days to set-up this effect and as many as 6 people are needed to stretch and mount the inclined stretched plastic film  26 . As such, the wear and tear on a hotel facility is significant. The ceiling lights  4  above need to be blocked from above since the lights in the room wash out the floor resting front projection screen  18 . Reducing the lights in the room  2  is not a solution, because a dark room limits the usefulness of the seating zone  14 . Commonly, such systems have black drapes (not shown) placed at the rear of the temporary stage  12 , which adds more equipment for logistics and set-up time. The inclined stretched plastic film  26  is most often not coated with any reflective enhancing properties. Typically, the uncoated optic would have a reflective value of about 10% of the originating source. That means a very expensive and high-powered projector is needed for projector  8  to increase the brightness of the floor resting front screen  18 . Further, the inclined stretch plastic film  28  is delicate and can be easily dinged and ripped making it nearly impractical for long-term installation in a multipurpose room  2 . Black levels for these systems are typically poor creating a noticeable haze in the virtual reflected image  24  caused by ambient light impinging the floor resting front projection screen  18 . Even grey colored screens do not sufficiently resolve this haze issue. Other issues abound, yet the most significant is the speaker  10  is strangely separated from the audience in the sitting zone  14  by the inclined stretched plastic film  26 . The speaker  10  is positioned up to 20 feet away from the front of the sitting zone  14 . Being at such a far distance and separated by the inclined plastic film is not effective when the speaker  10  wants to engage an audience or a talent wants to gauge an audience reaction. 
       FIG.  3    illustrates another embodiment of the inclined stretched plastic film  26  incorporated into the temporary stage  12 . This solution is just as complicated to set-up as the Pepper&#39;s Ghost illusion of  FIG.  2   . A fake room  32  is positioned in the ceiling and reflected by the inclined stretched plastic film  26  forming a virtual reflected room  36 . A rear projector  28  and a rear projection screen  30  form a presentation image (not shown) in front of the virtual reflected room  36  adding depth behind the speaker  10  from the audience perspective at the sitting zone  14 . The fake room  34  is illuminated by lights (not shown) so that it will appear visible in the reflection of the virtual reflected  36 . This visual effect shares many of the same drawbacks as described for  FIG.  2   , including complex logistics, high cost, lengthy set-up time, dim images, room lights needing to be lowered, wear and tear on the facility, and having the speaker  10  far away and behind the inclined stretched plastic film  26 . 
     With the limitations of the prior art, hotels have had little options to create compelling visual effects, presentations, and like-like videoconferences in their large multipurpose rooms  2 . The same is true for other large rooms in schools, churches, corporations, and specialty venues, all of which can benefit from the present invention. The present invention offers an inventive solution to resolve all these issues of the prior art by enabling a compact system that is permanent to the room. The solution can retract and expand and has a retractable stage incorporated into it as well. The solution is very bright so room lights can remain on and a depth illusion for 3-D holography can be seen without the need of a bulky inclined stretched film taking up a large portion of the room. Further, the solution is concealable so when it is not in use it is camouflaged into the room décor so that the multipurpose rooms can be used for multiple kinds of events and room arrangements. 
     A primary embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in  FIG.  4 A . The large hotel multi-purpose room  2  utilizes a massive image display  42  positioned near the display wall side of the room  3  with an image screen  43  facing the audience sitting zone  14 . The image display  42  is vertically oriented substantially straight up. Preferably, the massive image display  42  is an LED high-resolution fine pitch display. Often these displays are fabricated in modules and it is certainly advantages to utilize an LED product that has seams between modules that are not noticeable by the audience in the sitting zone  14 . The image display  42  may also be an image display technology other than LED, and just as with LED, a self-contained light emanating display technology is preferred. The choice of potential massive display technology will evolve over the coming years and those advances are certainly applicable to being the massive image display  42 . The image display  42  may be as large as desired for any particular large hotel multipurpose room  2 . However, it is preferred the image display  42  enables a person to be imaged on the display life-size (not shown) from a lower portion and also provide presentation content above the person on the image screen  43 . Hence, a size approximately 30 feet across and 15 feet tall would be one ideal arrangement. Also, the massive image display  42  may be oriented in a specific aspect ratio to match a pixel-for-pixel resolution of 4K or 8K video, as an example. Those in the art will appreciate that each room  2  may require a modification of the massive image display  42  and constructed at a size that fits any particular large hotel multipurpose room  2 . A surrounding black mask  46  is aligned to the perimeter edge of the image display  42 , at least on the top, left, and right so that when the image screen  43  images the color black the image screen  43  and the black mask  46  forms a continuous appearing surface from the perspective of the audience at the sitting zone  14 . 
       FIG.  4 A  further illustrates an embodiment of a retracting stage system  44  that retracts under the image display  42  when not in use and expands when in use. The retracting stage system  44  can be of any construction and mechanical method of contraction and expansion. It may be in modular pieces and manually set-up or fully automated and folds out aided by motors (not shown). Stage steps, railings, and multiple stage levels may also be added as desired (not shown), as well as other common stage construction elements. 
     An image display concealment substrate  40  of  FIG.  4 A  is a retractable system for concealing the massive image display  42  and its image screen  43 . The image display concealment substrate  40  is vertically oriented substantially straight up. A primary embodiment of the present invention is that the concealment substrate  40  can conceal the massive image display  42  when not in use and further conceals the image display  42  so that the large hotel multipurpose room  2  has a continuity of décor in the room and among its the wall surfaces. In other words, the room wall surfaces all share a similar theme of décor including, but not limited to, color, texture, pattern, design and materials.  FIG.  4 A  illustrates the room décor on the surrounding walls in the large hotel multipurpose room  2  and  FIG.  4 B  illustrates a front view of the concealment substrate  40  that is, in this one configuration, a printed rolling fabric with printed décor elements that match the actual décor of the room  2 .  FIG.  4 A  and  FIG.  4 B  are illustrated side-by-side revealing a room color  37   a  matching a printed room color  37   b , a pattern with texture  39   a  matching a printed pattern with texture  39   b , a room design  41   a  matching a printed room design  41   b , and a room material  45   a  matching a printed room material  45   b . The image display concealment substrate  40  also serves to protect from damage the image screen  43  when not in use. 
     The image display concealment substrate  40  not only covers the image display  42 , but also the surrounding black mask  46 . The concealment substrate  40  in one embodiment ( FIGS.  4 A and  4 B ) is made of a flexible fabric panel and hung by an expanding ceiling bracket  48 . The concealment substrate  40  may be any material including fabric, printed fabric, room-wide substrate, sectional substrates, and a solid substrate such as wood, plastic, glass, and huge constructed moveable walls. Further, it may be mechanically placed in front of the image display  42  and away from the image display  42  by any means and can retract upwards, downwards, left, right, and any combination therein. It may be rolled, bundled, stacked in panels and held in place from any combination from above, below, and from the top. It may also be removed and positioned out of the way. The image display concealment substrate  40  may also be removed only partially exposing a smaller part of the image screen  43  for the audience to view. Those in the art will appreciate that the large hotel multipurpose meeting room  2  requires décor continuity of all room walls. An optional left side concealment substrate  40   b , an optional right side concealment substrate  40   c , and an optional center section concealment substrate  40   a  may all retract independently exposing differing portions of the screen image  43 . As described the image display concealment substrate  40  is configured into 3 independent sections (2 or 4 or more sections certainly can be a preferred for some rooms). 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is to conceal the massive image display  42  and its image screen  43  by actually imaging content on the image screen  43  that matches the large hotel multipurpose room  2  décor. Careful attention to brightness, resolution, color, texture, and pattern of an image that matches the room  2  décor will conceal the intrusion of the image display  42  and image screen  43  in the multi-purpose room  2 . The surrounding black mask  46  may be covered with retractable panels that match the décor and covers the mask  46 . It may also be permanently finished not in black, but in a décor that matches the room. Lastly, the surrounding black mask  46  may be eliminated and the image display  42  is placed to the ceiling and the side walls of the room  2 , and optionally to the floor, consuming the entire display wall side of the room  3 . 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is the image screen concealment substrate  40  is constructed of an open weave fabric and when light from the bright image screen  43  in illuminated, the open weave fabric (not shown) nearly disappears from the audience perspective in the sitting zone  14 . As a result the image screen concealment substrate  40  need not be positionable away from the image screen  43 . In this case the open weave fabric becomes fully visible when the image screen  43  is off and lights (not shown) between the image screen concealment substrate  40  and the sitting zone  14  shine upon the open weave fabric making it fully visible to the audience in the sitting zone  14 . The open weave fabric may be printed upon to match the décor of the large hotel multipurpose meeting room  2 . The open weave fabric may also be any color, yet some colors such as black become especially unnoticeable when the image screen  43  is on. 
     A major embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in  FIG.  5   . The expanded ceiling bracket  48  with the image display concealment substrate  40  is attached and expanded to a position at a distance substantially away from the image screen  43 . That distance may be any distance, but in a preferred arrangement 12 feet is sufficient. A speaker  10  is standing on the retracting stage system  44  and is able to engage the audience with an eye line  49  seated in the sitting zone  14 . The speaker  10  is able to do so, because the concealment substrate  40 , in this specific configuration, is configured with the optional center section concealment substrate  40   a  ( FIG.  4 B ) rolled up and exposing to the sitting zone audience the image screen  43 . Significantly, the optional left side concealment substrate  40   b  and the optional right side concealment substrate  40   c  remain down, concealing the stage left and right (not shown). The concealment substrate  40   b  and  40   c  now serves as a stage foreground separated from the image screen  43 . No inclined stretched plastic film  26  is placed between the speaker  10  and the audience seated in sitting zone  14  as with prior art systems ( FIGS.  2  and  3   ). Novel to this invention is a vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  placed near the image screen  43  and behind the speaker  10 . The audience in the sitting zone  14  observes through the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  the image screen  43  and the surrounding black mask  46 . When the image screen  43  images the color black the continuous black surface is seen combining both the surrounding black mask  46  and the image screen  43 . 
     A vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  of  FIG.  5    reflects the foreground including a stage floor  52 , a stage ceiling  54  and a concealment substrate foreground side  50  all forming a reflected rear stage  56 . The foreground has physical objects between the audience in the sitting zone  14  and the image screen  43 . The mid-ground has physical objects, such as a podium prop  58  placed near adjacent to the image screen  43  and is also between the image screen  43  and sitting zone  14 . The mid-ground includes images imaged upon the image screen  43 . The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  is vertically oriented substantially straight up. The concealment substrate foreground side  50  may be flat or dimensional in shape (not shown). Also, the vertical reflective transparent substrate  50  may also reflect a side stage wall between the image screen  43  and the concealment substrate foreground side  50  (not shown). The speaker  10  is seen standing in front of the reflected rear stage  56 . The podium prop  58  is placed on stage at a mid-ground to allow an imaged person (not shown) to be imaged on the image screen  43  to appear standing behind the podium prop  58 . To enhance the reflection of the stage floor  52 , the stage ceiling  54 , and the concealment substrate foreground side  50 , stage lights (not shown) are used to illuminate these objects so that they will be visibly bright in the reflection. Rather than stage lights, the stage floor  52 , the stage ceiling  54 , and the concealment foreground side  50  may be illuminated by any means. For example, they may be self-illuminated light panels, full color image displays, and projection screens with projected images to name only a few options (all not shown). Those skilled in the art will appreciate the creative production components and image content that can be added to enhance the illumination of the foreground elements of the stage floor  52 , the stage ceiling  54 , and the concealment foreground side  50 . 
       FIG.  6    provides an alternative configuration of  FIG.  5    where the concealment substrate  40  and its concealment foreground side  50  are replaced with a self-illuminated foreground object  62 . That object  62  is reflected by the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  forming a reflected rear stage object  64 . The foreground object  62  is illuminated from within, but may be illuminated by stage lights instead (not shown). The foreground object  62  may also be used in conjunction with the concealment foreground side  50 . The foreground object  62  may also be an image display (not shown) various image content. It is possible the light emanating from the foreground object  62  and any other foreground illuminated elements may cause unwanted reflection of the image screen  43  affecting its black level. Also, LED pixels may reflect the light exposing them to the audience and impinging a view of the reflected rear stage  56  and the reflected rear stage object  64 . To resolve this, a first foreground polarizer  59  is placed on one or more illuminated foreground objects such as object  62 . Between the image screen  43  and the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  is a mid-ground polarizer  61 . From the image screen  43  perspective the foreground light is greatly reduced and that light does not impinge the image screen  43  due to the darkening alignment of polarizer&#39;s  59  and  61 . It has also been successfully deployed to use a large sheet polarizer as the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  and thereby the mid-ground polarizer  61  serves to both reduce the foreground light on the image screen  43  and to reflect the foreground object  62  and the concealment foreground side  50 . 
     Construction of the present invention is preferred to use Christie Digital Velvet LED modules as the image display  42 . Also, Leyard based in China has made major advances in fine pitch indoor LED display technology. There is currently a substantial cost difference between high resolution LEDs and low resolution LEDs. Conceivably, to reduce costs a large display could incorporate two or more resolutions of LEDs where the higher resolution is used to image life-size people and the lower resolution is used for showing large close up shots of people in a magnification portion (see  FIG.  20   ) of the screen (not shown). From the audience perspective they may not even detect the difference in resolution if sufficiently far enough away. These LEDS are delicate and can be damaged, so the numerous disclosed layers of substrates placed adjacent to the LEDs, as disclosed herein, serve to protect the LEDs from possible damage. The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  is preferably a flexible polyester film that offers inherent strength when stretched. Typically polyester film is cut from its master roll at the manufacturing plant to manageable smaller rolls. Specialized handling procedures are required to access rolls wider than 10 feet. The concealment substrate  40 , mechanical hanging and retracting systems are readily available and custom built by firms such Rosebrand. Also, staging systems are available from many resources. Show control and image processing are also widely available from many sources including Barco and Christie Digital. 
       FIG.  7    illustrates additional embodiments of the present reflected foreground stage invention. The concealment substrate  40  is replaced by a left theatrical stage drape  80  and a right theatrical stage drape  82 . The drapes  80  and  82  are positioned away from the image screen  43  so that their rear foreground side (not shown) can be reflected and form a reflected rear stage  56  (not shown) behind an imaged speaker  68  on the image screen  43 . The drapes  80  and  82  may open and close concealing the image screen  43 . The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  has been replaced with a left reflective clear substrate section  74 , a right reflective clear substrate section  76 , a bottom reflective clear substrate section  78  and a top reflective clear substrate section  72 . Unlike vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  that spanned the entire surface of the image screen  43  the sections  74 ,  76 ,  78 , and  72  permit no reflective transparent substrate over the major center portion of the image screen  43 . By doing so ambient light in the large hotel multipurpose room  2  will not have unwanted reflection over the image screen  43 . The sections  74 ,  76 ,  78 , and  72  reflect the foreground drapes  80  and  82  and the stage floor  52  and stage ceiling  54  (not shown). The sections  74 ,  76 ,  78 , and  72  may cover none or parts of the image screen  43 . Further, the sections cover the surrounding black mask  46 , which is left, right, and above the image screen  43 . 
     The imaged speaker  68  seen in  FIG.  7    is imaged on the image screen  43  and may be recorded, broadcast or live videoconference. The podium prop  58  serves to add a three-dimensional mid-ground prop aiding in the illusion that the imaged speaker  68  is live on stage. Preferably the imaged person  68  is seen against the color black on the image screen  43  giving the audience in the sitting zone  14  no visual reference point that the image screen  43  is there. The surrounding black mask  46 &#39;s primary purpose is to expand the black continuous surface so as to present no visual reference point of the existence of the screen. A videoconference camera  70  is optionally located inside the podium prop  58  to capture images of the audience and the speaker  10  (not shown) standing on stage  44 . To further aid in the illusion, the imaged person  68  appears as a real person on stage by aligning his feet at an alignment point  45  on the stage floor  52 . It is to be expressly understood that the color black in the image display may be shades of black depending upon the black level of the image screen  43 . The surrounding black mask  46  should match the shade of black to create a continuous appearing black surface. 
       FIG.  8    illustrates the configuration of  FIG.  7    except the drapes  80  and  82  are replaced with a left roll up concealment panel  84  (functionally the same as  40   b  of  FIG.  4 B ) and a right roll up concealment panel  86  (functionally the same as  40   c  of  FIG.  4 B ). The panels  84  and  86  serve as the foreground for reflection forming the reflected rear stage  56 . The panels  84  and  86  can also, by motor, rise to expose the entire image screen  43  (not shown). A center concealment roll up center panel  88  (functionally the same as  40   a  of  FIG.  4 B ) raises and lowers exposing or concealing the image screen  43 . The center panel  88  can also be built with a motorized rolling mechanism. The concealment panels  84 ,  86 , and  88  when fully rolled out conceals the image screen  43  and may even conceal the stage  44  and has a décor that matches the large hotel multipurpose room  2  wall surfaces. 
       FIG.  8   . additionally illustrates a virtual stage light with a beam  87 . The virtual stage light  87  is an image on the image screen  43 . The beam of light against a black color filling the image screen creates the illusion that the imaged person  68  is actually a real person on stage. The virtual stage light with beam  87  may be a stock video clip added to the show production by use of chromakey and other image combining techniques and mixes the image signals of the imaged person  68  and the virtual stage light with the beam  87 . The virtual stage light with beam  87  is made even more realistic by having subtle changes in atmospheric diffusion of which the light beam illuminates. The show producer may create numerous lighting scenarios with colors and a plethora of virtual stage light with beam  87  stock clips. The virtual stage light with beam  87  can even be real-time animated to follow the imaged person  68  as they move about. That process can be live manual by a show staff or automated by image recognition and image processing. It is conceived that a live animated splash of light may illuminate the imaged person  68  and as he moves in and out of one or more imaged light beams. This requires a sophisticated image processing and image manipulating computer system and software to accomplish this effect in real-time. 
       FIG.  9    has the foreground elements removed to illustrate a vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  covering the image display  43  and the surrounding black mask  46 . The imaged speaker  68  has a close-up shot  89  on a magnification image  88  seen on a portion of the image screen  43 . The recorded, broadcast or videoconference imaged person  68  is contained in an image signal. Real-time image processing permits the close up shot  89  image to be extracted from the image of the imaged person  68 . This may be a live manual process or achieved by automated image processing software. It is also possible that the close up shot  89  is a separate image signal and recorded and synced with the full body image signal of the imaged person  68 . Also, a second image signal can be transmitted and received as an additional recorded, broadcast or videoconference image. 
       FIG.  9    further illustrates the present invention presenting a massive 3-D volumetric object  90  floating in a black color of the image screen  43  and the surrounding black mask  46 . The volumetric object  90  appears 3-D and is described as “holographic” by observers even though the volumetric object  90  is technically not a hologram. Yet, industry terminology and popular description is certainly now morphing the definition of a “hologram.” The object  90  is animated or videotaped with careful attention to increased surface reflection, shadows and motion that are in concert create the impression of a solid object floating in mid-air in the stages black void. The illusion is even more impressive when the reflected rear stage  56  is seen behind the 3-D volumetric object  90 . Of course, stereo 3-D with glasses or auto-stereoscopic displays are applicable to the present invention, but the impressive illusion of the 3-D volumetric object  90  presents an impressive 3-D presentation and entertainment experience. Those skilled in the production arts will appreciate the vast creative possibilities to create impressive corporate meetings, church services, concerts, and special events with custom content created for the present invention. For example, data from a motion capture actor movements can, in real-time, be used to create animated characters. Those animated characters can be recorded or interact with an audience live at many locations simultaneously. 
       FIG.  10    illustrates an embodiment of the present invention where the image display  42  rests on a room floor  91  with its image screen positioned near the room floor  91  with a portion of the floor forming a floor stage area  92 . The imaged person  68  has his feet aligned with the stage floor area  92  (not shown).  FIG.  11    illustrates the present invention where the retracting stage system  44  is positioned in front of the image screen  43 .  FIG.  12    illustrates a retracting of the reflective foreground elements, removing of the concealment substrate  40 , and the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  from observation by the audience in the sitting zone  14  (not shown). By doing so the image screen  43  can be used in a mode of use as a large video wall or movie screen and in a second mode of use as a reflective foreground stage system. 
       FIG.  13    is a detailed mechanical side view of many of the embodiments described for  FIG.  8   . The left roll up concealment panel  84 , the right roll up concealment panel  86 , and the center concealment roll up center panel  88  are rolled down concealing the entire image screen  43  and the black surrounding mask  46 . The retracting stage system  44  is seen retracted under the image display  42  with a stage front  136  that may remain in view or covered by the panels  84 ,  86 , and  88  (not shown). A first hinge  132  connects to a permanent stage section  126  and a first flip up stage floor  130 . The floor  130  is connected to a second hinge  134  to a second flip up stage floor  128 . An audio/visual equipment rack  138  is placed under the image display  42 . The image display  42  is attached to the display wall side of the room  3  by a heavy duty wall connectors  110 . Those in the art well appreciate that the image display  42  may also be free standing (not shown) and also built with an access area between the image display  42  and the display wall side of the room  3  for maintenance purposes (not shown). The image display  42  may also be positionable away from the display wall side of the room  3  for maintenance and then repositioned closer to the wall  3  when in operation (not shown). The surrounding black mask  46  is attached to the image display  42  by an angle bracket  108 . A side lighting rig  124  is one of two rigs, one for each side of the stage  44  (second side not shown). 
     The embodiment of  FIG.  13    further illustrates mechanical systems for raising and lowering the various substrates and panels in the differing modes of use. Customizing various theatrical drapery and scenery drop mechanical systems will be apparent to those skilled in the art. The specific mechanical systems described herein are only one of many options to achieve the functional objectives described herein. A side spool plate  103  (a second side spool plate on the opposing side of the stage  44  not shown) is attached to the display wall side of the room  3  by an upper angle bracket  98  and a lower angle bracket  106 . The side spool plate  103  has ceiling fabric spool  104 , a direction roller  100  for connecting a ceiling fabric  102  to a clamp  118 . Also connected to the side spool clamp  103  is the wide internal motor spool  120  for raising and lowering the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60 . The expanding ceiling bracket  48  has a motor  96  with a hanger bracket  112  and a connected valance  122 . Also, connected to the expanding ceiling bracket  48  is a dual motorized spool  114  with independent motorized spools for raising and lowering independently the left roll up concealment panel  84 , the right roll up concealment panel  86 , and the center concealment roll up center panel  88 . 
       FIG.  14    is the same exact configuration of  FIG.  13    except in an expanded mode of use with the image screen  43  visible to the audience (not shown). Specific unnumbered parts in  FIG.  14    are numbered and referenced in  FIG.  13   . In the expanded mode, the ceiling fabric  102  is expanded at a fabric direction  148  by the expanding ceiling bracket  48  at an expand-out direction  146 . The expanding ceiling bracket  146  is also positioned into the foreground and substantially away from the image screen  43 , the left roll up concealment panel  84 , the right roll up concealment panel  86 , and the concealment roll up center panel  88 . The center concealment roll up panel  88  is rolled up at an up direction  144  exposing the image screen  43  to the audience. Lights from the stage lighting rig  124  are aimed to illuminate all foreground elements sufficiently to be effectively reflected by the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  or similar reflective system disclosed herein. The retracting stage system  44  is expanded at a direction  142  and is held in place by a stage leg trusses  140 . The lights are prevented from being aimed at a rear facing direction  147  which may wash out the image screen  43 . Any type lights illuminating the foreground with the intent to be reflected by the vertical reflective substrate  60  or similar transparent reflector should not wash out the image screen  43 . To minimize light wash on the image screen  43  baffles, light directors, light lenses, image blocking film with micro louvers, and any other system, material or construction (not shown) are applicable to the present invention. Lights from the stage lighting rig  124  also can illuminate the podium prop  58  and any person on the stage  44  (not shown). 
       FIG.  15    illustrates a top view of the large hotel multipurpose room  2  revealing both sides of the stage  44  and the left roll up concealment panel  84  and the right roll up concealment panel  86 . From the perspective of the viewer  150  the reflected rear stage  56  is produced by the reflection of the foreground including the stage floor  52 , the stage ceiling  54  (not shown), a stage side walls  149 , and the concealment substrate foreground side  50  all forming the reflected rear stage  56 . A show operator  153  utilizes a control panel  151  to operate the entire event. Certainly other arrangements of audio/video control and show production will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. 
       FIG.  16    illustrates the present invention with an embodiment that utilizes a bright projector  152  and a massive front projection screen  160  instead of the image display  42 . All the disclosure related to the image screen  43  is applicable to the massive front projection screen  160 . The massive front projection screen  160  may use any type and arrangement of variants of the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  as disclosed herein. As seen in  FIG.  16    an optional hanging sheet polarizer  159  is used to improve the contrast of the massive front projection screen  160  by darkening with alignment with an ambient light polarizers  156 . Further, projector lens polarizer  154  can reduce the reflection of the projection lens of the bright projector  152  from the audience perspective in the sitting zone  14 . The surrounding black mask  46  may be changed in color to match the color of the massive front projection screen  160  forming a solid continuous appearing surface. The hanging sheet polarizer  159 , or any reflective transparent substrate, may also only cover the surrounding black mask  46  and not the massive front projection screen  160 . The podium prop  58  may need to be constructed in a way that prevents excessive shadows to be cast on the massive front projection screen  160 . 
       FIG.  17    illustrates the present invention and cross referenced to  FIG.  10    with the image display  42  and the image screen  43  positioned at the room floor  91  and forming the floor stage area  92 . The image display concealment substrate  40  is motorized retractable by a motor spool  166  held by a top bracket  164 .  FIG.  18    Illustrates the present invention of a reflected foreground built as a staging kit to be set-up and placed in front of the image screen  43  of the image display  42  that is permanent or temporary in the large hotel multipurpose room  2  or any room or venue. Moving at an upwards direction  192 , the image display concealment substrate  40  is rolled out of the way. Positioned in front of the image screen  43  is a temporary stage floor  188  supported by a temporary stage riser legs  184  consuming a floor space  190 . The temporary stage riser legs  184  are concealed by a stage skirt  186 . The stage lighting rig  124 , a rear mount spool  182  for rolling up the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60 , the hanger bracket  112  with a connected valance  122 , the dual motorized spool  114  with independent motorized spools for raising and lowering independently the left roll up concealment panel  84 , the right roll up concealment panel  86 , and the center concealment roll up panel  88  are held in place by a back truss  170 , connected to a back upper truss block  174 , connected by a top truss  178 , connected by a front upper truss block  176 , and connected to a front truss  172 . While  FIG.  18    illustrates the image display  42  at floor height it certainly could be raised up and still have the staging kit embodiment placed in front of it. 
       FIG.  19    illustrates the present invention configured with a 3D projector  199  projecting onto a stereo image supporting projection screen  198 . The podium prop  58  is constructed to not interfere with an angle of the projection beam  204  and thereby reduce shadows cast onto the screen  198 . The audience in the sitting zone  14  utilizes 3D glasses of any type including active and passive glasses. As described for all embodiments that are herein relevant to this configuration, and especially the disclosure for  FIG.  16   , is applicable to this configurational embodiment. 3D production, post production, and projection is common in the art. The present invention applies the additional depth cues of 3D projection to a recoded, broadcast, and videoconference of the image of the imaged person  68 . 3D can aid further in creating a virtual stage, adding depth to the imaged person  68  and project virtual 3D stage elements (not shown). It can also be produced in conjunction with the reflected rear stage  56  (not shown). 
       FIG.  20    illustrates the present invention&#39;s video production and various image display orientations for recorded presentations, broadcasts, and videoconferences of the imaged person  68 . A production backdrop  208  is made of a black light absorbing substrate or a chromakey background and image processed to a black color. The image captured person  214  is contained in an image capture image  210 . A close up image  213  is either extracted from the image capture image  210  or created with a second image capture device. The imaged captured person  214  utilizes a narrow podium  212 , which is blocked by the podium prop  58  when displayed. Image processing  222  of the image capture image  210  modifies the image  210  in a venue one with a square screen  220  and also in a venue two with a rectangular screen  218 . Image processing  222  can take a recorded image, a broadcast image, and a videoconference image and maintain a life-size proportion of the image captured person  214  who is seen as the imaged person  68  on the square screen  220  and the rectangular screen  218 . The image capture image  210  aspect ratio may be maintained in proportion no matter what numerous shapes and sizes of screens such as  218  and  220 . The venue one with the square screen  220  and the venue two with the rectangular screen  218  are for reference sake and both share the embodiments described for image screen  43 . That aspect ratio will usually be 16:9 but may also be wider or narrower. The aspect ratio may also be in portrait mode to preserve as a high pixel density of the imaged person  68 . The production backdrop  208  that produces black in the image capture image  210  is displayed as native source image  216  in the screens  218  and  220 . The screens  218  and  220  themselves image the color black in all areas of the screen that are not the native source image  216  forming a continuous black color with the screens  218  and  220 . The videoconferencing camera  70  is concealed in the podium prop  58 . A displayed close-up shot  89  on a magnification image  88  originates as the close image  213 . A venue one virtual stage light  221  and a venue two virtual stage light  223  are configured for the size and shape of the screens  220  and  221 . Functionally, the virtual lights  223  and  220  correspond to the explanation of  FIG.  8    and the virtual stage light with beam  87 . Modifications of the production and the display on multiple size image screens will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art. Further the image person  68  need not be head-to-toe, but may be only a torso and head shot and placed in front of the podium prop  58  or a table prop (not shown). In this case, the native source image  216  may actually be quite small. Also, numerous native source signals could be mixed and displayed side-by-side and each containing an imaged person recorded or live video conferenced creating the appearance that they are all sitting at a table during a panel discussion (all not shown). 
       FIG.  21    illustrates an alternative to the image display  42 . A massive rear projection screen  227  replaces the image screen  43 , and is produced by a lower short throw projector  226  and a higher short throw projector  228 . The projection beams form a single continuous image and are seamless by an image over lapping  265 . Those skilled in the art will appreciate multiple projection pathways from one or many projectors forming a massive image that functions as described for the image screen  43  with all the other related elements and functions as described herein. Projection mirrors (not shown) as well as any type of projector are applicable to the rear projection configuration of the  FIG.  21   . 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is utilizing the image display  42  with its image screen  43  constructed as a massive flexible display (not shown) that can be rolled up or moved aside like curtains or wall panels. It is to be expressly understood that as it relates to the deployment into the large hotel multipurpose room  2  such flexible image display construction will enable the same modes of use as described herein. With the massive flexible display, the massive concealment substrate  40  is not needed. The massive flexible display when positioned out of the way reveals the actual room wall of the multipurpose room  2  creating a consistency of décor on all room wall surfaces including the display wall side of the room  3 . Further, the massive flexible display is constructed of a display technology that is integrated into all of the disclosed embodiments of the present reflected foreground invention in any application, and most significantly for the stage. The surrounding black mask  46  may be built into the flexible image display and may have a mask that is dropped in front of, rolled up with, and adjacent to it. Additionally, the vertical transparent reflective substrate  60 , or its equivalent, can be dropped in front of the massive flexible image display. 
       FIG.  22    illustrates the present invention with both the imaged person  68  and the speaker  10  on stage. While certainly the speaker  10  could interact with a recorded image of the imaged person  68  it would require timing and production coordination. In a broadcast, the speaker  10  may only transmit his voice to the location where the imaged person  68  is located and thereby give the impression to the audience that both the image person  68  and the speaker  10  can both see and hear each other. Ideally, the imaged person  68  and the speaker  10  participate in a high quality videoconference transmission and the audience can observe the speaker  10  and the imaged person  68  and interact naturally with each other. Further, the speaker  10  and the imaged person  68  can also interact live in the videoconference with the audience enabling a fully interactive event. Further, multipoint can enable a videoconference to occur in many locations simultaneously with the present invention. The videoconference camera  70  is mounted and concealed in a floor resting microphone stand  229  on the stage  44 . This unique camera concealment is an inventive embodiment of the present invention. 
       FIG.  23    illustrates a preferred videoconference transmission system for the disclosed image display stage concealment and reflected foreground stage invention. A data network  232  connects to a network operations center  230  intended for managing a global deployment of large hotel multipurpose rooms  2  incorporating the present invention. Connected to the data network  232  is a hosted router and/or MCU (multi-point control)  234  for enabling many sites to participate in a stage videoconference. A live stage production  246  permits a videoconference transmission by a codec for a stage  240  to be viewed upon a production display  236 . A live telepresence production  244  permits a videoconference transmission by a codec for the talent  238  to be viewed upon a stage display  242 . The videoconference transmission permits the live telepresence production  244  and the live stage production  246  to communicate by seeing and hearing each other by the connected interaction of at least minimally the codec for the stage  240 , the codec for the talent  238  and by means of the data network  232 . Related equipment such as cameras, microphones and speakers are integrated as a part of the videoconference transmission system, as required at one or more locations. The network operations center  230  can also serve to manage all forms of communication to and from the present stage invention including satellite, terrestrial TV, and other communication means, and all showing content that is recorded, broadcast, and live videoconference interactive among various large hotel multipurpose rooms  2  and production studios (not shown). Any and all protocols for videoconference transmission, including, but not limited to, analog, dynamic transfer mode (DTM), internet protocol (IP), and motion JPEG are all applicable to achieve the communication objectives of the present invention. 
       FIG.  24    illustrates the present invention as a digital signage system. A sign image display  268  with a sign content image screen  267  has a reflective clear substrate  266  that reflects a light prop  261  in the foreground as a virtually reflected light  264  behind the sign content image screen  267 . An optional light side polarizer  266  is aligned with an optional sign side polarizer  265  and darkens from the sign content image screen  267  perspective and thereby reduces light from impinging the sign content image screen  267 . A sign viewer  262  peers in a sign screen direction  271  through the reflective clear substrate  266  and the sign side polarizer  265  to view the sign content image screen  267 . A clear bather  263 , such as protective glass, is not positioned between the sign viewer  262  and the sign image content screen  267 . Such barrier itself would be reflected by the reflective clear substrate  266  causing unwanted reflection and also have upon it unwanted ambient reflections. The sign side polarizer  265  may serve as the reflective clear substrate  266  provided it has sufficient reflection value to reflect the light prop  261 . The light prop  261  may be any shape and size depending upon the intended digital signage application. The signage system may incorporate any embodiment described for the stage application including videoconferencing. The embodiment of  FIG.  24    is applicable to large and small signage systems in public spaces and may be built into kiosks and automatic teller machines (ATMs). It is also applicable to the stage systems and any other relevant configurations described herein. 
       FIG.  25    illustrates the present invention configured as a group videoconferencing system with a center camera placement  260  (but not limited to other placements) and aimed through a wide clear reflective substrate  250  reflecting a foreground light posts  254  and appearing as a reflected background light posts  256  in a reflection upon the wide clear reflective substrate  250 . The camera placement may also be in front of the wide clear substrate  250 . A group videoconference participants  258  are imaged on a wide conference screen  252  and the screen is adjacent on the same plane as an optional wide area surrounding black  251 . The wide area surrounding black  251  extends the area for reflection by the wide clear substrate  250  of the foreground light posts  254 . All embodiments of the reflected foreground discussed herein are applicable to the present embodiment of  FIG.  25   . The foreground light posts  254  may be modified in size, shape, position and number. Likewise floors, ceilings, and walls that are illuminated externally or internally may be reflected by the wide clear reflective substrate  250  to create objects that appear behind the videoconference participants  258 . 
       FIG.  26    illustrates an alternate embodiment as described for  FIG.  24    and  FIG.  25    with the modification of showing a full standing person  288  on a portrait display  280  with a portrait image screen  286 . The portrait image screen  286  has a portrait surrounding black substrate  284 . The black substrate  284  and the portrait image screen  286  are covered by a portrait clear reflective panel  282  for reflecting a tall foreground light posts  294  and an illuminated floor  292  creating a reflected floor  290 . A wide direction  308  illustrates construction of the embodiment that may be widened to provide a wider viewing angle for observers (not shown). A videoconference box  296  contains a microphone  298 , a small conference camera  300 , and a small speaker  301 . The embodiment of  FIG.  26    may be a videoconferencing system, kiosk, an ATM, a virtual greeting system, a clothing advertising system, and any recorded and live application that shows a life-size person, among numerous other uses. Further, internally or externally illuminated floors, ceilings, and walls may replace or augment the tall foreground light posts  294  for reflection by the portrait clear reflective panel  282 . 
       FIG.  27    illustrates a multi-sided light output post as an alternative foreground object. A light  304  illuminates a heavy diffused three sided housing  302  and lightly diffused side  306  has a facing direction  303  toward the clear reflective substrate (not shown). The heavy diffused three-sided housing  302  is observed directly by a viewer (not shown) and has a common level of illumination. The light diffused side  306  is much brighter, but is observed by a viewer only in a reflection of the clear reflective substrate (not shown). That reflection matches the common level illumination from the viewer&#39;s perspective as being a consistency of illumination of the foreground object as observed directly and in the reflection. The clear reflective substrate for reflecting a foreground, as described herein in numerous embodiments, may be adjusted in its reflectivity from being an uncoated clear substrate to a complex beamsplitter coating with high reflectivity and transparency. 
       FIG.  28    illustrates a perspective view of the present invention for the stage revealing the foreground object  62  ( FIG.  6   ) seen as the reflected rear stage object  64 . The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  is placed in front of the image screen  43  of the image display  42 . The stage floor  52  of the retracting stage floor system  44  is seen as a stage reflection  315  upon the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60 . The speaker  10  can interact with the audience (not shown) and the imaged person  68 . The imaged person  68  can appear to stand behind the podium prop  58  and the imaged person  68  can see the audience and the speaker  10  by the videoconference camera  70 . The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  may be configured into a left reflective zone  314 , a right reflective zone  316 , and a reduced reflective zone  318 . The reduced reflective zone  318  may have a reflective top for reflecting the stage ceiling (not shown) and a lower reflective zone for reflecting the stage floor  52  as revealed in the reduced reflective center portion  320 . An ambient light source  310  has a potential reflection  312  in the right reflective zone  316 . The potential reflection  312  is more visible on the right reflective zone  316  and less reflective in the reduced reflective zone  318  and the reduced reflective center  320 . The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  may be constructed by any reflective clear substrate and may have a continuous reflectivity across its entire surface or degrees of reflectivity across its surface. Variations of reflectivity are possible by numerous methods including, but not limited to, reflective optical coatings, anti-reflective optical coatings, layering coatings, feathering coatings with degrees of reflectivity, seaming coating sections with degrees of reflectivity, and using reflective sectional pieces instead of single vertical reflective transparent substrate  60 . The same applies to all configurations of the present reflected foreground invention disclosed herein for such applications as group videoconferencing, digital signage, kiosks, and ATMs. 
     The vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  and its disclosed variants may be constructed in numerous ways, with numerous materials, and with numerous optical coatings and properties. As advances in optical technology takes place and new materials come into existence all are applicable and within the scope of the present invention.  FIG.  29 - 36    are all variants of the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60 . The embodiments of any these figures may have any type of optical coating and optical characteristic such as polarization and may be in any combination. Polarized optics in the form of glass, plastic or film may serve a dual role to reflect the foreground and also block foreground light aligned with another polarizer from negatively impinging the image screen  43 .  FIG.  29    illustrates a clear rigid plastic  322 .  FIG.  30    illustrates a rigid glass  324  that may be hardened chemically, by tempering or by other means.  FIG.  31    illustrates a separate sectional clear reflective members consisting of a section left  326 , a section right  328 , a section bottom  332 , and a section top  330 .  FIG.  32    illustrates a single clear substrate  336  with an increased reflective left side  334  and an increased reflective right side  338 . The increased reflectivity may be based on optical coatings, adding or removing portions of optical coatings, feathering optical coating or layering several clear optical pieces on top of each other as illustrated in  FIG.  33   .  FIG.  33    shows a first vertically clear flexible sheet  340 , a second vertically clear flexible sheet  342 , and a third vertically clear reflective sheet  344  each with an inherent reflection value and when positioned next to each other increases the total value of reflection.  FIG.  34    illustrates a flexible clear plastic film  348  hung by a hanger  350  and with a bottom weight  346 . The bottom weight  346  pulls the flexible clear plastic film  348  sufficiently to form a distortion free reflective surface.  FIG.  35    illustrates a flexible clear film  354  stretched over a frame  352 . Stretching can be manual pulling, mechanical pulling, and also heat shrinking over the frame  352 .  FIG.  36    illustrates a flexible stretch plastic  364  with pull bars  358  affixed to one or more sides (all shown) and pullers  366 . The pullers  366  are affixed to a rigid structure (not shown). The pullers  366  may be worm screws, springs, straps, ratchets, and any other puller technology well known in the projection screen and theatrical staging arts for decades. 
     Any embodiment of the present invention utilizing the surrounding black substrate  46  and the vertical reflective transparent substrate  60  or the separate sections described for  FIG.  31   , may be combined as a single optical element referred to as a black mirror (not shown). As such, when in claims and description herein it should be expressly understood the black minor is an optional combination of the black substrate  46  and the reflector used for reflecting the foreground. The black mirror may be fully opaque and placed at and beyond the perimeter of the image screen  43  or may be dark in hue and partially transparent and covering the image screen  43 . The objective of the black mirror is to form a continuous black surface of the image screen  43  and beyond its perimeter. The color black is preferred, but shades of dark grey will suffice and those shades, for the sake of definition, should be construed as the color black. The black mirror may be any substrate, yet large plastic sheet film that is black in color or is transparently grey to the see the image screen  43  behind will suffice. As such, a grey sheet polarizer may be used. The polarizer also can eliminate ambient room light and foreground light from impinging the image screen  43  by additionally aligned polarizers. 
     The hotel multipurpose room  2  combined with the present stage embodiments enables a hotel owner and operator to offer a wide variety of events otherwise not possible. Ideally the present disclosed stage inventions are deployed in hotels around the globe and booking for these events are centralized. For example, a music artist desires to do five simultaneous concerts around the globe live. The present invention and numerous embodiments permit the hotel owners to have the entire concert venue technology stored and ready to be deployed in their hotel multipurpose room  2 . No outside audio/visual company and no staging company is required for these events. The hotel multipurpose meeting room  2  is connected to an originating site where the artist is located and live via videoconference the artist can interact with each of the live locations by both seeing and hearing each other. Of course, the present invention offers the hotel owner and operator an impressive corporate meeting tool where executives need not fly to the hotel to fully interact with the audience on stage. When not on stage the executive can use another videoconferencing room as disclosed later herein to conduct more personal meetings and breakout sessions. The present invention offers a superb system for doing professional development such as a global remote doctors training network. For example, surgical techniques and medical products can be seen floating on stage next to the presenter. Religious groups may utilize the hotel multipurpose meeting room  2  and enjoy the present disclosed invention at weekly gatherings. Politicians will also greatly benefit by the present invention since they are now be able appear as a hologram and visit a dozen or more cities in a single day by arranging campaign stops at participating hotels all via videoconference. The present invention also permits movies to be seen and the participating hotels can convert a ballroom into a high-end dinner and movie theater. Also, live drama via broadcast or even better via videoconferencing permits actors in one location to interact and hear the audience feedback live even though the actors and audience are separated by thousands of miles. The present stage invention is also ideal for showing live sports at many locations to large audiences with sports figures, commentators and giant volumetric objects appearing 3D on stage. Numerous other applications and event types abound and hotel owners and operators have a new globally connected solution for numerous segments of society to visit their hotel properties. 
     Those skilled in the art will appreciate the stage embodiments for the described large hotel multipurpose room  2  may be modified as needed for the numerous arrangements of multipurpose room  2  environments. Those rooms, in fact, need not be multipurpose, but fixed seat theaters with the seats at inclines, fixed seat training environments in universities and corporations, to name only a few. Those skilled in art will appreciate that any room and any scale of the embodiments will not depart from the scope of the disclosed invention. The present invention may be a permanent or a temporary installation. Also, the hotel multipurpose room  2  is herein defined to include any public rentable multipurpose space such a convention center hall and a convention center meeting room. When built into a temporary application, such as a tradeshow booth, the display wall side of the room  3  includes in its definition a side of a booth or other arrangement. Lastly, the present invention may be incorporated into theatrical shows and concerts where the entire image display  42  and all other elements are rolled, swung, raised, lowered, and the like for an audience observation for only a portion of a show, concert or event. 
     Eye contact while videoconferencing has been a perplexing problem for all types of applications and uses. The camera mounted at the edge of the display creates the distraction of people looking far away rather than toward each other. Ideally, an eye contact system mounts a camera directly behind the eyes of the person on screen to affect perfect eye contact. Yet, a substantial need exists to improve eye contact and do so with off-shelf TVs and computer monitors. Also, a substantial need exists to provide a superior camera quality better than a web camera. Still further, consumers are frustrated with having to purchase a different kind of camera for numerous conferencing applications such as desktop and group conferencing configurations. The present invention resolves these issues. 
       FIG.  37    illustrates a prior art multiple rear projection display system with a hole  372  cut into a rear projection screens  370 . A rear camera  374  is mounted between projection pathways (not shown) so as to not cast a shadow on the rear projection screens  370 . Rear projection has proven to be too bulky and affordable flat panel TVs now render this solution nearly obsolete. Also, the hole  372  is an intrusion and when the rear projection screens  370  show content, such as data, the hole  372  is an unacceptable obstruction to the image.  FIG.  38    shows a large PTZ camera box  378  intruding a generic display  376 . A pan/tilt/zoom camera  380  requires the large PTZ camera box  378  for the camera  380  to mechanically capture various parts of a room and not have the box  378  impinge the image captured. The large PTZ camera box  378  may be in front of the generic display  376  or built into the generic display  376 . Certainly the intrusion of the bulky pan/tilt/zoom camera  380  and its box  376  is a distraction and an intrusion while videoconferencing.  FIG.  39    illustrates an overhanging camera body  386  with a lens camera  384 . The overhanging camera body  386  creates a significant distraction being in close contact with a conference person&#39;s image  383  on a typical conference display  382 . The lens camera  384 , with even a small lens 1″ in diameter, is a significant intrusion while conferencing since it looks like the conference person image  383  is wearing a hat or has something stuck on his head. The visible and obvious lens and the wide body of the overhanging camera body  386  combined, negatively affects the conferencing experience and eliminates whatever gains are made with an improved eye line. Other prior art systems place tiny beamsplitters on an image screen and aims a camera onto the beamsplitters for capturing a reflection of the viewers (not shown). These systems have proved to be too complicated and non-functional since light from the image screen impinges the reflected image on the tiny beamsplitter. Still others have tried, since the dawn videoconferencing, clamping cameras in bulky housings to monitor bezels and positioning the camera over the face of the person on the screen (not shown). Such crude systems have been used for decades and have proved utterly impractical for quality videoconferencing. 
       FIG.  40    illustrates a small camera  394  made of a common construction square electronic sensor board. The small camera  394  has a screw on lens  398  into threads  396 . An image signal transmitter and power wire bundle  392  is contained along with the small camera  394  in a slim housing  390 . The power wire of the bundle  394  is connected to a power source and that source may be permanent or battery. Traditional small camera construction limits a primary objective of the present invention and that is to create a nano camera with no intruding large visible lens and wide body housing.  FIG.  41    illustrates a nano camera  402  with an integral lens constructed upon a rectangular shaped nano electronic sensor board  404  for processing sensor image data. The objective is to create a highly unique rectangular camera assembly herein referred to as a nano stem camera  400 . As described for all relevant embodiments of the present invention whenever the nano stem camera  400  as referenced includes the nano camera  402 . As illustrated, the nano-sensor electronic board  404  is nearly as narrow as the image signal and power wire bundle  392  permitting the assembly of the nano-stem camera  400  to be extremely narrow and elongated in shape. 
       FIG.  42    illustrates an alternate embodiment where power and signal wires are integral to a clear wire assembly  406 . The clear wire assembly  406  may be constructed as a clear flexible ribbon material or a clear rigid material. The wires may be embedded or printed and the wires are intended to nearly disappear from view when placed in front of a luminous image display (not shown).  FIG.  43    separates electronic functions of the nano electronic sensor board  404  into two halves consisting of sensor mount board  408  and an electronic camera board  412 . The sensor mount board  408  connects to the electronic camera board  412  by an electronic wire bundle  410  that may be clear or concealed in the nano stem camera  400 . The electronic camera board  412  may be constructed rectangularly and contained in the nano stem camera  400  (not shown) or separate and hidden from view. 
       FIG.  44    illustrates a perspective view of the nano stem camera  400  held in the hand of a camera user  414 . The nano camera  402  is exposed from the nano stem camera  400  and is so small it is not recognizable as a camera unless the camera user  414  closely inspects it. The elongated shape may be any tubular style including round, oval, and square. The exterior of the nano stem camera  400  may be any color or texture including highly reflective mirror like finishes. An extension tube  413  permits the camera user  414  to choose the ideal length of the nano stem camera  400  and depends upon the image display (not shown) it will be placed in front of. For example, a short stem would be used with a desktop computer monitor and a long stem would be used with a large flat panel TV for group conferencing. Ideally, one product could be sold for multiple applications. The diameter of the nano stem camera  400  depends upon specific applications. The stem has been demonstrated to be less the 0.5 inch and even 0.28 inch diameter. Certainly the less diameter the better to minimize its appearance when placed in front of an image display. Further, the nano stem camera can have at one end a motorized pan and tilt mechanism (not shown). Also, the mechanism may be built into any part of the stem such as close to the nano camera  402 . A motorized zoom may also be included. Preset scene features may be added and even auto tracking. The nano stem camera  400  may have IR and wireless and wired controls. 
     The nano camera  402  is preferably sourced as a massive megapixel CMOS camera for mobile phones. These nano cameras are now constructed into mobile phones with resolution above 40 megapixels. As a result they have a magnitude greater resolution than HDTV.  FIG.  45    illustrates a nano camera  402  with integral nano lens (not shown). The lens on the nano camera  402  may cause a significant distorted image area  420  at the perimeter of a megapixel sensor  418 . This is especially true for a massive megapixel camera. The area in the center of the megapixel sensor  418  is substantially free from lens distortion permitting an image portion  424  to be extracted. The present invention utilizes the image portion  424  of the sensor  418  free from lens distortions to digitally simulate a panning, tilting, and zooming  422  of the nano camera  402 . The image portion  424  can produce a native resolution of any HDTV standard and even 4K standards and beyond. The camera user  414  can manually select features common to mechanical panning, tilting, and zooming and also has presets for one-touch selected scenes. Remote controls (not shown) and software can be used to access the cameras functionalities and may include pattern recognition face tracking. 
       FIG.  46    illustrates the present invention nano stem camera  402  with a megapixel camera sensor substantially higher than the needed native resolution of a given videoconferencing system or application. The present invention extracts from the sensor  418  a first video portion and live stream  426 , a second video portion and live stream  428 , and a third video portion and live stream  430 . The video portions  426 ,  428 , and  430  may each capture various parts of a videoconference with the intent of being displayed at a remote location on multiple image displays or seamed together by image processing to create a panorama view of a videoconference. Numerous options are available to enhance videoconferencing by having a megapixel sensor  418  that can produce simultaneously two or more image signals. Custom image processing and electronics are required to extract multiple simultaneous images from the megapixel sensor  418 . 
     Several manufactures around the world manufacture nano class cameras and custom configuration from the sensor manufacture is preferred to ensure the assemblies and cable connectors enable the elongated and extremely slender shape of the nano stem camera  400 . Sensor technology may be CMOS, CCD, and any type of sensor. It may also be 3D, multi-sensor, multi-lens array, and 3D light field technology. Also preferably the camera lens should be so small it is not recognizable as a lens from even inches away. The nano camera  402  may also be constructed with a tiny mirror and the assembly works like a tiny periscope (not shown). Although present invention discloses the nano stem camera  400  as specifically created for videoconferencing, it can certainly be used in many other applications such as security, live action sports, and even TV and film production. It may also have built in recording capabilities for storing video clips, picture taking function, built-in videoconferencing codec, battery, and other features. 
       FIG.  47    illustrates a unique embodiment of the present invention that conceals the nano camera  402  in a gooseneck camera microphone  442  on a table stand  432 . The nano camera  402  captures an image  438  of a local videoconferencing participant (not shown). The gooseneck camera microphone  442  is a real object that naturally extends above a working surface  440  without drawing attention to local participants that it is actually a camera placed in front of a flat panel screen  436 . The gooseneck camera microphone  442  and the nano camera  402  are placed sufficiently high in the picture to enable better eye contact while videoconferencing and broadcasting. The gooseneck camera microphone  442  may also be built to raise and lower into a table surface by hand or by motorized mechanical means. The gooseneck camera microphone  442  may also have a functional microphone built near the nano camera  402  (not shown). That microphone is not aimed toward the image of the person (not shown) on the flat panel screen  436 , but rather is aimed toward the local participant (not shown). 
     Further, a flat panel display  434  with the flat panel screen  436  (more fully defined in  FIG.  64   ) is placed behind the working surface  440 . Placing the flat panel display behind and below the working surface  440  permits imaged persons on the screen (not shown) to appear with their torso originating from the table and eliminates the lower bezel (not numbered) from being viewed by the local videoconferencing participants. The effect is a greater sense that the imaged person on the flat panel screen  436  is sitting at the table. The working surface  440  may be any type of table, desk, counter, and the like. 
       FIG.  48    illustrates the nano stem camera  400  built into the working surface  440  and it has a raising and lowering motion  446  by a surface hole  444 . The nano stem camera  400  can be positioned by the raising and lowering motion  446  manually or by a mechanized motor (not shown). The local participant may select the desired height of the nano stem camera  400 .  FIG.  49    illustrates a quick disconnect mount  445  for the nano stem camera  400  so the local participants can add the nano stem camera  400  in front of the flat panel screen  436  during videoconferencing. Preferably the mount  445  aligns the camera forward when inserted so no image alignment procedures are need before a videoconference.  FIG.  50    illustrates the nano stem camera  400  on a stand stem  448  so that the nano stem camera  400  can be moved about on the working surface  440 . The nano stem camera  400  may also telescope up and down while mounted to the stand stem  448  (not shown), similar a motorized car antenna. The stand stem  448  may also have a ball mount (not shown) to permit the nano stem camera  400  to adjust to level and to tilt up and down. Such image adjustment can also be built into the nano camera  402 , into the housing of the nano stem camera  400 , or achieved digitally. Such adjustments apply to all configurations of the nano stem camera  400  and gooseneck camera microphone  442  described herein. The configuration of  FIG.  50    is ideal for desktop computer monitors. The  FIGS.  47 - 50    are shown built into the working surface  440  but may, and all other similar illustrations, be built into or onto the actual flat panel display  434  or another supporting structure (all not shown). 
       FIG.  51    illustrates the present invention using the nano stem camera  400  in orientation depending on a first imaged person size  502  and a second image person size  500 . Ideally for the smaller first image person size  502 , the nano stem camera  400  is mounted below and can move by a first up and down motion  506 . For the larger second image person size  500  the nano stem camera  400  is positioned above and moves in a second up and down motion  504 . The sizes of people on the screen may be the difference in human sizes or the result of image scaling the human proportion to the desired size. The nano stem camera  400  may have manual selector menu or a gravity detector to automatically flip the image signal when the nano stem camera  400  is turned upside down. The image signal may also be selected to correct an image when captured off of a mirror. 
       FIG.  52    illustrates the present invention with a lower telescoping receiver  508  and an upper telescoping receiver  510  for mounting the nano stem camera  400  and the nano stem camera  400  either mechanically or manually collapses into the receiver  508  by a receiver down direction  514  and receiver  510  by a receiver up direction  512 . The nano stem camera  400  does not need to intersect nor interfere with the face of the person on screen, which would ruin any attempt at have a quality videoconference (not shown). The intent is to give the consumer the ability to adjust the nano stem camera as desired to a position just out of the way of the face of the person on screen and rely on the distance from the user and the person on screen to minimize the parallax angle and thereby affect better eye contact. Further, the extreme narrow construction of the nano stem camera  400  and the unnoticeable lens of the nano camera  402  sufficiently remove intrusion when placed in front of group conferencing displays and desktops displays. This is especially an improvement over bulky common hinged articulating arm cameras that have been placed in front of faces on screen for behavioral research apparatus videoconferencing for decades and other consumer makeshift systems for eye contact, blocking the face of the person on screen. The telescoping receivers  508  and  510  compactly stows the nano stem camera  400 , removing from view of the user the elongated stem of the nano stem camera  400 . Consumers will readily adapt numerous ways to mount the nano stem camera  400  with adhesive, hook and loop, clamps, hooks, brackets, quick disconnects, and the like to any type of display, TV, computer monitor, tablets, notebooks, and mobile phones. Ideally, the nano camera stem  400  is sold with numerous attaching systems to adapt to many consumer desired uses. 
       FIG.  53    illustrates a common dual videoconferencing screen system with a dual image display  518  with adjacent image screen  516 . Two nano stem cameras  400  are positioned near center and originate from below. The nano stem cameras  400  can originate from above and also be positioned further apart. The nano stem camera  400  can also be placed in between the displays  518  at eye level (not shown).  FIG.  54    illustrates the present invention in a three screen videoconference arrangement with numerous camera arrangement position options. A three image displays  520  with a three image screens  522  are utilized to show a videoconference at a distant location with a similar three screen system. The nano stem camera  400  can be arranged in a left camera position  526 , a center camera position  524 , and a right camera position  528 . Or a videoconference can use three nano stem cameras  400  positioned in the center camera position  524 . The nano stem cameras  400  can be placed in any arrangement above and below depending upon the desired configuration and experience. The nano steam camera  400  can, as well, be placed in between the bezels of displays  520  (not shown). 
       FIG.  55   . Illustrates the present invention where the nano camera  402  has a quick connect support stem  530  for transmitting image signals and power. The quick connect support stem  530  is placed in a micro hole  532  in the flat panel display  434 . Mounted behind is a nano camera receptacle  534  which may have image processing electronics.  FIG.  56    illustrates the nano camera  402  in a nano housing  536 . Image signal transmission is made possible by a built in wireless image transmitter  540 . Power may be presented to the nano camera  402  by wire or wireless (both not shown). The nano housing  538  is held to the image screen  436  by friction adhesive  538 . Preferably the friction adhesive  538  leaves no residue on the flat panel screen  436 . The illustration of  FIG.  56    eliminates a major portion of the stem of the nano stem camera  400 .  FIG.  57    presents a power generation by a photovoltaic cell  542  or similar functioning energy producing device where the nano camera  402  is powered by the light emanating from the flat panel screen  436 . A special image processing software can coordinate a bright light to always appear in the spot the nano housing  536  is affixed to (not shown).  FIG.  58    conceals an image transmission and power cable assembly  544  by a flex display  546 . It may also conceal a camera electronic board (not shown). The flex display  546  images the exact content on the flat panel screen  436  that is being covered up by the flex display  546 . A small hole in the flex display  546  allows the nano camera  402  to capture images. A wire bundle  548  attaches to the image transmission and power cable assembly  544  and a second wire bundle  550  attaches power and video transmission to the flex display  546 . The flex display  546  need not be flexible yet a flexible OLED is preferred. 
       FIG.  59    illustrates the present invention where a short throw projector  554  mounted from below projects an image onto a short throw projection screen  552 .  FIG.  60    illustrates the short throw projector  554  projecting from above onto the short throw projection screen  552 . In both configurations of  FIG.  59    and  FIG.  60    the nano stem camera  400  is placed in front of the projection beam so that the projection beam does not impinge the nano stem camera  400 .  FIG.  61    illustrates a prior art front projection eye contact system that suffers from the common projector  562  impinging by an intrusion angle  560  the lens of a conference camera  508  in a screen hole  556  cut into a common front projection screen  561 . The light from the intrusion angle  560  substantially effects image capture with bright spots and lens flares being captured. The present invention resolves this prior art problem with the configuration illustrated in  FIG.  62   . The short throw projector  554  projects upon the short throw projection screen  554  at such a steep angle that the conference camera  508  is not impinged by a stopped impingement angle  564 .  FIG.  63    illustrates the common front projection screen  561  being projected upon by the common projector  562 . The nano stem camera  400  is unaffected by the projection beam by a beam shield  566  preventing the beam to impinge the nano stem camera  400  and the lens of the nano camera  402  (not shown). 
     It is a primary embodiment of the present invention to create a single immersive videoconferencing system that serves two distinct modes of use. One mode is a close up work mode of use and the second a watching mode of use. Variations of these modes are herein discussed, but apply to diverse applications from hotel guest rooms to group videoconferencing rooms and even personal videoconferencing systems. Personal videoconferencing is ubiquitous, but it is nearly always experienced on a notebook, tablet, PC or mobile phone. Rarely do consumers have the ability to access high quality videoconferencing with life-size images and improved eye contact. Guests in hotels are usually presented with small flat panels displays and have little innovation in enhancing the guest experience. The present invention discloses unique hotel guest room as an immersive entertainment and work environment. Consumers have applications they use for videoconferencing such as Skype or Face Time, yet do not have the expertise to know how to coordinate these applications on immersive display systems. The recent availability of 4K resolution flat panel displays offers unique opportunities to innovate new ways to use immersive displays for multiple modes of use. 
       FIG.  64    illustrates an ultra HD flat panel display  601  with an ultra HD screen  602 . Ultra HD is herein described as TV resolutions above 1080 lines a resolution and preferably 4K resolution or higher. Further, ultra HD is to be understood as immersive meaning the ultra HD screen  602  is larger than 50″ diagonally measured and is preferably a display 80″ diagonally measured and above. Ultra HD resolution and the large display scale permits a primary embodiment of the present invention of creating a computer resolution screen portion  600  to be scaled smaller inside the ultra HD screen  602  (as seen in  FIG.  64   ). 1080 lines of TV resolution has been ineffective to permit close up viewing of computer data because of the limitation of the native resolution. Ultra HD flat panels permit such high resolution that sitting close to the ultra HD screen  602  and seeing the screen portion  600  is effectively the same experience as sitting close up to a computer monitor. This permits an entire new immersive way to use computer images in personal workspaces. Typically, in videoconferencing group meeting rooms, a computer signal is fed to a TV and people observe the image in a meeting room from far away. Because people are far away the detail of resolution is not a critical issue. The present invention discloses unique embodiments that configure work station computer images for videoconferencing where local participants sit up in a close work zone  620  to view the ultra HD image  602  on the ultra HD display  601  (see  FIG.  66   ). 
     Unique to this present invention the screen portion  600  contains a computer image from an operating system GUI such as that provided by Apple or Microsoft. Alternatively, it may have an image from a dedicated videoconferencing appliance. The image in the screen portion  600  is preferably large enough to show a life size imaged person  603  with a remainder of the ultra HD screen  602  with a vacant area  607 . That vacant area  607  surrounding the image portion  600  is used for lighting during a videoconference with TV lights  605 . The TV lights  605  may use any portion of the vacant area  607  of the display and may be configured with numerous lighting gradients, color temperatures, brightness intensity, positions, and size in the vacant area  607 . The screen portion  600  is preferred to be located on the ultra HD screen  602  at a lower image section  414  so that it appears in the portion  600  life-size image person  603  is sitting on the other side of the working surface  440  from a local participant (not shown). 
     The flat panel display can as well image a full screen videoconference on the ultra HD screen  602  ( FIG.  65   ). A first life-size group participant  606 , a second life-size group participant  608 , and a third life-size group participant  610  are all seen on the ultra HD screen  602 . The nano stem camera  400  with the nano camera  402  is positioned and adjusted to improve eye contact by raising or lowering over the ultra HD screen  602 . The full screen videoconference can be viewed from close up or far away. 
       FIG.  66    illustrates the present invention built into a hotel guest room  612 . The room is configured with a close work zone  620  where a guest  618  sitting at a chair  619  at a pull out table  616  which is connected to a long working surface  614 . The guest  618  is positioned less than 7 feet away from the ultra HD screen  602  of the ultra HD display  601 . The guest  618  is able to access his favorite computer operating system and select a scaled image where the computer image fills the screen portion  600 . Alternatively, the guest may select a computer image to fill the entire ultra HD screen  602  and positions various windows to the lower image area  414  and leaves other applications in other areas of the ultra HD display  601 . Essentially, in this configuration of the ultra HD image display  601  becomes akin to a bulletin board where an application window is available for quick glance, but not for intensive interaction due to the excessive eye and head motion strain. Further, observing motion images such as movies and video games it is preferred to not fill the entire screen when the guest  618  is in the close work zone  620 . Motion sickness and headaches can occur when full screen fast motion content fills a wide field-of-view. The guest can select his favorite videoconferencing applications and observe the experience in the screen portion  600 . Many videoconferencing software applications will not withstand quality requirements of 4K resolution and a large immersive screen. The image screen portion  600  effectively scales the image so that these applications can be seen life-size, but not so large they expose codec compression and other image artifacts. Scaling is achieved by software and hardware. 
     The hotel may provide a premium conferencing solution where a superior soft client application or appliance based videoconferencing system is used that provides a near pristine HD resolution at full screen and even 4K resolution. A network for superior performance videoconferencing requires that the remote people have the same experience for all participants. The present invention discloses a hosted network where hotel guest rooms, business centers, subject matter experts of any type, hotel staff, and other guest rooms in other hotels around the globe share in this unique high-end videoconferencing experience. Further, the system can also be deployed in homes, businesses, and other commercial, retail, finance, education and government facilities. The close up work zone  620  may be used with or without the screen portion  600  for videoconferencing. 
     The same ultra HD screen  602  of the ultra-image display  601  is viewed by the guest  618  in a watching zone  622 . While in a bed  624  or a chair  626  the guest  618  can enjoy wide screen immersive movies, TV, sports, and gaming. The distance beyond 7 feet from the ultra HD screen  602  defines the watching zone  622 . Modifications of the distance may be based on user preference, yet the principal of the watching zone  622  and the close work zone  620  having different intended uses remains constant. The ultra HD screen  602  is so substantially large it can be used to create the appearance of an environmental immersive wall. Content of nature, outer space, and other scenery may play constantly and selected by the hotel or the guest  618  to add room ambiance. Further, the ultra HD screen  602  plays all sorts of content from any transmission means such as satellite, a media server, and the like. 
     The ultra HD screen  602  may also be used in live videoconferencing to hotel staff as a live concierge service. The hotel staff can appear sitting or standing up and seen on the large immersive ultra HD screen  602  in full screen. 4 k resolution videoconferencing would be ideal and since the lower bezel (not shown) of the ultra HD display  601  is hidden behind the back edge of the working surface  614 , it appears the hotel staff person is just standing on the other side of the working surface  614 . Further, a series of 4 k resolution hotel video productions can be created with the life-size person arranged proportionally to the ultra HD screen  602  to create a life-like in-person experience. For example, as soon the guest  618  enters his room for the first time a video plays of a hotel staff person greeting them to the hotel. The video can play automatically by numerous triggers such as a room key activation and a proximity sensor. 
     A primary concern for hotel room based videoconferencing is the awkward image capturing of the bed  624 . As seen in  FIG.  66   , a room block  628  prevents a guest from sending an image of himself with a bed in the background as captured by the nano stem camera  400 . The room block  628  may be achieved by drapes, partitions, panels, a fold away bed, a bed transforming into a sofa, a camera angle aimed up slightly to remove the bed from view, architectural features, a room décor feature, and a furniture feature. For example, a headboard (not shown) of the bed  624  could be constructed as a lightweight panel and simply rested at the foot side of the bed and thereby completely eliminate the appearance of the bed when captured by the camera. More elaborate systems of modifying the actual captured image with image background replacement have been demonstrated. The image of the guest room  612  can be changed or only a portion and it may be done with any type of image processing and manipulating techniques. One such technique captures an image of the guest room  612  without the guest  618  in it and then a software program can identify when the guest enters the image so that the guest is seen in the final processed image, but not the actual room. Another simple technique is to use optical or image processing to create a shallow depth-of-field so that the guest remains in perfect focus but the background with the bed  624  is out of focus making the bed  624  no longer identifiable. 
       FIG.  67    illustrates the present invention where the ultra HD display  601  slides in a left and right direction  630  to a position away from the foot of the bed  624  to a side area with guest  618 . This gives the guest  618  more area to move about while in the close work zone  620 . It also gives the guest  618  the ability to position the ultra HD display  601  in the ideal position for viewing from the bed  624  and from the chair  626 . Alternatively, the room  612  can have a dedicated workstation  632  at a second guest position  634 . The workstation  632  may also be an ultra HD screen and have videoconferencing features. The workstation  632  can be oriented so the ultra HD screen  602  can be seen in the background of a videoconferencing image originating from a camera (not shown) at the workstation  632 . Preferably the workstation  632  is an eye contact system to enable perfect eye contact while videoconferencing. 
       FIG.  68    illustrates the present invention for a hotel room  612  (room not shown in close work zone  620  (see  FIGS.  66  and  67   ) mode of use. The ultra HD display  601  with the ultra HD screen  602  is positioned so that the guest  618  can enjoy the screen  602  close up. The pull out table  616  is out and the nano stem camera  400  is engaged upward protruding from the long working surface  614 . A control pad  640  controls the entire device and may be any technology such as touch and any communications protocol. A line speaker  641  on both sides of the ultra HD display  601  permits the illusion that voices are emanating from the center of the screen. Other audio speakers can be used instead of the line speakers  641 . A connector cubby lid  638  conceals a cubby box  656  ( FIG.  69   ) with an electrical sockets  654 , an AV connections  652 , a computer USB and monitor connectors  650 , a table microphone  644 , microphone indictor “on” light  646 , and a hard “off” switch  648  for the microphone  644 . The long working surface  614  is attached to a hotel room credenza base  642  that can include numerous features including a minibar, a desk, a dining table, a cabinet, a wardrobe, and drawers (all not shown). 
       FIG.  70    illustrates the configuration described for  FIG.  68   . The ultra HD display  602  is positioned to the left with the pull out table  618  retracted. The nano stem camera  400  is fully retracted and the nano camera  402  is concealed into the long working surface  614 . The nano stem camera  400  retracted offers total video privacy for the hotel guest  618 . Other ways to ensure to the guest  618  that the camera is off and cannot capture images is by shuttering the camera, disconnecting the camera and blocking the camera. A rear furniture well  658  permits the ultra HD display  601  to be lowered to conceal its lower bezel (not shown) and permitting the bottom perimeter of the ultra HD screen  602  to align flush with the long working surface  614 . Imaged people (not shown) on the ultra HD screen  602  appear to be sitting on the other side of the working surface  614 . The ultra HD display  601  receives content from an IPTV device  662 , which includes any recorded and live TV, a videoconferencing codec appliance device  664  and a desktop computer device  668  (as seen in  FIG.  71   ). These devices may be built as one or in any combination. Other connections and devices that work interconnected to the ultra HD display  601  is a satellite dish, a TV cable, a phone line, a DSL, a public Internet, a media server, a hotel property management system, a private data network, and an analog videoconferencing system. An analog videoconferencing system may be used for internal hotel communications since no compression would be required. Further, the ultra HD screen  602  may be touch sensitive and can swivel out to form more comfortable viewing angles. 
     All the embodiments of the hotel guest room  612  ( FIGS.  64 - 71   ) and its unique dual zone mode of use are equally applicable to other types of rooms. Certainly a home bedroom could share all the same embodiments as the hotel guest room  612 . More specific is a traditional conferencing room  676  ( FIG.  72   ) that illustrates the close work zone  620  where a meeting participant  671  sits at the pull out table  616  with a tight camera angle  670  from the nano stem camera  400 . In the watching zone  622  resides a common meeting room table  670  of which all seats (seats not numbered) are captured by a wide camera angle  672 . The present invention enables group conferencing to serve for a large group and a smaller group. When only a few people want to videoconference in common videoconferencing rooms they are forced to sit at the end of a big meeting room table and look across the table a TV hanging on the wall. This is an awkward and unnatural experience. When the meeting participant  671  sits in the close work zone  620  he can select to conference with either a full image over the immersive ultra HD display  601  or select a more appropriate portion  600  as described previously.  FIG.  73    is an illustration of an office  678  with a worker  681  in the close work zone  620 . Certainly, an ultra HD display  601  would need to permit a scaled window to manage content over such a wide area, and especially relevant using the portion  600  for videoconferencing. The worker  681  may also sit in chairs  682  and observe the ultra HD display  601  from the watching zone  622 . An office desk  680  can be used by the worker  681  in both the zone  620  or  622 . 
       FIG.  74    illustrates the ultra HD display  601  with its ultra HD screen  602  and an eye contact camera placement. The image portion  600  displays the image of a remote eye contact participant  602  whose image came from a videoconferencing system that had an aligned camera with the display that enabled eye contact (not shown). Camera placement  686  illustrates the principle that the present invention may use any camera in any placement, other than the nano stem camera  400 . Ideally, the present invention can utilize any type of eye contact display solution provided the display is large and provides the ultra HD resolution. No matter the camera type and its placement, all are applicable to the present invention with the close work zone  620  and the watching zone  622 . 
       FIG.  75    illustrates the present invention where the image portion  600  is moved to a left side  688  and that portion displays a life-size imaged person  603 . The vacant area  607  of the ultra HD screen  602  is used for an additional content window  690 . The additional content window  690  may be data sharing, an interactive whiteboard, a TV signal, an advertisement, a computer image signal, a GUI window, a hotel communication, to name only a few. Ideally, the local participant can select a view that best suits his needs. For example, the portion  600  may remain centered and the additional content window  690  is made small enough to fit into the vacant area  607  of the ultra HD screen  602 . Alternatively, the ultra HD screen  602  is entirely filled with a graphical user interface of a software operating system and the portion  600 , along with the additional content window  690 , are independent segments in the interface. 
       FIG.  76    illustrates the ultra HD image screen  602  surrounded by a soft bank conference light  692 . The soft back conference light  692  is used when the ultra HD display  602  displays full screen videoconferencing with the first life-size group participant  606 , the second life-size group participant  608 , and the third life-size group participant  610 .  FIG.  77    illustrates various options for audio speaker placement. Options include a left speaker  694 , a right speaker  696 , a top speaker  698 , and a table speaker  700 . Ideally, the speakers are arranged to simulate audio emanating from the ultra HD screen  602  to give the impression voices originate with the people seen on the ultra HD screen  602 . Modifications of lights and speakers will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. 
     The present invention discloses the use of stretched plastic film in meeting rooms for videoconferencing. The use of stretched film for stage and entertainment applications have been well documented and the inventors&#39; have utilized stretched film for over two decades as disclosed in several patents. Applying stretch plastic film in a reflected Pepper&#39;s Ghost arrangement for corporate class videoconferencing presents numerous challenges for a successful deployment. Especially complicated is the dual function displaying holographic appearing augmented reality images simultaneous with a live video production for videoconferencing in meeting room environments. Issues of image brightness, image wash out, exposed optics, concealing mechanisms, conference lighting, interactivity with floating objects, and configuration in a common meeting room with limited space are all the subject of the present invention. 
       FIG.  78    illustrates the present augmented reality invention of an angled film  720  that is both transparent and reflective. The angled film  720  is stretched to form a distortion free room wide transparent reflective panel. The angled film  720  is transparent so that a room camera  706 , disposed on a background side  716  of a meeting room  702 , captures an image through the film  720  of both a sitting conferee  754  and a standing conferee  762 . The camera also captures a table portion  756  of a tabletop  758 . The angled film  720  also permits the conferees to peer through to the background side  716  of the meeting room  702 . The room camera  706  is concealed by at least one of a room décor, a wall, an architectural feature, a piece of furniture, a façade wall panel, and a paint color similar to the environment (all not shown). Also, the room camera  706  may be any type of camera used for videoconferencing transmission including exotic type cameras such as 4K resolution, 3D, multi-sensor, multi-lens, and the like. Also, a mirror or series of mirrors (not shown) may reflect the image captured by the room camera  706 . The angled film  720  also reflects an image on a slanted image screen  736  creating a virtual image  712 . The slanted image screen  736  and the angled film  720  are both inclined at angles to enable the virtual image  712  to be vertically oriented substantially straight up. A vertical space  714  establishes the height of the virtual image  712  starts from the floor level. The vertical space  714  is between 24 inches and 32 inches so that in the virtual image  712  appears as if the video conferenced people are at table height (not shown). The angled film  720  is held in position by a bottom rigid frame  718  and additional elements are described in detail in  FIG.  80   . The angled film  720  intersects a wall slit  732  in a rigid partition wall  752 . 
       FIG.  78    further illustrates a background display  704 , which can be any type of display including flat panels, video walls, rear projection, front projection, and the like. The images on the background display  704  may simulate the room décor creating the illusion that the background display  704  is not a display but a solid architectural element in the room. The background display  704  can also show content that works in concert with the virtual image  712 . Special attention is needed so that the background display  704  does not show content so bright that it substantially washes out the virtual image  712 . A monitor  708  on a riser lift cabinet  710  enables additional content in the room. For example, data or a videoconference can be seen on the monitor  708 . The background display  704  and the monitor  708  are in the room  702  on the background side  716 . 
       FIG.  78    further illustrates a projection system consisting of an upward mounted projector  740  reflecting a first small mirror  744  and then reflecting a second large floor mirror  738  and finally imaging its beam upon the slanted image screen  736 . The slanted image screen is approximately measured 120 inches diagonal allowing multiple people to be sitting and standing in the virtual image  712 . Those skilled in the art will appreciate the extreme tight optical pathway configured to achieve such a massive image. The upward projector  740  requires a projector of about 12,000 lumens and a very short throw lens. The slanted image screen  736  is a stretched grey plastic rear screen. The disclosed projection pathway is only a suggestion and other types of projection such as a front projector above shooting upon a front projection screen below is certainly feasible and within the scope of the present invention (not shown). The upward projector  740  is mounted into a table base  742 . The table base has forced air passed through it to keep the upward projector  740  cool (not shown). The table also has a sound dampening to reduce the sound of the projector (not shown). 
       FIG.  78    further illustrates highly controlled conferee viewing perspective. The sitting conferee  754  has an upward viewing perspective  747  that is obstructed by a hanging soffit  748  lowered by a soffit hanger  728 . The hanging soffit  748  may include a directional conference light  734  aimed toward the conferees  754  and  762 . The light is highly directional so as to not impinge the slanted image screen  736 . The hanging soffit  748  hides from the conferees&#39; observation a top film edge  731  of the angled film  720 . Further, the hanging soffit  748  conceals a black out substrate  726  from the conferees  754  and  762  view. The blackout substrate  726  prevents ceiling reflections on the camera  706  side of the angled film  720 . By doing so the camera image captured through the angled film  720  is free of any ceiling reflections from a reflective angle  722 . Concealing both the top film edge  731  and the blackout substrate  726  is to eliminate any foreign elements unnatural to a common meeting room and thus expose the optical pathway to the conferees  754  and  762 . The sitting conferee  754  has a downward viewing perspective  749  and that perspective conceals from observation the slanted image screen  736  by a table top riser  746 . A primary embodiment of the present invention is to conceal the visible technology so that the conferees can enjoy an augmented reality conference that really does “trick” the mind making it look like the virtually imaged people (not shown) residing in the virtual image  712  are actual people in the meeting room  702 . 
     Besides directional conference light  734  contained in the hanging soffit  748  the conferees are further illuminated by a second bank of directional conference lights  730  by an angled downward direction  750 . Additional directional lights may be added such as pinpoint lights (not shown) from behind the conferees  754  and  762  to add illumination to the conferees&#39; hair and shoulders, and to help separate their image captured by the room camera  706  against a room light absorbing black substrate  760 . The conferees  754  and  762  images are captured by the room camera  706  and sent via a videoconferencing system to another exact room  702  at a distant location where their image is displayed with the black background surrounding their image (not shown) and the portion that is black is see-through revealing the distant rooms background side  716 . Likewise, the room  702  virtually images conferees from the distant location (not shown) and what is black in that image is not seen and is see-through revealing the background side of room  702 . A motorized roller  764  drops a matching room décor panel  760  to conceal the room light absorbing black substrate  766  when not in videoconference mode. A spotlights  724  illuminates the background side of the room  716  and an interacting person  768  standing in the background side  716  (see  FIG.  79   ). 
       FIG.  79    illustrates additional embodiments of the present augmented reality invention disclosed in  FIG.  78   . The interacting standing person  768  is interacting with a volumetric 3D object  770  located at the virtual image  712 . The volumetric 3D object  770  is actually a 2-D image of a 3D appearing object produced on a slanted flat panel  784  and reflected by the angled film  720 . Objects that have shading, reflection and motion, and are surrounded in a black field will appear 3D in the present invention and seemingly float in the middle of the meeting room  702 . The object  770  can also be fully interactive where the interacting standing person  768  motion is detected by a Microsoft Kinect  782  through pattern recognition and software aligning the person&#39;s motions with the object  770 . The result is the appearance that the person  770  is holding, moving, and modifying the object  770 . The interactive standing person  768  sees the object by a down glance  773  on the slanted flat panel  784 . The interacting standing person  768  also simultaneously views a reflection of his image in the camera side of the angled film  720  and is able to exactly align his hands to the volumetric 3D object  770 . The same operation is also ideal for navigating operating systems using Microsoft Kinect or a similar motion detection device. Other images surrounded in black also produce a stunning experience. For example, the present invention utilizes Microsoft Power Point and coordinated slides with a black background to produce impressive presentations. These presentations can originate from a simple tablet and its image is seen floating across the width of the meeting room  702 . A second Microsoft Kinect  780  captures the motion of the sitting conferee  754  and the standing conferee  762 . The conferees are also able to manipulate the object  770  or other content in the virtual image  712 . 
       FIG.  79    further illustrates the embodiments of placing a data screen  780  inside the tabletop  758 . The conferees  754  and  762  are able to simultaneously view the virtual image  712  and the data screen  780  to further enhance the experience. In one configuration the data screens show a multipoint image from several remote videoconference locations and through voice activation an image of a location on the data screen  780  can automatically switch and appear on the virtual image  712  (not shown). Also, room controls may be seen on the data screen  780 . 
       FIG.  79    may utilize any type of display and certainly the projection system of  FIG.  78    is interchangeable with the slanted flat panel  784  of  FIG.  79   . As display technology advances any and all types of displays, including 3D, are applicable to the present configuration of the meeting room  702 . The display technology should be able to produce true black in order to eliminate any milky hue in the virtual image  712 .  FIG.  79    also illustrates a ceiling reflection block of louvers  774  constructed of louvers that from the perspective of the camera  706  side of the angled film  720  it appears black in the reflection and is free of any ceiling reflection from a reflective angle  722 . Further, from a conferee viewing direction  786  the louvers  774  appear white in a color or similar to the room décor. A first cross beam  776 , a second cross beam  778 , and a third cross beam  780  span the room between rigid partition walls  752  with one wall on each side of the room supporting the beams. 
       FIG.  80    of the present invention illustrates a front view of the configuration of  FIG.  78    and elements of  FIG.  79   . The bottom rigid frame  718  is seen connected to a left side angled frame  790  and a right side angled frame  792 , and the angled film  720  is attached to the bottom and the sides (not shown). An unattached angled film portion  793  leaves the film  720  exposed and is nearly unnoticeable. Attaching on the top of the angled film  720  could occur behind the hanging soffit  748  (not shown).  FIG.  80    also illustrates the virtual image  712  with a first remote virtual conferee  794 , a second remote virtual conferee  796 , and a third remote virtual conferee  798 , and a fourth remote virtual conferee  800 . 
       FIG.  81    illustrates the present invention of  FIGS.  78 - 80    wherein the images produced and seen as a virtual image  712  are proportionate in image size and life-size conferees are the same as a remote site  804 . Ideally, the room  702  connects to the same configuration of the room at the remote site. In cases where the room  702  connects via videoconferencing to other types of room configurations with different size screens image processing can modify images to present life-size people in the virtual image  712 . Image processing includes layering images together, seaming images, and extracting color from the image background to isolate the person on black. Any type of image isolating techniques are applicable to the present invention to add a surrounding black color around the images of the conferees including chromakey and digital background replacement. 
       FIG.  82    illustrates the various modes the present invention described in  FIGS.  78 - 81   . The modes engage audio/visual control and switching equipment including an audio switching  830 , a video switching  832 , and a room light switching  834 . The modes for control are a telepresence mode  816 , a theater mode  818 , a 3D visualization mode  820 , an application mode  822 , a Power Point augmented reality mode  824 , and a gaming mode  826 . All the modes communicate by the control connection  828  and the modes have control of room light scenes, switch the audio and video signals, and access content sources. For example, in the theater mode  818 , at the touch of a button, most all room lights would be turned off and the audio switch  830  and video switch  832  would engage a movie content source (not shown). 
     The present invention described in  FIGS.  78 - 82    may also use for its display a front projection system ( FIG.  83    Prior Art) from a ceiling mounted projector  838  reflecting an image from a ceiling mirror  840  and imaged upon a lower projection screen  836  and observed by a person  844 . This arrangement is common in theater stage systems. A significant drawback to this system is the projector protrudes too far forward and adds bulk to the optical arrangement. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,639,151 and 5,890,787 to the present inventors disclose a superior optical pathway pass-through reflective projection ( FIG.  84    prior art) where the projector beam actually strikes and passes through the angled film  720  in a strike area  842 . The prior art patents teach that pass-through reflective projection can be used in any configuration for any application, which would include the desktop, meeting room, and theatrical stage. The patents also disclose the use of Mylar, which may be used for the angled film  720 . 
       FIG.  85    illustrates a novel embodiment of the present invention where the angled film  720  is stretched by a left flexible stretch bar  846 , a right flexible stretch bar  848 , a bottom flexible stretch bar  852 , and a top flexible stretch bar  850 . One or 2 sides may be removed if needed and still create a stretched distortion free reflective surface. Rather than pulling by points, the flexible stretch bars are attached by wide flex panels  854  that offers greater stability while stretching. The flexible bars may be constructed of any flexible material but is preferred that graphite composites are used for their high strength and even flexing characteristics. The angled film  720  is attached to the bars in one of numerous means common in the film stretching art. The flexible bars provide a greater ease of creating a distortion free angled film  720  since the flex allows greater fine tuning, rather than using a rigid bar such as metal tubes. 
       FIG.  86    illustrates a superior method for attaching the angled film  720  to a rigid or a flexible bar  858 . The bar  858  is a tube with a slit for the angled film  720  to pass by. A solid puck  862  made of metal or a composite is used to wrap the film around and may be optionally taped to the puck  862  before rolling or during roll turns (not shown). The angled film  720  is then wrapped around the puck  862  numerous times so that it locks in on itself by friction. An optional clamp base  861  with a tension bolt  860  presses the clamp base  861  upon the puck  862  further securing the film to the puck  862 . The present invention does not use any invasive measure to secure the angled film  720 . It does not glue, crush with abrasive grit or puncture the film, all of which weaken the film  720  and could cause a tear point while stretching. The bar  858  is pulled to a right pull direction  866  by the wide flex panel  854 .  FIG.  87    Illustrates a flex member round bar  870  of which the film  720  is sleeved in a slit (not shown) and rolled upon itself locking in upon itself by friction. A side bracket  874  holds an axel end  876  securing the flex member round bar  870 . Sprocket teeth  872  adjust by a lever  878  the tensioning of the angled film  720  in the right pull direction  866 . The tensioning methods of  FIGS.  86  and  87    work in concert with at least one other stretching mechanism side (minimum two sides) in order to fully stretch the angled film  720  (not shown). The embodiments of  FIGS.  78 - 87    may stretch the angled film by  720  by any means well known in the art for decades. 
     The angled film  720  is preferably made of a high strength polyester film and a common product name is Mylar. It is also preferred that the film is coated with a beamsplitter coating to increase its reflectivity. Often these coatings are highly sophisticated multi-layer dielectric stack coatings. Coatings that are highly transparent, yet has a reflectivity of about 40% is preferred over uncoated optics that have a low reflectivity of about 10%. Any and all materials used for the present invention and all embodiments for all configurations disclosed herein utilizing films should meet all regulatory safety standards. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that numerous options for the angled film  720  in regards to composition, thickness, and coatings. 
       FIG.  88    illustrates a reflective transparent panel  888  positioned with an eye contact user  910  on one side of the panel  888  and a black back board  880  positioned on the opposing side of the panel  888 . On the eye contact  910  user side of the panel  888  a color flat panel  892  is positioned with an integral color screen  890  aimed upward and reflected by the panel  888  forming a reflected color virtual image  882 . The black back board  880  is made of a black light absorbing material such as black telescope flocking. The reflected color virtual image  882  is positioned adjacent to the black back board  880  so that the reflected color virtual image  882  appears bright and with dynamic colors from the perspective of the eye contact user  910 . A color camera  904  is aimed through the panel  888  to capture an eye contact image of the eye contact user  910  while viewing the reflected color virtual image  882 . A dark surface  894  may be used so that the eye contact user does not see unwanted reflection reflected at the top of the panel  888 . The dark surface may be at table height and actually be a table placed in front of the configuration and used by the eye contact user  910 . 
     The side view  FIG.  88    and the front view  FIG.  89    illustrates a visible top black border  884  seen from an up perspective  912  of the eye contact users  910 , a left black border  896 , a right black border  898 , and a black bottom side  900 . From the eye contact user  910  perspective it appears the reflected color virtual image  882  has a black TV bezel around it. In the preferred embodiment of the present invention ( FIGS.  90  and  91   ) the reflected color virtual image  882  is substantially perfectly aligned to the back black board  880  and the image  882  is adjusted to the board  880 , which is cut to match so no black border is seen. To achieve this exact alignment means the reflected color virtual image  882  needs to be substantially vertically straight up and adjacent to the black back board  880 . While it is preferred no black border is seen the black bottom side  900  may be visible to support the black back board  880 , yet the border sides  896  and  898 , and the black border top  884  are eliminated Eliminating the black borders assists the eye contact user  910  to have an improved immersive telepresence experience. In such a case the image of the distant conferee (not shown) is seen in the reflected color virtual image  882  and absent the black borders, the distant conferee appears more life-like and present in a room (not shown) with the eye contact user  910 . 
     Further, the present invention  FIG.  90    illustrates a black hood  906  that prevents reflection from the ceiling falling upon the back side of the panel  888  and thereby impinging the image capturing of the color camera  904  through the panel  888  of the eye contact user  910 . The black hood  906  is constructed of black material so as to completely disappear in the middle of the black back board  880  from the perspective of the eye contact user  910 &#39;s view. The black hood  906  is carefully aligned between the black back board  880  and the panel  888  so that from the eye contact user&#39;s  910  view of the black hood  906  does not extend beyond the up perspective  912  protruding beyond a top  902  of the black back board  880 . A gap  908  is required to prevent the protruding to occur. Likewise, the same gap is required for the grouping of eye contact users with a first eye contact user  926 , a second eye contact user  928 , a third eye contact user  930 , and a fourth eye contact user  932  ( FIG.  92    top view). Here the grouping of eye contact users have a far left viewing perspective  920  of which a right gap  915  permits the black hood  906  to not protrude beyond the right side of the black back board  880 . In the same fashion, the far right viewing perspective  922  correlates to a left gap  914  which permits the black hood  906  to not protrude beyond the left side of the black back board  880 . As a result the configuration allows one user or many users to enjoy the eye contact invention and not see the black hood  906  which is fully concealed by having the black hood  906  fully absorbed by the color black against the black back board  880 . Further, the black hood  906  is configured so that it does not, from wide viewing angles, protrude beyond the perimeter of the reflected color virtual image  882  and the black back board  880 . In addition the color camera  904  permits a wide camera shot to capture the grouping of the eye contact users  926 ,  928 ,  930 , and  932  with a left side camera image side  916  and a right camera image side  918 . Further, the black hood  906  is constructed wide enough to permit that wide camera view, yet not so wide as to protrude beyond and outside the reflected color virtual image  882  adjacent to the black back board  880 . 
     The present invention further embodies many unique ways to collaborate and use asymmetrical screen arrangements as seen in  FIG.  92   . The grouping of the eye contact users  926 ,  928 ,  930 , and  932  preferably experience life-size immersive image of distant conferees displayed in the reflected color virtual image  882  (not shown) and simultaneously can view and interact with secondary images (not shown). Typical conferencing appliances most often have two, video outputs and typically they are integrated with a symmetrical screen side-by-side. This arrangement harms the immersive experience since images of life-size people are displayed with data or small multipoint boxes on a screen exactly next to their images (not shown). The side-by-side arrangement does not simulate the way people see each other if all were meeting in person in the same room. A left table well monitor  927  and a right table well monitor  929  permit the secondary images to be displayed independently on one monitor or mirror displayed with the secondary image on both the table well monitors  927  and  929 . The table well monitors  927  and  929  are in an area of the table  924  that is dark colored so as to not be visibly reflected by the panel  886 . Data as well as multi-point can be seen on the well monitors  927  and  929 . In multi-point, voice activated switching can select small images on the well monitors to dynamically switch to the reflected color virtual image  882  and that image can be transferred to the well monitors  927  and  928 . 
     Further, software application based conferencing can use the well monitors  927  and  928 , but it is preferred that a left table touch display  923  and a right table touch display  925  are used ( FIG.  92   ). This permits the grouping of eye contact users  926 ,  928 ,  930 , and  932  to interact with programs, such as a digital white board, and all people in conference can see each other interacting. It is possible that the table touch displays  923  and  925  can be switched from computer application to the data screen of a videoconference appliance. Lastly, some users may prefer touch interaction to occur on a large touch screen  921 . Preferably the large touch screen  921  is seen in the view of the color camera  904  at the sides of the telepresence table  924  or in the back of the room (not shown). Participants at the remote location would then be able to see the grouping of the eye contact users standing, sitting, and interacting with the large touch screen  921 . Also, unique to the present invention is that this eye contact configuration can be used as a hybrid conferencing system where, at the touch of the button on a control system (not shown), the user can select a traditional videoconference using a Polycom, Life-Size, and Cisco type codec appliance and then switch to a PC-based software application for videoconferencing with Microsoft Lync or Vidyo. The ability to have two discrete systems in one eye contact solution and can be deployed in any videoconferencing meeting room resolves the serious issue of clients having to decide one over the other. 
       FIGS.  88 - 92    may use any type of display technology including any type of front or rear projection pathway. The reflective transparent panel  888  may be any type of glass, plastic, and stretched plastic film, and may have any type of coatings to enhance reflectivity and maintain transparency. The black back board  880  may be removed by allowing the consumer to utilize the configuration as an augmented reality system and the people imaged in the reflected color virtual image  882  may appear to be in the actual environment of the room (not shown). The color camera  904  may be any type of camera and may have pan/tilt/zoom features. The camera may have presets so the a user may select the pan/tilt/zoom of the camera to select a shot of one, two, three or four or more users from the grouping of eye contact users  926 ,  928 ,  930 , and  932 . The present eye contact configuration described in  FIGS.  88 - 92    may be applied to an adaptation for a desktop, a meeting room, a kiosk, an ATM machine, and large stage applications, to name a few. This eye contact configuration may also be flipped upside down or turned on its side, as well as in other embodiment of any other configuration disclosed herein. 
     The embodiments of  FIGS.  88 - 92    are ideal for video depositions where the configuration allows life-size images of people interacting with perfect eye contact. Current video depositions consist of a common camera on a tri-pod and the defendant does not look into camera, but rather looks at a lawyer asking questions. The issue with this is when the video is played back in court the defendant does not appear to make eye contact with the jury as a news caster does when looking into a teleprompter. Eye contact is vital for establishing positive emotional reactions live during a videoconference and also when viewing recorded images. A unique embodiment of the present invention is to utilize the embodiments as disclosed for  FIGS.  88 - 92    to create a video deposition terminal that creates perfect eye contact recordings. The defendant and the lawyer each communicate with their own eye contact system and both see each other virtually and live while the deposition is being recorded. Ideally, two systems are situated at a law firm so they can converse and be recorded, but certainly they could also videoconference from different locations and have the video and audio recorded. Also, videotaped with eye contact can be witnesses, expert witnesses and anyone whose recorded testimony is needed. The present embodiment of the invention applies to any perfect eye contact videoconferencing system when applied to live and recorded two-way video depositions. 
       FIG.  93    Illustrates a hotel guest room smart door  936  with a hallway side door  933  in a public hallway.  FIG.  95    illustrates the same smart door  936  with an in-room side of the door  935 . Both door sides  933  and  935  have mounted to it a touch door display  934  with a top portion  936  containing a first door camera  942 . Further, the touch door display  934  has a bottom portion  940  with a second door camera  946 , a microphone  944 , and a speaker  948 . Only one camera is needed and the two cameras  942  and  946  are optional to permit a better view of tall people and short people. A standing user (not shown) may select which camera to use or the remote site can select which camera during a videoconference. The full color touch display  934  is positioned out of the way of a door handle  950  and is mounted where people of any height can see it clearly. The touch door display  934  may be any type of display and of any size. A custom display in portrait mode can show a life-size person that is approximately 37″ diagonally measured. Larger and much smaller displays, such as tablets, may be used in portrait mode or standard wide screen landscape. 
     The touch door display  934  may contain in it a computer processor for processing an operating system and software applications (not shown). One or both of the touch door displays  934  may have a computer built into it. Still further, the touch door display  934  on one or both sides may be thin client PCs with partial or major computing processing occurring by a computer in a hotel network, a cloud network, a separate processor attached to the door, or a computer in the hotel room (all not shown). It is to be expressly understood, and as described herein, the computer processing for the touch door display  934  may be of any computer configuration, integral to and separate from the touch door display  934 . Foundational to the configuration of the present invention is that the touch door display  934  can show interactive software that is touch controllable by a standing person. Power and computer signals, monitor signals, and network signals may pass through a door hole  954  ( FIG.  94   ) between both sides of the door and also a door channel  952  ( FIG.  95   ) can pass the same power and signals. Conceivably, wireless signals and wireless power technologies can be integrated into the present invention. 
     The smart door  936  has a built-in presence detection which can be used on one or both sides of the door  932 . A general presence detection is the ability to simply detect when a person is in the proximity of the smart door  936 . Commonly, motion detection and related technologies will integrate into the present invention. Specific presence detection is any technology that enables the display  934  to recognize a specific person in proximity to the display  934 . Specific presence detection can be based on pattern recognition where an image capture device such as one of the cameras  942  and  946  is able to determine the face of a specific person. Specific presence detection may also be linked to a room key. The room key may be any technology such as magnetic card swipe, RFID, and a bar code. The guest with this system is given a physical item that permits entry and hotels may deploy, as an example, wristbands that track the guest&#39;s entire activities while on the property. An entry device can be as simple as a metal key or a mobile phone with a software application that engages doors locks by any means. This system may be entirely built into the display  934  or the display  934  may be connected to any device such as a door handle and entry system device. Systems that enable specific presence detection permit a computer and a network to track the hotel guests throughout their stay and data such as the smart door opening and closing. Specific presence detection may also be based on fingerprint or simply typing an access code or other data into the touch screen of the touch door display  934 . 
     Privacy for a guest is extremely important. The cameras  942  and  946  may have physical blocking shutters on them or may be turned away from being able to capture video toward the guest. Also, the guest may hard shut off the camera and even physically detach the camera. The microphone may as well be physically detached, muffled by a physical block of hard shut off with an indicator light to ensure the guest has privacy. 
     The smart door  936  is intended to offer a single door with two touch door displays on each side of the door and the applications and content on each side uniquely coordinates a user experience with each other. Those skilled in the art of software programming will appreciate the unique options the present invention offers when creating specific applications for the smart door  936 . Software applications are created considering the idea that people are passing from one side to the other side of the smart door  936  and the application programming takes that into account. For example, a guest swipes a magnetic door key in a lock and that lock communicates to a computer controlling the smart door  936  as a guest is entering the room. Instantly the hallway side  933  touch door display  934  modifies content to notify that the room is in a “do not disturb” mode. At the same moment, a recorded concierge welcomes the guest on the in-room side  935  touch door display  934 . This is only one possible programmed scenario of hundreds where actions on one side of the door directly effects information, content, features and applications automatically on the other side of the smart door  936 . Certainly, many applications do not require informational exchanges between sides of the door and nothing herein should limit the present invention of the touch door display  934  being used on only one side of the door. 
       FIG.  96    illustrates an outline of custom software applications and content distribution  980 . Custom software applications are created for the present invention and may be modified for each hotel client property. The custom software accesses content from a network source such as a media server or a hotel property management system, which can also serve to control all of the touch door displays  934  at a hotel property. The touch door display  934  may be controlled from a central server and update the touch door displays at numerous hotel properties globally. Content may be stored in the cloud, in a server, integrated into the hotel property management system, and stored with the touch door displays  936 . Videoconferencing applications and transmission systems are integrated into the touch door display  934 . Guest contact with the hotel staff is the primary use and can serve any hotel staff service at the smart door  936  face-to-face. For privacy the smart door  936  and the touch door displays  934  may be engaged as a video and audio receive and only an audio voice is sent to the staff. Videoconferencing can apply to any application and can communicate hotel guests with each other, subject matter expert, and even used for conferencing with friends, family, and business contacts. The touch door display  934  on the in-room side  935  may even detach and be used while seated for videoconferencing. It may even be used as a hand held device for room controls, phone and TV operations (not shown). 
     As outlined in  FIG.  96    a hallway side services application  960  and an in-room side services application  962  are services provided by the hotel to the guest such as room service. A hallway side security application  964  and an in-room side security application  966  offer features related to guest and hotel security. For example, hallway side camera  942  can serve as a hotel security camera and from the in-room side  935  the guest can see who is knocking at the door on the hallway side  933 . A hallway emergency application  968  and an in-room emergency application  970  provide vital emergency information to the guest. For example, during a fire the hallway side touch door displays  934  can provide visual cues on all doors of the escape route, and the in-room side  935  can sound an alert and give emergency instructions. A hallway communications application  972  and an in-room communications application  974  provide a variety of ways for the guest to contact the hotel staff and others. For example, texting, emailing, voice calling, and videoconferencing. A hallway side advertising application  976  and an in-room side advertising application  978  provides to the guest general and targeted advertising. All of the embodiments described herein for  FIGS.  93 - 96    are applicable as described, without the specific hotel features, for use in hospital rooms, corporate meeting rooms and offices, schools, and government facilities, to name a few. 
       FIG.  97    illustrates the present videoconferencing invention with a rear projected transparent screen  1000  used in a group conferencing room arrangement. Group conferencing is more than one person in the room and more than one person on the screen  1000 . With that said all that is disclosed herein is as well uniquely applied to personal conferencing one person to another person. As discussed previously remote participants (not shown) are image produced among a black background and that image with the remote participants and black background is projected onto the transparent screen  1000 . A local meeting room participants  982  view the remote imaged participants (not shown) imaged on the screen  1000  and the portion of the image projected on the screen that is black (not shown) is see-through. The black portion of the image projects no light on the screen  1000  so it remains see-through from the perspective of the local meeting room participants  982  who see bright imaged remote participants sitting and standing amongst a meeting room background  998  visible around them. 
       FIG.  97    further illustrates a meeting room black light absorbing wall  999  for the nano stem camera  400  to capture images of the local participants  982  against the wall  999 . The nano stem camera stem  400  retracts in a direction  994  into a screen stand  992 . The image of the local participants  982  may be video conferenced to a similar system as seen in  FIG.  97    and appear at a remote side as if standing and sitting in the actual room. The effect is extremely impressive in creating a very life-like experience. The nano stem camera  400  can also be placed behind the screen  1000  and aimed through the screen to capture an image of the local meeting room participants. The gooseneck camera microphone  442  can be used instead of the nano stem camera  400  in any of the present configurations. The gooseneck camera microphone  442  is especially helpful since it raises the camera for better eye contact and looks like a real object that would be placed in front of a real person. The gooseneck camera microphone  442  adds an additional real world object making the image of remote participants that much more real appearing where they are sitting and standing amongst the meeting room background  998 . The nano stem camera  400  can also be placed behind the screen  1000  and aimed through the screen to capture an image of the local participants  982 . 
       FIG.  97    further illustrates a meeting room table  988  with a meeting tabletop  986  is positioned in the middle of a meeting room floor  1004 . Chairs may be placed on a side of the table near the wall  999  and on the side with the screen  1000  (not shown). The rear projected transparent screen  1000  is built upon a moving mechanism such as wheels (not shown) that permits the screen  1000  to move toward the table  988  and away from the table  988  in a back and forth direction  996 . An HD projector  1002  also may move with the screen  1000  or remain locked in position. Moving the screen closer and further away from the meeting room table  988  permits the meeting room to be used as a telepresence room and a multipurpose gathering room with the screen  1000 . In telepresence mode, the local meeting room participants  982  sit on one side of the table and the screen  1000  is moved close to the meeting room table  988 . In multipurpose gathering room mode the screen  1000  pushes away and chairs can be used on both sides of the meeting room table  988 . Telepresence rooms are often inflexible meeting rooms and the present invention fully resolves that issue with chars being able to be placed on both sides of the table.  FIG.  98    illustrates a moved away extra space  1003  which permits chairs to be placed on that side of the table (not shown). 
       FIG.  97    illustrates a downward projection pathway with the HD projector  1002  mounted high and aimed down to the rear projection transparent screen  1000 . The rear projection transparent screen  1000  is partially transparent which means all the light of the HD projector  1002  does not disperse upon the screen  1000  and actually passes through the screen  1000  and creates an unwanted secondary image  990 . As seen in  FIG.  97    the unwanted secondary image  990  falls upon the meeting tabletop  986  and the local meeting room participants  982  can see in a tabletop direction  984  a highly distracting full color motion image of the remote participants both on the meeting tabletop  986  and on the screen  1000  (remote participants not shown). The experience is unacceptable for videoconferencing because the unwanted secondary image  990  intrudes on the videoconference call. As seen in  FIG.  98    the HD projector  1002  is positioned near a meeting room floor  1004  and is aimed up to the rear projection transparent screen  1000 . The unwanted secondary image  990  is seen on a meeting room ceiling  1006 , which is directly seen by the local meeting room participants  982  by a line of sight  1008 . 
       FIGS.  99 - 102    illustrates the embodiments of the present invention to eliminate the unwanted secondary image  990  from a direct observation direction  1010  by the local meeting room participants  982 . The HD projector  1002  is aimed through the screen  1000  forming the unwanted secondary image  990  above or below (not shown) of the local participants.  FIG.  99    uses a physical image block  1014  to block the view of the local meeting room participants  982  from seeing the unwanted secondary image  990 .  FIG.  100    illustrates an image reduction substrate  1018  that reduces the visible brightness of the unwanted secondary image  990 . Black light absorbing flocking material is a superior choice and similar light absorbing materials. Another substrate has optical elements that have directive optical prisms and/or reflectors that aim the light of the unwanted secondary image  990  in a direction not noticeable by the local meeting room participants  982 . The image reduction substrate  1018  may also be a mirror that reflects the light to another part of the room away from the local participants in a direct observation direction  1010 . For example, the meeting tabletop  986  or the meeting room ceiling  1006  can have a mirror surface.  FIG.  101    Illustrates a louver light trap  1018  that traps the secondary image  990  so it disperses upon a side of the louver light trap  1018  away from the direct observation direction  1010  of the local meeting room participants  982 . The louver trap may be large slats 3 inches or larger, and can be tiny louvers barely noticeable to the human eye.  FIG.  102    uses a bright light  1020  aimed at the unwanted secondary image  990  and it washes out the unwanted secondary image  990  to make it less noticeable to the local meeting room participants  982  direct observation direction  1010 . 
       FIG.  103    illustrates the present invention where the unwanted secondary image  990  is concealed from a direct observation angle  1022 . The HD projector  1002  is mounted above the screen  1000  and aimed through it and the unwanted secondary image  990  falls behind the meeting room table  988 . Further, a primary embodiment of the present invention is a high mounted projector light block  1024  which prevents the local meeting participants  982  from directly looking into the HD projector  1002  and its beam of light. 
       FIG.  104    illustrates the present invention where the HD projector  1002  is aimed upwards and bounces off a high mirror  1038  which then redirects the projected image to the screen  1000  and also passes through the screen  1000  forming the unwanted secondary image  990 . Adding mirrors in the projection pathway can be applied to any relevant configuration of the present invention. The unwanted secondary image  990  is concealed as described for  FIG.  103   . A mirror block  1036  prevents the local meeting room participants  982  in a mirror observation direction  1034  from seeing the high mirror  1038 . The high mirror  1038  is optionally attached to a low profile soffit  1026 . Contained in the low profile soffit  1026  is a directional conferencing light bank  1032  with an illumination angle  1030  illuminating the local meeting room participants  982 . A lower projector light block  1040  prevents the local participants  982  from seeing the HD projector  1002  lens and light beam which would otherwise be very distracting to the point of blinding to the local participants  982  during a videoconference. 
       FIG.  105    illustrates the same configuration of  FIG.  104    except the table meeting top  986  extends nearly all the way to the screen  1000 . A table gap  1042  provides a greater illusion effect that the remote participants are sitting on the other side of the meeting room table  988 . The remote participants&#39; images actually extend below the meeting room tabletop  986  back edge so as the local participants move their heads up and down they see more or less of the lower torso of the remote participants on the lower portion of the screen  1000  (not shown). This substantially aids in giving the impression the person is sitting in the room and not just an image on the screen where the bottom of the perimeter of a screen cuts off the remote participants&#39; image (not shown). Further, the table gap  1042  hides a portion of the unwanted secondary image  990 . The unwanted secondary image  990  also falls on the meeting tabletop  986 . The unwanted image reduction embodiments described for  FIGS.  99 - 102    are applicable to an image reducer  1042  positioned within or upon the meeting tabletop  986 . The screen  1000  is mounted in  FIG.  105    directly to the meeting room table  988 , but may be attached by other means such as a simple support stand (not shown). 
       FIG.  106    illustrates the present invention where the HD projector  1002  strikes the screen  1000  from an angle from below. In this configuration, the HD projector  1002  is mounted near the meeting room floor  1004  and aimed upward to the screen  1000  and the unwanted secondary image  990  disperses upon the ceiling  1006 . The image reducer  1042 , which may be any embodiment described for  FIGS.  99 - 102    serves to substantially reduce the image on the meeting room ceiling  1006  that would otherwise be observable by the local participants  982 . Without the image reducer  1042  the local participants  982  would observe the images of the remote participants (not shown) seen on the screen  1000  and on the meeting room ceiling  1006 . Seeing the same image twice is highly distracting while conferencing making the meeting experience unusable.  FIG.  106    also illustrates the HD projector  1002  and its bright lens and beam are blocked from the local participants view by the screen stand  992 . 
       FIG.  107    illustrates the present invention where the projector utilizes a floor mirror  1056  to lengthen the optical pathway. A meeting room hanging soffit  1052  and connected to a soffit drop  1054  creates an effective block so the local meeting room participants  982 , when gazing in an upward soffit direction  1046 , cannot see the unwanted secondary image  990 . Contained in the meeting room soffit are soffit directional lights  1050  aimed in a local participant downward direction  1048 . The image reducer  1042 , although shown, is most likely not needed since the meeting room hanging soffit conceals the unwanted secondary image  990 . The meeting room hanging soffit  1052  may also be a hanging decorative light fixture. So whether it is a décor feature or any kind of architectural feature the principle remains the same. That principle is any object that is common to meeting rooms in both design and décor blocks from the local participants  982  view of the unwanted secondary image  1002 . 
       FIG.  108    illustrates the present invention where the image reducer  1042  is placed inside the low profile soffit  1026 . The projection pathway is the same as described for  FIG.  107   . In this configuration the HD projector  1002  is concealed inside of a façade housing wall  1058 . It is constructed with a hole (not shown) and the façade housing wall  1058  serves the same function as the lower projector block  1040  ( FIG.  104   ). The hole (not shown) can be concealed by many decorative means, so as to not draw attention to itself. The façade housing wall  1058  may also be a real wall with a hole cut into it. 
       FIG.  109    illustrates a rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060  built into a custom stage  1072 . A curved slit  1066  permits a screen portion  1068  of the rigid plastic screen  1060  to be inserted into the curved slit  1066  and pressed clamped into place by a clamps  1070 . As a result the rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060  is held upright by the curved shaped formed by the curved slit  1066  enabling the rigid plastic screen to not require any additional support such as wires, poles or frames. Without the curvature of the rigid plastic screen  1060  the screen would lean back and forth. The curved shape helps greatly in reducing cumbersome screen frames that reveal the screen  1060  to an audience observer  1080 . Also, the curved shape adds to the 3-D appearance of a custom stage imaged person  1078  walking on stage in a 3-D area from the back to the front of the custom stage  1072 . As described previously for numerous embodiments of the present invention the custom stage imaged person  1078  can be recorded, live via a broadcast or interactive videoconference and when the imaged person  1078  image is surrounded in black the effect is the imaged person  1078  is standing amongst the meeting room background  998  (or any stage background). It is created by a lower rear stage projector  1064  projecting the imaged person  1078  and the surrounding black that is see-through on the rigid plastic screen  1060  from the perspective of the audience observer  1080 . 
     A live stage person  1073  stands on stage and interacts via broadcast or videoconference with the custom staged imaged person  1078 . The nano stem camera  400 , a custom stage microphone  1076  and a custom stage audio speakers  1074  are used to enable a videoconference, as well as, any other equipment and network (not shown). The custom stage projector  1064  is positioned low and aimed up toward the rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060 . The custom stage projector  1064  is hidden behind the custom stage  1072  from a direct audience observation direction  1082  of the audience observer  1080  as he sees-though the rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060 . By doing so the audience observer  1080  is not blinded by the light of the custom stage projector  1064 . The rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060  may be any size and can be fabricated by a size as large as 10 feet high and 20 feet wide. Acrylic ¼ thick clear with a lightly diffused 4% haze will suffice among other rear projection transparent screen technologies. 
       FIG.  110    illustrates an optional rear and front projection screen  1083  that can function as a rear projection transparent screen as described for screens  1000  and  1060  ( FIGS.  97 - 109 ,  111 ,  118 - 120   ), where a rear side projector  1087  projects onto the screen  1083  and a rear projection side  1084 . The screen  1083  is transparent and the participant viewer  1089  can see-through the screen  1083  to the meeting room background  998 . Alternatively, various screen technologies that are transparent can be projected from either side of the screen. A front projection side  1086  of the optional rear and front projection screen  1083  has a formed image from a front side projector  1085 . Other transparent screens are fabricated to be projected onto only from the front projection side  1086 . It is to be expressly understood that the present invention and its embodiments described for rear projection transparent screen technology are all applicable to front projection transparent screens. All embodiments of videoconferencing, unwanted secondary images, blocking a direct view of the projector and its lens, and the configuration into a meeting room and a stage, to name a few, are all applicable to a screen that has a front projection side  1086  that is transparent. The inventive configurations disclosed herein are applicable to any applications such as ATM machines and virtual concierge kiosks. 
       FIG.  111    illustrates a variant of the  FIG.  109    with the rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060 . In this configuration the screen  1060  does not fit into the curved slit  1066  but rather is held in place by a support poles  1090  connected to a metal bases  1088 . The support poles  1090  are hidden from an audience viewing area  1100  by artificial trees  1096 . Certainly any type of object could conceal the support poles  1090  other than the artificial trees  1096 . Instead of the custom stage  1072  the configuration of  FIG.  111    uses a left rolling road case  1094  and a right rolling road case  1092  to serve as the actual stage. A wood façade  1098  covers the road cases and from the audience viewing area  1100  the rolling road cases  1094  and  1096  appear to be a stage. The rolling road cases  1094  and  1096  are bolted together forming an integral stage. When not attached the rolling road cases  1094  and  1096  has everything placed inside for shipping including the rigid plastic rear projection transparent screen  1060  that is rolled up to fit into one of the road cases. 
     As it relates to the embodiments described for  FIGS.  97 - 111  and  118 - 120    various options for the screen technology are applicable as described for  FIGS.  112 - 117   . Primarily these screen technologies are designed for rear projection, but may be applied to front projection as well. In common these screen technologies receive a bright beam of light containing a full color motion image that is dispersed upon the screen forming a visible image and these screen technologies have the unique characteristics of being see-through in the portion of the screen where no image is projected. That see-through portion is the projected color black and other very dark colored hues.  FIG.  112    illustrates a rigid plastic transparent image screen  1102  that can be made of any plastic, any thickness and any optical characteristics enabling an image to be seen and see-through when no image is projected onto it and also see-through in black or dark image projected image portions.  FIG.  113    illustrates a glass transparent image screen  1104  that can be made of any glass, any thickness and any optical characteristics enabling an image to be seen and see-through when no image is projected onto it and also see-through in black and dark projected image portions. The glass transparent image screen  1104  may be chemically hardened or tempered.  FIG.  114    illustrates a laminated transparent image screen with a laminated first side  1106 , a laminated second side  1110 , and a lamination layer  1108 . The sides  1106  and  1110  may be made of any plastic or glass with any type of properties. The lamination layer  1108  may be adhesive only and also have embedded in it an image dispersing technology such as holographic film or lightly diffused film. If holographic film it may be highly exotic and designed to receive a projected image from a certain angle and from a certain distance. The lamination layer  1108  can also serve as a safety feature preventing shattering.  FIG.  15    illustrates a fabric transparent screen  112  that has sufficient size holes weaved into the fabric that it appears see-through.  FIG.  116    is a flexible film transparent screen  1114 , which may be holographic film, and lightly diffused plastic film. Both the fabric transparent screen  112  and the flexible film transparent screen  1114  can be hung, framed, stretched by pulling or heat contracting over a frame, or by any other means to form a surface to project upon. 
       FIG.  117    illustrates combining a first screen type  1120  with a second screen type  1116  by a connecting system, such as an adhesive, to bond the first screen type  1120  with the second screen type  1116 . For example, a certain holographic film may only be 7 feet wide and needs to be extended an additional 6 feet to attain the proportion needed to mount on a stage solution as described for embodiment  FIG.  111   . It is also relevant in reflected systems as described for  FIGS.  78 - 87   . In this case, the angled film  720  may only be 7 feet wide that comes with a superior optical coating for reflection and clarity, yet an additional 3 feet is needed to stretch the film in a size optically required for the configuration. As such the embodiment taught in  FIG.  117    would resolve the issue by widening the angled film  720 . Any of the transparent image screens ( FIGS.  112 - 117   ) described herein may have a variety of optical coatings to enhance the required image brightness and transparency. An embodiment especially significant for quality of videoconferencing are anti-reflective coatings that can be used with any of the transparent image screens ( FIGS.  112 - 117   ) and are used to reduce ambient light reflecting off the front surface of the transparent image screens (not shown) and reducing a back reflection from the projector off the back-side of the transparent image screens (not shown). 
       FIG.  118    illustrates an augmented reality podium  1130  that allows an image of a person to appear to be standing at a podium from a recorded source, a broadcast source, and an interactive videoconference (not shown). A person&#39;s image (not shown) is imaged on a rear projection transparent podium screen  1132 , which permits a podium observer  1122  to see the person&#39;s image on the screen  1132  and the meeting room background  998  around the person&#39;s image (not shown). As described previously, the see-through portion has black or a dark hue projected onto it, which means the person&#39;s image is surrounded in black. The person&#39;s image (not shown) is projected by a floor podium projector  1136 . The podium projector  1136  bounces its projected image beam off of a floor mirror  1138  and then dispersed onto the rear projection transparent podium screen  1132 . The augmented reality podium  1130  has a glass ledge  1126  with a black mask  1128 . The glass ledge  1126  is a real 3D object in front of the imaged person on the screen  1132  (not shown) further enhancing the realism that a real person, and not an imaged person, is standing at the augmented reality podium  1130 . Further, the podium observer  1122  repositions his head naturally at differing heights from a lower height  123  and a higher height  1124 , in which more or less of the screen can be seen in a lower podium screen portion  1134  of the screen  1132 . The glass ledge partially obstructs the image person (usually the lower torso and not shown) on the screen  1132  adding to the effect a real person is standing at the augmented reality podium  1130 . The glass ledge  1126  may also be constructed of any material such as metal, plastic and wood. 
       FIG.  119    illustrates the same configuration of  FIG.  118    with the addition of a videoconference camera placement configuration options. Contained in a hidden black podium camera hood  1144  is a podium camera  1142  aimed through a hole (not shown) in the black mask  1128  and through the glass ledge  1126 . The camera is encapsulated in black so it is not noticeable by the podium observer  1122 . Alternately the gooseneck camera microphone  442  as described in  FIG.  47    raises the camera closer to eye level and also presents a real 3D physical object in front of the imaged person (not shown) to further enhance the impression that a real person is standing at the augmented reality podium  1130 . 
       FIG.  120    illustrates the present invention of a portable augmented reality podium  1148 , which operates nearly the same as described for  FIGS.  118  and  119    except it collapses and is moveable. The portable augmented reality podium  1148  is built upon wheels  1156  for ease of moving in any direction. The system collapses by mounting an inside projector  1147  inside the podium  1148  and that projector is aimed to a folding mirror  1150  connected to a folding housing back  1152  and then directed to the rear projection transparent podium screen  1132 . The folding housing back  1152  is connected to a housing riser  1162  and that is connected to a slide tray  1160  that closes in a closing direction  1154 . Upon closing the folding housing back  1152  hingedly closes upon the portable augmented reality podium  1148  and thereby protecting the folding mirror  1150  when closed. A housing mounted camera  1146  is aimed through a hole (not shown) in the podium  1148  for videoconferencing. 
       FIG.  121    illustrates a primary embodiment of the present invention where a person or object can appear to have a matching shadow cast in an environment behind them. A generic augmented reality screen  1172  is a transparent screen where an augmented reality imaged person  1166  appears full color, full motion, and solid in form in front of a generic room background  1174 . The generic augmented reality screen  1172  is any type of functional display, technology or system that enables the described effect of the imaged person  1168  in front of the background  1174  with his shadow cast in the environment. The visual cues of seeing shadows presents the impression that the image person  1166  is real and physically solid and thereby greatly enhancing the quality of the experience. The primary categories of technologies use the angled film  720 , the rear projection transparent screen such as screens  1000 ,  1060 , and  1132 , front projection transparent screens and emissive transparent displays such as transparent OLED or transparent LCD with an adjacent back light removed. All of these technologies can create an impressive effect of an imaged floating person or imaged floating object on a clear substrate seen amongst a generic room background  1174  as observed by an awe struck viewer  1164  in a see-through direction  1168 . The present invention utilizes a shadow projector  1170  to project a projected shadow  1176  onto the generic background  1174 . The projected shadow  1176  cast a matching shadow from the signal source containing the imaged person  1166 . In other words, as the imaged person  1166  moves about the projected shadow  1176  also moves. The projected shadow  1176  may be projected upon the generic background  1174  floor, ceiling, walls, and objects (not shown). Further, additional shadow projectors  1174  (not shown) can be added to create the illusion that multiple light sources are casting a shadow of the imaged person  1166  or any video object. 
       FIG.  122    illustrates a process diagram for creating the projected shadow  1176 . A full color image signal source of a person or an object  1178  has that person or object isolated in a background and that background in the image does not appear on the generic augmented reality screen  1172 . Further, that screen  1172  is see-through as viewed by the awe struck viewer  1164  perspective except where the image person  1166  resides in the image. That image signal  1178  is split and displayed on the generic augmented reality screen  1172  (process diagram  1180 ). The image signal  1178  is also sent to an image processing  1182 . The image processing  1182  image manipulates the image signal to modify it to appear as a shadow. Image manipulation includes at least one of removing color except for black and white and grey, removing an image detail of the imaged person  1166  or another object, softening the edges of the imaged person  1166  or another object, filling the imaged person  1166  or another object with a dark color, replacing a dark area surrounding the imaged person  1166  or another object with a light color, and distorting the shape of the image person  1166  or another object. Pattern recognition algorithms and video editing techniques may also be used to isolate the image of the imaged person  1166  from the surrounding background in the image. Fortunately, extrapolating a person in the present invention is aided for the fact that many embodiments of the present invention captures an image of the person against a black background or a chromakey background. As discussed later for  FIGS.  126  and  127    some augmented reality display technologies utilizes the color white as the color that is see-through on the display. In that case white would be the color used to isolate the image of the imaged person  1166  for image manipulating. Finally, the image manipulated signal is displayed by the shadow projector  1170  in a background environment  1184 . The shadow projector  1170  may be a black and white, full color, low resolution, high resolution, high bright and also low brightness. The inventive solution of creating the shadow described herein may also be produced and animated separate from the image on the augmented reality screen  1172  and used for specialty uses in theme parks, museums and other entertainment applications. 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is using image mapping to create a three-dimensional physical object environment  1200  that is projected upon and imaging a video conferenced person in the environment. A first image mapped projector  1186 , a second image mapped projector  1188 , a third image mapped projector  1190 , and a fourth image mapped projector  1192  all project an imaged mapped content upon the three-dimensional physical object environment  1200 . A viewing audience  1202  observes the three-dimensional physical object environment  1200  with projected content that aligns to a physical objects  1194  and also observes a live video conferenced person  1198  within the environment. The live video conferenced person  1198  sees the viewing audience  1202  by an environmental camera  1196 . That camera can be placed anywhere in the environment and also positioned to see a live person standing (not shown) in the environment as well. Image processors, scalers, and image mapping software orients the projectors  1186 ,  1188 ,  1190 , and  1192  and their projected content to align the physical objects  1194  and also projects in an projected conference area  1201  the live video conferenced person  1198 . 
       FIG.  124    illustrates an image mapped stage system  1205  with a bottom stage object  1210 , a top stage object  1208 , a left stage object  1204  and a right stage object  1206 , a stage resting object  1212  and a stage elevated object  1214  all imaged mapped objects and projected upon with content by the projectors  1186 ,  1188 ,  1190 , and  1192 . A stage video conferenced person  1218  stands in an environment that completely transforms from various three-dimensional settings. The stage video conferenced person&#39;s  1218  image may be produced by either another display system such as an LED or rear projection or created by the projectors  1186 ,  1188 ,  1190 , and  1192 . To further enhance the realism of the experience the podium prop  58  and the videoconferencing camera  70  for videoconferencing is placed within the image mapped stage system  1205 . 
       FIG.  125    illustrates an imaged mapped group conferencing system  1217  with a 3D table  1222 , a left 3D object environment  1218 , and a right 3D object environment  1220  all projected upon with the image mapped aligned images produced by a left projector  1224  and a right projector  1226 . A conference image section  1228  may be any type of image display and preferably is an eye contact display with an eye level camera  1236 . If not an eye contact display then any camera and display can be used. The conference image section  1228  images a remote matching table  1238 , and a first section display conferee  1230 , a second section display conferee  1231 , a third section display conferee  1232 , and a forth section display conferee  1233 . The conference image section  1228  may also be produced by the left projector  1224  and the right projector  1226 . The imaged mapped group conferencing system  1217  permits an immediate modification of the room environment during a meeting. For example, a board meeting may have the look of a wood paneled executive suite and an engineer meeting may have data projected on portions of the environment. 
     Another primary embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in  FIG.  126   , which reveals an electronic see-through panel  1250  that displays an imaged panel person  1246  (or any object) surrounded by a see-through display elements  1248 . A panel observer  1244  watches and interacts via videoconference with the imaged panel person  1246  as well as other objects. The electronic see-through panel  1250  requires an illumination panel to produce bright images. The present invention creates an environmental background light  1254  larger than the electronic see-through panel  1250  so that the panel observer  1244  can move about and have a wide field-of-view. Also, the larger environmental background light  1254  is fully detached and substantially away from the panel  1250 . The environmental background light  1254  appears to the panel observer  1244  as an architectural light feature or other bank lighting system. Unbeknownst to the panel observer  1244 , the environmental background light  1254  illuminates the image on the electronic see-through panel  1250 . The electronic see-through panel  1250  is preferably an LCD flat panel display with its common adjacent backlight removed. Variations of LCDs are all applicable to the present invention, yet LCDs that are nominally white are preferred. In other words, the color white is actually produced by the flat panel backlight so when that backlight is removed the color white actually becomes the see-through display elements  1248 . As a result with this type of LCD flat panel the video content production of the imaged panel person  1246  should have the person surrounded in white and similar variants of hue and not black. Other types of LCDs may require another color to be selected in order to be transparent or may have a specific method other than color to engage transparency of the LCD elements. Such color selection or specific method should be understood as modifications within the scope of the present invention and disclosure. Various types LEDs with transparent capability may also be used for the present invention and a camera (not shown) may be aimed through an LED display for eye contact image capturing of a conferee observing the LED display. The electronic see-through panel  1250  often has a surrounding frame around it (as illustrated  FIGS.  126  and  127   ) and that frame can be concealed by any means including building kiosk walls and table surface in front of the frame that hides the surrounding frame leaving only the see-through display elements  1248  in view. 
     Further, the large environmental background light  1254  has affixed to it or near it a background differentiator  1252 . A large light offers no reference for the panel observer  1244  to distinguish the depth of the background environment. The background differentiator  1252  may be a square pattern as shown, but may also be anything that breaks up the uniformity of the environmental background light  1254 , such as an architectural element, a furniture element, and a physical object. As the panel observer  1244  moves about the background differentiator  1252  clearly associates where the imaged panel person  1246  is located in reference to the environmental background light  1254 . Another preferred embodiment of the present invention is the environmental background light  1254  is a large video display (not shown) that images white light and the background differentiator  1252  is actually a matching shadow of the imaged panel person  1246  (not shown). The description for  FIGS.  121  and  122    are applicable to create a matching shadow for this present embodiment. The present invention can also be a group videoconferencing system where an environmental background light  1254  can fill a room wall and the electronic see-through display is positioned in front of, but substantially away, to juxtapose the differentiator  1252  position in the room and a first electronic see-through display conferee  1266 , a second electronic see-through display conferee  1286 , and a third electronic see-through display conferee  1270 . 
     Yet, another primary embodiment of the present invention is a personal display that is mounted to a person&#39;s wrist as a watch or bracelet. Many firms have tried to commercialize smart watches and others have conceptualized displays that wrap around the wrist. The problem with such display devices is that they are only usable while mounted to the wrist. Unfortunately, consumers have become accustomed to the practicality of flat mobile phone displays and small tablets, which have proved to be the most ergonomically sound since they are handheld and can be manipulated with two hands. While consumers enjoy the large mobile displays for numerous applications they are universally annoyed by having to store the large device in their pocket or purse. A simple watch offers the convenience of having the display readily available on the wrist. The present invention resolves the problems of this prior art by providing a personal wrist display  1274  with a flex screen  1275  that is flexible and can be in a position one  1272  that can wrap around the wrist as seen in  FIG.  128   . In the display position one  1272  maintains the circular shape rigidly and affixed to the wrist much a like a rigid bracelet or the circular shape is not rigid and can follow the contour of the wrist and the two ends may clasp together by any common magnetic or mechanical means (not shown). The personal wrist display  1274  can be removed from the wrist and uniquely mechanically be made rigid and substantially flat in a display position two  1278  as seen in  FIG.  128   . Now the consumer can utilize the wrist display while mounted to the wrist, but also as a rigid handheld display device. It is preferred the personal wrist display  1274  has the wide and long flex screen  1275  that covers all or most of the surface. It may serve as a watch and the video display may show the content of any watch piece and also any type of watchband. 
     Preferably the personal wrist display  1274  is a full functioning mobile phone with any and all known phone features such as a camera on both sides of the display, video and picture flash light, and display on both sides (all not shown). All current and future innovations in hardware and software applications applicable to mobile phones are readily configurable into the personal wrist display  1274 . Further, it can function with any and all known features common to tablets and notebooks.  FIG.  129    illustrates a bottom housing  1290 , which can contain hardware common to a mobile phone. It also illustrates a top housing  1282  which contains optionally a wrist display speaker  1286 , a wrist display microphone  1288 , and a wrist display camera  1280 , all of which combined can function to conduct a videoconference and any other common applications such as video/audio recordings and pictures. The computer circuitry and battery technology can be of any type and shape and mounted anywhere within the personal wrist display  1274 . The ideal design objective is to create a lightweight and thin personal wrist display  1274 . Flexible batteries and flexible computer circuitry may aid in that that ideal design objective but is not required. The flex screen  1275  may be any type of flexible display technology but is preferred to be full color, high definition, and full motion. Flexible OLEDs are a prime candidate for the flex screen  1275 . 
     A primary embodiment of the present invention of the personal wrist display  1274  is that it can transform from the circular position one  1272  and into the rigid and flat position two  1276 . Flat is to be defined as substantially flat and in the rigid position two  1276  state the personal wrist display may have a slight arc. Numerous mechanical mechanisms can achieve the position one  1272  and the position two  1276  and all are applicable to the present invention. A sleeve  1279  behind the flex screen  1275  ( FIG.  128   ) can receive a thin memory metal plate  1277  bent to snap into the position one  1272  and when lightly forced open it snaps into the position two  1274 . The sleeve  1279  can receive many sizes and tensions of the thin metal memory plates  1277  for differing size wrists. Since the thin metal plates  1277  are removable they are replaceable if they should ever lose rigidity or not conform to the intended circular shape. The thin memory metal plate  1277  may also be affixed to the flex screen  1275 . Other methods to attach or build integral a mechanical system that allows both a circular shape and a rigid flat shape are applicable to the present invention. Any type of clasping system can be used if desired (not shown) or be used on the wrist as an open sided bracelet. Other mechanical systems that use sectional magnets can snap into a rigid shape and then be lightly forced to break contact and then clasped around the wrist (not shown) are certainly acceptable alternatives. Conceivably, the consumer could be offered several sizes of the personal wrist display  1264  that are longer, shorter, wider, and narrower. 
     Another primary embodiment of the present invention is to provide a multi-mode meeting room  1292  that can serve as a common group videoconferencing room and also as a studio production room for producing, recording, live broadcasting, and videoconferencing to the unique display systems of the present invention disclosed herein. The room  1292  is ideally located at, but not limited to, a hotel to provide a service as a self-contained production studio. The multi-mode room  1292  serves as a normal appearing meeting room with a videoconferencing system. It also serves several specialty modes all of which require capturing an image of the participants in the room surrounded in black or chromakey with a black background and transmitted to the many display systems disclosed herein. This includes, as is relevant to any particular application and configurations, the embodiments illustrated in  FIGS.  4 - 36 ,  78 - 87 ,  97 - 127 ,  146 - 147   , and other relevant figures and all possible configurable modifications. For  FIGS.  126 - 127  and  147    the color black may be replaced with white. The multi-mode meeting room  1292  has a room eye contact display  1306  with multi-mode camera  1304  which may be a high-end broadcast camera with pan/tilt/zoom capability. A side conference lights  1302  illuminates toward local conferees (not shown) sitting at a front table  1300  and a rear table  1298  and toward a back conceal wall  1296 . The back conceal wall  1296  are fabric panels, a rolling fabric or another concealing substrate that matches the décor of the multi-mode meeting room  1292 . The multi-mode camera  1304  has a first capture angle preset  1308  that is ideal for capturing conferees sitting at the front table  1300  while viewing the eye contact display  1306 . The multi-mode camera  1304  can also have presets that aim to three, two, and one conferees (not shown). Also, conferees seated at the rear table  1298  are also captured in the first capture angle preset  1308 . A second camera capture angle preset  1310  captures the rear table  1298  with the conferees sitting at that table facing the eye contact display  1306  and are aligned to be transmitted and displayed as seen in  FIGS.  80  and  81    and applicable to numerous other embodiments and configurations of the present invention. Further, the back conceal wall  1296  is removed from the camera capturing revealing a multi-mode meeting room black wall  1294 . The wall  1294  may be black light absorbing material or chromakey all with the intent to surround the conferees image in black (not shown).  FIG.  131    illustrates how the multi-mode meeting room  1292  can have the front table  1300  and rear table  1298  rolled into a single large table meeting room experience. 
       FIG.  132    is the same multi-mode meeting room  1292  as disclosed for  FIGS.  130  and  131    and is now converted into another mode of use and that is as a studio for production to the stage systems disclosed herein with head-to-toe video shots of a full body conferee  1322 . The production in this mode can be for recorded, live broadcast, and videoconferencing. The front table  1300  and the right table  1298  are moved away from the center of the room. The back conceal wall  1296  is retracted left and right fully exposing the full body conferee  1322  standing against the pitch black background of the multi-mode meeting room black wall  1294  (which alternatively may be chromakey background). A side lights  1312  offer side lighting, a rear ceiling track spot lights  1316  offers back of head and shoulder lighting, a first concealed ceiling light bank  1320  and a second concealed ceiling light bank  1318  offers front lighting all to illuminate the full body conferee  1322 . All this studio quality lighting is deployed in the multi-mode meeting room  1292  inconspicuously and all looks like a normal business class meeting room. A black carpet area  1314  extends from the black wall  1294  to a location in front of the full body conferee  1322 . The multi-mode camera  1304  captures the feet of the full body conferee  1322  amongst pitch black so the entire captured image of the full body conferee  1322  is surrounded in black. A small scale podium  1324  serves as a place for the full body conferee to rest his hands and notes. The small scale podium  1324  is constructed so as not to be seen on screen in the disclosed stage configurations of the present invention because it is blocked from view on stage from the podium prop  58 . Finally, the full body conferee  1322  may use the room eye contact display  1306  which can be used as a teleprompter and as a videoconference display to see a remote location. Certainly, the multi-mode meeting room  1292  is not the only way to produce a head-to-toe image of a person and, at times, events occurring around the globe will require capturing the image of a speaker live on stage for recording, broadcast, and videoconference. 
       FIG.  133    Illustrates a multipurpose group meeting room  1326  which has a convertible table  1328  that is used with chairs and conferees (not shown) on both sides of the table in a typical meeting room arrangement. The issue with this arrangement is when conferencing is the people in the chairs close to the eye contact display  1306  appear larger than the people farthest away at the opposite end from the eye contact display  1306 . The convertible table  1326  rotates on wheels or other means (not shown) to create a telepresence row where all people are positioned on one side of the convertible table  1328  as seen in  FIG.  134   . The eye contact display  1306  would ideally be the embodiment as described in  FIGS.  88 - 92   . The convertible table  1328  may also be used without the eye contact display  1306  and instead a common flat panel with any kind of camera (not shown). If a flat panel is used, the nano stem camera  400  would be preferred because of the improved eye line. 
     Lighting for group conferencing meeting rooms has been frustrating because room designs, facilities personnel, and others are usually forced to select some kind of expensive and complicated ceiling light systems. Also, these ceiling light systems require electrical contractors to install and hard wired into the room electrical systems. Most conferencing rooms now use simple flat panel displays that hang on the wall. Facilities personnel are commonly hanging these lightweight TVs on the walls without contractors involved. Most meeting rooms have ample ambient light generated from above such as florescent fixtures, but light only from above causes unflattering shadows on peoples&#39; faces. 
     A primary embodiment of the present invention is to provide lightweight illumination panels that flank the videoconference display to add forward light illumination.  FIG.  135    illustrates a pair of a wide soft light LED panel  1340  that is mounted on the wall by a simple hanger  1338 . The wide soft light LED panel  1340  flanks left and right a hanging flat panel  1332  with an HD integral screen  1334 . The wide soft light LED panel  1340  plugs simply into a wall outlet and has on/off that can be IR controlled or other control features common to room control systems. Exposed LED light bulbs can be blinding so they are covered by a diffuser (not shown) which may be a white lightly opaque acrylic plastic sheet or a lamp shade material. The LEDs may be white light of any color temperature desired and any brightness. Alternatively, a mixture of blue and yellow LEDs can be independently controlled and mixed to a desired white color temperature. The LEDs are spread over a wide area because the light should appear soft to the observer with no hotspots that could be blinding. 
     Another primary embodiment of the present invention is to use an emissive light display, such as an LCD TV or OLED TV, in landscape or portrait mode, as the wide soft light LED panel  1340 . The emitted white conference light can be a video source and various light effects and adjustments are added. Controllability of the TVs is by typical audio/video TV controls with preselected lighting scenes for the content (not shown). Content scenes for lighting could be served by a small media server (not shown) and the content signal may be mirror split to multiples of the wide soft light LED panels  1340 . Additionally, a lampshade material may be placed over the TV to completely conceal the fact that the light source is actually a TV serving as the wide soft light LED panel  1340 . Alternatively, a standing LED light bank  1344  as seen in  FIG.  136    can be used instead of using the simple hanger  1338 . The standing LED light bank  1344  leans against a room wall  1330  and does not fall forward because of an attached front half foot  1350  resting on a conference room floor  1352 . The LED illumination section  1346  is aimed toward the videoconference participants (not shown). An optional audio speaker area  1348  allows many different types of speakers to be mounted into it. Alternatively, it can be used to house a videoconferencing computer or codec appliance (not shown).  FIG.  137    is a perspective view of the standing LED light bank  1344  and it can stand and not fall back by the addition of an attached rear half foot  1354 . Conceivably, the standing LED light bank  1344  could come in a height that would work at table height and also bar stool height, which is becoming a trend in videoconferencing collaboration furniture. 
     A primary embodiment of the present invention is to create a videoconferencing media wall kit system  1353  that permits architects, room designers, and facilities personnel to modularly select a videoconference media wall kit system that best suits their design and communication technology goals. The kit is conceived as offering a series of styles to fit multiple environments and the architect, designer, and facilities personnel can choose a variety of surfaces, fabrics, and speaker cloth so that a kit can be premade and delivered to a job site and mounted adjacent to the room wall  1330 . As seen in  FIG.  138    a single display center housing  1361  has a TV conference display  1363  contained therein. The TV conference display  1363  may be an eye contact display with a center mounted camera  1352  or a nano stem camera  400  with nano camera  402  mounted from below, but may be from on top as well (not shown). A center lower housing  1366  is connectively positioned below the single display center housing  1361 . An upper left housing  1354 , an upper center housing  1368 , an upper right housing  1356 , a left center housing  1358 , a center right housing  1360 , a lower left housing  1362 , a lower center housing  1366 , a lower right housing  1364 , and the single display center housing  1361  are all connectively positioned into a single assembled kit.  FIG.  139    illustrates the same left and right side housing assembly as seen in  FIG.  138   . This embodiment further illustrates a left TV conference display housing  1382  with a left TV conference display  1380 , a right TV conference display housing  1384  with a right TV conference display  1386 , a left lower center housing  1374 , a right lower center housing  1376 , a left upper center housing  1370  and a right upper center housing  1372  all connectively positioned into a single assembled kit. Multiple nano stem cameras  1388  may be positioned as desired, as well as numerous other mounting options for a plethora of camera types with and without mechanical pan/tilt/zoom. Any of the housings described herein as part of the videoconferencing media wall kit system  1353  are configurable to contain an electronic component storage area, a cabling area, a storage area, a camera area, and a speaker area. 
       FIG.  140    illustrates a side view of  FIGS.  138  and  139   . A selected table shape and style  1390  permits the architect, designer, and facilities personnel to choose a variety of table shapes that best suits the meeting room. Tables as seen in  FIGS.  130 - 134    are all applicable, as well as many other shapes and sizes. The nano stem camera  400  can mount in many ways as described herein as well as other cameras.  FIG.  141    illustrates a variant of the videoconferencing media wall kit system  1353  designed for a beamsplitter  1400  eye contact display with a lower mounted flat panel  1402  with a screen aimed up (not shown) and reflected by the beamsplitter  1400 . A kit mounted camera  1398  aims through the beamsplitter  1400  toward the local room videoconference participants (not shown) to capture a perfect eye contact image. Likewise, a reverse beamsplitter arrangement can be used where the camera captures a reflected image of the participants off of the beamsplitter  1400  and the flat panel is placed vertically behind the beamsplitter  1400  opposite the participants (not shown). The beamsplitter  1400  can be any type of reflective transparent panel with any type of coatings which includes beamsplitting coatings to improve reflectivity. An eye contact left side upper housing  1392 , an eye contact left side center housing  1394 , an eye contact left lower housing  1396 , as well as other center and right side housings (not shown) are all connectively positioned into a single assembled kit. 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is a desktop eye contact display as seen in  FIG.  142   . A desktop beamsplitter  1412  permits the nano stem camera  400  to capture through the desktop beamsplitter  1412  the image of a desktop video chat user  1416 . A common desktop flat panel display  1420  has its screen (not shown) aimed upward and is reflected by the desktop beamsplitter  1412  forming a desktop reflected image  1406 , which is observed by the desktop video chat user  1416 . A thin profile housing  1408  supports the desktop beamsplitter  1412  and a panel mount  1417  of which the common desktop flat panel display  1420  rests upon. The thin profile housing  1408  is attached to a desktop support plate  1410  and rests upon a desktop  1404 . The common desktop flat panel display  1420  is mounted at a slant and higher toward the desktop video chat user  1416  for the purpose of creating a screen obstruction angle  1418  so the user  1416  does not see the flat panel display  1420  screen. Further, the common desktop flat panel display  1420  is positioned above the desktop  1404  forming a working space  1414  to extend desktop usable space. The nano stem camera  400  is adjusted by a camera adjustment knob  1413  for subtle direction changes and positioning up, down, left, right, and yaw are set by a stem adjustor  1407 . The nano stem camera  400  conceals power wires and image signal wires so they are not exposed and seen through the desktop beamsplitter  1412  by the desktop video chat user  1416 .  FIG.  142    also illustrates a power management connector  1419  so that mobile phones, notebooks, PCs, and tablets that are used to send a videoconferencing image signal to the common flat panel display  1420  can plug directly into the desktop system for power. 
     Mirror flip features are typically included in projectors such as is used in  FIGS.  78 - 84   . The common desktop flat panel display  1420  does not have a mirror flip feature so when its screen is seen as the desktop reflected image  1406  it is unreadable with a mirror image distortion. An image flip scaling box (not shown) is used for this desktop embodiment so that the user  1416  can read the reflected image  1406  and is as well applicable to many embodiments described herein such as  FIGS.  88 - 92   . These additional boxes add considerable wiring mess and bulk issues for desktops. To resolve this the present invention incorporates an internal image flip scaler to manipulate the image so it can be seen upon a reflection in correct orientation. An image flip scaler board  1415  is incorporated into the thin profile housing  1408  and the common desktop flat panel display  1420  plugs directly into the image flip scaler board  1415  to receive the image manipulated image. Finally, a USB hub  1411  is built into the thin profile housing  1408  so that USB peripherals such as microphones, cameras, lights, and the panel display  1420  can all connect to a PC, notebook, tablet or other computing device through the thin profile housing  1408  or other part of the system. As a result multiple USB lines are now contained in the unit and not laid out on the table. The USB hub  1411  reduces greatly the complications for the consumer on integrating components into the present desktop embodiment. 
       FIG.  143    Illustrates the present invention as described for  FIG.  142    except that it is designed to receive temporarily a tablet  1422  into a dock port sleeve  1424 . The desktop video chat user  1416  engages a mirror flip app so the image is seen correctly in the desktop reflected image  1406 . The user  1416  engages touch on the tablet  1422  by looking at the desktop reflected image  1406  and simultaneously the reflection of his hand (not shown) reaching to the touch the tablet  1422  screen. This embodiment permits the entire large tablet screen to be viewed by the user  1416  unencumbered by a surrounding bulky housing and many differing types of tablets can mounted into the desktop system. The desktop systems of  FIGS.  142  and  143    may also have beamsplitters that are clear, may have a black coating on the back except for a hole for the camera to aim through, may have an adjustable contrast systems to change from clear to dark, and may be configured as described for  FIGS.  88 - 92    with the black back board  880 . 
     Another primary embodiment of the present invention it to permit a standing person to have a high quality videoconferencing experience and or produce for a high quality image for transmission. Standing conferencing is applicable to many uses such as, but not limited to, ATM machines, subject matter expert kiosks, hotel front desk and concierge communications.  FIGS.  144 - 147    will discuss a particular application for each figure and in no way should be construed to limit other applications of use.  FIG.  144    illustrates a hotel concierge  1430  videoconferencing with a hotel room guest. The concierge  1430  appears standing life-size in the room across form the table at the distant location when viewed on the configuration seen in  FIGS.  64 - 71   . Additionally, it is preferred the connection is 4K resolution. The concierge  1430  stands at a mini matching table  1434  that matches the tables in the hotel guest rooms. A portion of the mini matching table  1434  is captured by the nano stem camera  400 , which is mounted from above a vertical display  1440 . The vertical display  1440  can be quickly adjusted in a vertical up and down direction  1442  for differing heights of concierge  1430  on a small display stand  1444  resting on a simple floor  1438 . The nano stem camera  400  also captures the image of a matching wall  1432  that is a similar color and texture and material of the wall in the guest hotel rooms. The configuration of  FIG.  144    is also ideal as a video recording studio to procure messages to be played by guests in their hotel room. 
       FIG.  145    illustrates a hotel front counter associate  1450  at a counter  1452 . The associate  1450  can converse naturally with the standing guest  1458  and can also glance to a counter reflected image  1456  produced by reflecting a counter display  1454  by a clear beamsplitter  1459 . The clear beamsplitter  1459  permits the associate  1450  and the standing guest  1456  to see each through the clear beamsplitter  1459 . Without the clear beamsplitter  1459  a common display would be needed and block a view between the associate  1450  and the standing guest  1458 . 
       FIG.  146    illustrates an augmented reality ATM machine  1471  with a large clear beamsplitter  1467  reflecting a large HD videoconferencing display  1462  and forming a floating reflected image  1460 . An ATM user  1469  sees in an image direction  1468  the reflected floating image  1460  against a controlled background  1471  that is substantially dark that enhances the brightness of the floating reflected image  1460 . The large HD videoconferencing display  1462  is mounted at a slant to block the HD videoconferencing display  1462  from an ATM user  1469  viewing direction  1472 . The ATM machine  1471  also has an ATM touch screen  1466  with easy access for the ATM user  1469 .  FIG.  147    is a see-through image ATM machine  1476  and is based on the description for  FIGS.  126  and  127   . The ATM user  1469  peers through the electronic see-through panel  1250  in a gazing direction  1478  to see the environmental background light  1254 . A bright floating image of a bank teller (not shown) interacts with the ATM user  1469  as if actually present in the room. Lastly, the configuration as described for  FIG.  26    can be configured as an ATM machine showing a full body (as seen) or as an upper torso and head appearing as if the bank attendant is standing across a counter (not shown). The bank attendant that appears on this or any configuration of the present invention may be video conferenced or recorded interactive video clips. Certainly the ATM configurations of  FIGS.  146  and  147    can also be used as interactive kiosks that offer a whole host sales and services such as insurance sales, medical opinion, hotel concierge, auto sales to name only a few. 
     Numerous embodiments of the present invention are all applicable to any and all potential applications from corporate, government, finance, healthcare, entertainment, and education communications and while disclosed to enhance a guest experience while visiting and staying at a hotel are fully applicable to all other potential applications of use outside of hotels. Hotels should also be understood applicable to cruise lines and other types of luxury accommodations. As defined by Wikipedia in the hospitality industry “a property management system, also known as a PMS, is a comprehensive software application used to cover some basic objectives such as coordinating the operational functions of front office, sales and planning etc. Automate hotel functions like guest bookings, guest details, online reservations, point of sale, telephone, accounts receivable, sales and marketing, banquets, food and beverage costing, materials management, HR and payroll, maintenance management, quality management and other amenities. Hotel property management systems may interface with central reservation systems and revenue or yield management systems, front office, back office, point of sale, door-locking, housekeeping optimization, pay-TV, energy management, payment card authorization and channel management systems.” 
     As such, all of the embodiments of the present invention, the configurations illustrated and the numerous modifiable configurations are ideally connected to a PMS so that hotel management and staff have greater flexibility and control of the display systems disclosed herein. This includes the related videoconferencing systems, entertainment content, and digital signage applications that can be utilized with the disclosed display systems. The display systems disclosed herein are intended be used in hotel business centers, hotel guests rooms, the lobby, the front desk, convention center facilities, back room videoconferencing production room, ballrooms, multipurpose rooms, meeting rooms, to name only a few.  FIG.  48    illustrates a PMS property management system  1500  and all the embodiments of the present invention  1504  are connected by a two-way communication  1502 . The two-way communication  1502  is connected software communication offering control and feedback from the various display systems disclosed herein. Feedback is not required, but serves to alert the hotel staff of the operational status of the displays systems and their related systems such as videoconferencing, advertising content, TV content, hardware functions, to name only a few. Further, guests can make input selections which interactively accesses the PMS property management system  1500  to engage through one of the disclosed displays, a product or service and also activities such as reviewing a room bill or making or modifying room reservations, to name only a few. 
       FIG.  149   . Illustrates the present stage invention as described for and illustrated in  FIGS.  4 - 23    and elsewhere. A forward projection substrate  1506  may be one of many materials for a desired effect. It may retract up, down, right or left by any means (all not shown) and it may retract with the entire device when not in use. The forward projection substrate  1506  may be a solid or partially transparent surface so that rear projected images can be created from a lower back projector  1512  and/or an upper back projector  1508 . Likewise, the substrate  1506  may be front projected where images are created by a lower front projector  1514  and an upper front projector  1510 . The image on the substrate  1506  may be formed by one or more projectors combined to fill the substrate  1506 . The substrate as a solid surface may use common rear projection and front projection screen material. Specifically, to enhance the present invention for the hotel multi-purpose room  2  is to enable a transparent forward image dispersed upon the substrate  1506  so that the audience can see both the dispersed image on the substrate  1506  and simultaneously through the substrate  1506  to see the image upon the image screen  43  of image display  42  (not show). Video content can be synchronized so that the layers of images are coordinated on the substrate  1506  and the image screen  43 . The impact from the viewer&#39;s perspective is a 3D appearing effect where video objects can appear on the substrate  1506  in front of other video objects behind on the image screen  43 . The art to create effective video images is described specifically for  FIG.  9   . A material to enhance the forward projection substrate  1506  as being transparent are open weave fabrics, such as various types of scrim, tulle, clear, and lightly diffused plastic sheets and actual clear holographic sheets with light, enhancing, directing, dispersing characteristics. The forward projection substrate  1506  may be in front of the entire image screen  43  or only a portion and may cover multiple portions of the image screen  43 . Also, the concealment substrate  40  may be used for any of the characteristics for the just described forward projection substrate  1506 . 
     The embodiments of  FIGS.  4 - 23    and all other relevant embodiments herein are applicable to the embodiments as described in  FIGS.  150 - 152   .  FIG.  150    illustrates the present invention where the hotel multi-purpose room  2  has installed the image display  42  and is suspended by a cables  1522  attached to a cable spool  1526  and is moved by a motor retractor  1524 .  FIG.  151    illustrates the image display  42  lowered to floor level by the cables  1522 , the cable spool  1526 , and the motor retractor  1524 . The image display  42  may be any type of light emitting display such LED modules, LCD displays with very thin bezels forming a nearly invisible connection between the display sections/modules, and newly developed displays, such as rolling fabric image displays, to name a few potential image display technologies in development and applicable to the present invention. A novel variant of the image display  42  is similar to the arrangement of  FIG.  16    and the massive front projection screen  160 , yet in this embodiment, the screen is actually a black surface projection substrate (not shown). Typical front projection screens cannot show deep black when the room lights are on. However, with very bright projectors, images can be formed on black surfaces such as black cloth. The advantage of such a screen surface is that it is integral with the surrounding black mask  46 . 
     The mechanical connectivity of  FIGS.  150  and  151    illustrates a left truss  1516 , top truss  1518 , and right truss  1520  which all connected supports the image display  42  and any other component related to the present invention. The trusses  1516 ,  1518 , and  1520  may also be fabricated as solid supports such as I-beams. However, trusses provide the optimum strength with lightest weight.  FIG.  152    is a side view of  FIGS.  150  and  151   . The trusses  1516 ,  1518 , and  1520  may be self-standing or may be attached to the wall side of the room  3  (not shown) and detachable by fasteners, quick release mechanisms (all not shown), or other means. A rotational wheel  1530  enables the trusses  1516 ,  1518 , and  1520  and the image display  42  and any other optional components of the system described herein and enables the entire stage device to move in any direction. A removable optional support stem  1532  with a stem rotational wheel  1534  may be included to add stability and prevent tipping of the device while it is being moved. Those skilled in the art will appreciate the numerous mechanisms to enable the stage  1540  to move in any direction. Further, motorized systems can be added as well. 
     A primary embodiment of the present invention is to move the image display  42  and other stage related components discussed herein without the need to disassemble them so they can be repositioned in the hotel multi-purpose room  2 . A moving retracting stage  1540  embodies the present invention as described for and shown in  FIGS.  4 - 23   ,  FIGS.  149 - 152   ,  FIGS.  154 - 156    and elsewhere in the present invention. The hotel multi-purpose room  2  is often partitioned into sections with a Section One  1549  partitioned by first moveable partition  1536  adjacent to a Section Two  1550 , and the Section Two  1550  adjacent to a Section Three  1551  partitioned by a second moveable partition  1538 . Of course, hotels and convention centers have numerous layouts of moveable partitioned sections within their large multi-purpose rooms. Any of those various configurations are applicable to the following descriptions for the Sections  1549 ,  1550 , and  1551  and may be two sections, four sections or any number of sections. The moving retracting stage  1540  has numerous advantages over common prior art method of disassembling and moving audio/visual equipment. For example, just assembling a 12 foot high by 43 foot wide LED or LCD display wall, which proportionally is approximately two massive 16:9 aspect ratio images side by side, could take a day and a large crew. This moving retracting stage  1540  can be moved into the desired location in the hotel multi-purpose room  2  in a fraction of the time. The stage  1540  may be moved by motors that power wheels, rollers or sliders (not shown) to position the stage  1540 . This is done with little human physical effort. The present invention provides enormous cost savings and while maximizing facility productivity. 
     As seen in the primary embodiment  FIG.  153    the moving retracting stage  1540  in Section One can be used in a closed Section One  1549  of the room  2  by the first moveable partition  1536 . For larger events the first moveable partition  1536  and the second moveable partition  1538  can be retracted creating a large open room  2  for a very large audience. The moving retracting stage  1540  can be moved to an end wall  1553  and face all three Sections  1549 ,  1550 , and  1551 . Or the stage  1540  can be moved in a right direction  1544 . It is also conceived that a hotel may have two stages with the moving retracting stage  1540  and a second moving retracting stage  1542 . With the room  2  partitions  1536  and  1538  closed, separate events can be conducted at the same time in the multi-purpose room  2  with the stage  1540  and the second stage  1542 . With the partitions  1536  and  1538  open, the stage  1540  and the second stage  1542  can be moved in the right direction  1544  and a left direction  1546  and meet at a connection point  1548 . The two stages then could be used for a single large room event. They stages  1540  and  1542  can operate independently or together and it is intended that the image display  42  (not shown) of each stage is joined seamlessly forming a much larger display area. In such a case other stage components and systems would, as well, be integrated for the event (not shown). Additionally, more than 2 moving retracting stages  1540  and  1542  could be in the room  2  (not shown). The hotel, with this deployment, has a great deal of flexibility to rapidly adapt the hotel multi-purpose room  2  for any given size of event. 
       FIG.  154    illustrates a further primary embodiment where the hotel multi-purpose room  2  has a temporary audio and video production sound stage. It is the intent to build a global network of stage systems as described herein and permanently locate in hotel multi-purpose rooms  2 . Ideally, these rooms  2  are connected with quality of service data connections and may be interconnected and optionally through a remote network operations center  230  as discussed for  FIG.  23   . This enables very high quality data connectivity to exist and be constantly checked to ensure the connection is up and running and at an acceptable quality. This inherent connectivity enables broadcast, multicast, videoconference and multipoint communications without the complexity and cost to access temporary data connections in the room  2 . As a result of this connectivity the hotel multi-purpose room  2  is an ideal location to create a temporary soundstage for productions. In many situations complex video productions of live and recorded human activities will be needed. The room  2 , at a particular hotel, serves as a studio sound stage for live productions sent to other stages  1540 , or variant stages as described herein, around the globe. Likewise, recorded productions could be played back on stages  1540  around the globe. A large backdrop  1566 , such as black cloth or green screen, is positioned in the room  2 . An on camera talent  1562  is captured by a high res camera  1554 . The high res camera  1554  is connected to the moving retracting stage  1540 , or any other version of the stage embodiments of the present invention, by a signal cable  1556 . The on camera talent  1562  is able to see himself live on the stage  1540  and adjust his performance or presentation accordingly. A series of studio lights  1560  are also temporarily set-up to illumine the on camera talent, the large backdrop  1566  and the production prop  1564 . 
     Conceivably, any hotel multi-purpose room  2  with the present invention installed can become a state of the art production studio in a relatively short period of time. The advantages are critical to ensuring the best possible productions, which are intended to be seen on the image screen  43 . The on camera talent  1562  can see in real-time exactly how his feet align to the floor at the feet alignment point  45  in the image screen  43  ( FIG.  150   ) and stage floor  52 , and how his interactions with production prop  1564  appears. The creative production team can adjust the series of studio lights  1560  to enhance a 3D appearance and can enhance shadows of the on camera talent  1562  and how shadows play off the production prop  1566 . 
     Another major advantage of using the large room  2  as a studio soundstage is that the high res camera  1554  can be placed very far away from the on camera talent  1562 . When the high-res camera  1554  is moved in a closer and further away directions  1558  it effects the perspective of the on camera talent  1562  as he walks closer and further away from the camera  1554 . For example, the talent  1562  may move about and his image may look to get too small or too big as displayed on the image screen  43  and thereby breaking the illusion there is a real person on the image screen  43  (not shown). Further, the high res camera  1554  may also be mounted, not only far away for proper perspective, but also mounted close to the floor of the room  2  (not shown). If the camera is too high, then the talent  1562  may look like they are floating with their feet leaving the stage floor  52  at the alignment point  45  ( FIG.  150   ) as they move closer and further away from the high res camera  1554 . Shadow or reflection displays (not shown), can be deployed on the stage floor  52  as any type of front or rear projection, or any type of emissive display such as LED or LCD creating the illusion that the imaged person  68  on the image screen  43  is actually casting shadows or reflections on the stage floor  52 . Such stage floor reflections and shadows may also be used for imaged stage props (not shown) to enhance their realism. To enhance the overall illusion, the stage floor  52  would be black in many instances to create the illusion that the imaged person  68  is standing in a black void with a deeper theatrical stage behind them. Likewise, the illusion can be further aided by simulating floor shadows and reflections imaged on the image screen  43 . The black void effect is further enhanced when a bright light is placed in the field of view of the image screen  43 , such as at the perimeter of the image display  42 . Or the image screen itself may have a feature that has a bright light with surrounding black. The bright light tricks the eye into stopping down like a camera so that black areas appear even more deeply black (all not shown) making the black void even more convincingly deep as a common theatrical stage. 
     Those in the production arts will greatly appreciate this hotel “ballroom” temporary soundstage studio and the ability to see exactly the finished product in real-time. Highly complicated productions with numerous actors, singers, speakers, and so on, with numerous props, visual effects, animated effects, backdrops, shadow effects, lighting effects, are all used to enhance the realism of the final visual experience. Also, green screen and chromakey can be used for live and recorded productions in many creative ways including isolating the on camera talent  1562  on a black field aiding in the illusion he is standing realistically amidst a black void on the stage of the present invention. This black void is why careful attention is given to ensuring the image screen  43  can produce deep black and the surrounding black mask  46  hides any visual cues of the actual narrow depth of the stage floor  52  and the entire stage device  1540 , or its variants described herein. 
       FIG.  155    illustrates a primary embodiment of the present invention creating a novel production workflow process that radically improves the productivity of event content creation and thereby lowers the cost of production. The prior art process for event video content creation has relied almost exclusively on expert video production companies that create custom video content for custom large format displays. The present invention radically changes this process by empowering the client to create their video production for the various stage inventions disclosed herein. A client users  1568  accesses with their own personal online device  1570 , such as a tablet or notebook PC, a website, and/or a downloaded app to engage a client production computer program  1572 . The program  1572  has at minimum a reference to the image display  42  screen aspect ratio at a particular selected hotel multi-purpose room  2 . That reference is a video playback for a show preview  1574 . The client users can create a show event and store the show event for future access by themselves and others they give permission to. The client user  1568  layouts a timing of the event in the program and can add a show notes  1578  for a staff of people to review and know chronologically the timing and sequence of various elements of the show. Further, the client users  1568  has access to a selectors  1576 , which provides all vital elements needed to create video content and also the overall show, such as lighting scenes. 
     The selectors  1576  include, but not limited to, venue selection, video template selection, video elements selection, virtual video lighting selection, actual stage lighting selection, prop selection, audio set-up selection, and audio clip selection. The client users  1568  creates a show using the selectors  1576  on their own device  1570  and can view the show created on the show preview  1574 . Accessible from a separate database or integral to the program  1572  is a massive content library  1580  so that the client users  1568  can select the desired content. Additionally, the client users  1568  can upload their own or a third party content to the program  1572  by means of a download elements feature  1582 . Upon creation of a show file the client users  1568  has a database of a stored client created show  1584 . A production team accesses the stored client created show  1584  and further modifies, expert enhances, and creates a show ready production  1586 . The show ready production  1586  is then sent to a show control  1588  at the hotel multi-purpose room  2 . The transfer can happen prior to the event and stored on a portable device, data streamed prior to the event or data streamed real-time during the event, among other options. The show ready production is then displayed on the moving retracting stage  1540  or any variation of the stage embodiments disclosed herein. The show control  1588  can include, but not limited to, video playback, audio playback, live videoconferencing equipment, video and audio switchers, and other audio, visual and communication equipment needed to conduct a large event. 
     The program  1572  further includes, but not limited to, show timeline and notes, multiple show project files per client user  1568 , playback online, playback from device  1570  data storage, online collaboration such videoconferencing, cloud storage, copyright vetting and terms, production company terms and conditions for use, schedule of production fees, content fees, venue reservation, production work time tracking, online payment system, talent and technical online resource referrals. While the embodiment of  FIG.  155    is primarily a new production method to empower client created event shows, it is to be expressly understood this online production system, will also be used by industry professionals, production companies, and creative content agencies on behalf of their clients. It is also to be expressly understood that the event show creation process described in this primary embodiment as illustrated in  FIG.  155    is also applicable to any other prior art or alternative stage systems that images video on large format displays at events with an audience. 
       FIG.  156    illustrates a real-time remote production system to bring multiple locations of remote production staff collaborating in real-time at one or more hotel multi-purpose room  2  locations. A remote site production  1590  may be one or many locations and it may be a person working from any location, including their home, office or mobile, and may be a production team office where production staff is located. A collaboration connection  192  connects the remote site production  1590  to the room  2  and local staff operating the show control  1588  and can be at least one of online editing, videoconferencing, one or two way audio and/or video, and room  2  video observation for audience reaction and security. Together, the remote site production  1590  and the staff operating the show control  1588  jointly conduct the live event show. Multipoint videoconferencing bringing in multiple locations at the room  2  and related staff and many remote site production  1590  locations can all join the call. Audio can be broken off to camera people in the room  2  taping the event for a magnification screen, as well as all other conceivable delegation of duties to an event production staff. A control connection  1594  connects one or more remote site production  1590  locations to the show control  1588  and can operate remotely various features of the show control  1588 . Ideally, the remote production  1590  location has a high-quality eye contact videoconferencing system as described herein so that the dispersed production staff can work as efficiently as if they were all present in the room  2 . Further, the staff at the remote site production  1590  may see a feed of the image to be sent to the stage  1540  and can forward content to the staff at the show control  1588 . The remote site production  1590  becomes especially useful as a production operations center when coordination is needed when multiple room  2  with multiple stage  1540  (and all the stage variants disclosed herein) are conducting the same event around the country or globe. 
     The embodiments as illustrated and described for  FIG.  47 - 77    and elsewhere in the present invention are applicable to a novel workspace cubicle. Prior Art  FIG.  157    illustrates a common cubicle barrier  2007 . A cubicle desk user  2002  sits at a cubicle desk  2004  on cubicle desk legs  2006  and gazes ahead in a gaze direction  2008  and is prevented from seeing beyond the cubicle bather  2007 . The cubicle barrier aids in privacy to limit other workers (not shown) from readily seeing the cubicle desk user  2002  and at the same time limits the view of the cubicle desk user  2002  so other workers can have additional privacy. The cubicle barrier  2007  also aids in reducing workspace noise. The flat panel ultra HD display  601  with its ultra HD screen  602 , described previously is seen by cubicle desk user  2002  so that he can enjoy a high resolution image on a very large display  601  in his personal space ( FIG.  158   ).  FIG.  158    illustrates an embodiment of the present invention where the ultra HD display  601  serves as a cubicle bather with similar function as the common cubicle barrier  2007 . The ultra HD display is placed near a cubicle desk  2004  opposing the side the cubicle desk user  2002  is seated. The ultra HD display is detached from the cubicle desk  2004  and rests on a stand  2010  with a stand base  2012 . The stand  2010  may also serve as a cable management system. The stem camera  400  is shown for illustrative purposes and can be mounted in any location and other types of cameras and eye contact displays can be used with present embodiments. 
       FIG.  159    illustrates the ultra HD display  601  mounted to the cubicle desk  2004  by a display desk mount  2014 . Again, in this configuration the ultra HD display  601  replaces the common cubicle bather  2007 . As seen in  FIGS.  158  and  159   , the ultra HD display  601  provides sufficient privacy for the cubicle desk user  2004 , yet additional barriers may be added surrounding the display  601  and on other walls of the cubicle workspace. The word “cubicle” may not now be in fashion, yet still many manufacturers make open concept workspaces where desks and small barriers are placed in large open spaces. The present embodiments transform these open workspaces with privacy barriers being created by large ultra HD displays  601 . Additional common sound masking/noise reduction technology has been deployed to further aid in audio privacy and reducing distracting ambient noise in these open workspaces using the ultra HD display  601  as a replacement for the common cubicle barrier  2007 . 
       FIGS.  40 - 46   , as previously described, teach the fabrication and unique applications of novel small cameras.  FIG.  44    illustrates a specific housing nano stem camera  400  with nano camera  402 . All the embodiments described for the  FIGS.  40 - 46    are applicable to the present invention embodiment as illustrated in  FIG.  160   . With the miniaturization of components such as the nano camera  402 , the small camera  394 , the lens  398 , the wire bundle  392 , the electronic sensor board  404 , power wire bundle  392 , clear wire assembly  306 , sensor mount board  408 , electronic camera board  412 , sensor mount board  408 , electronic wire bundle  410 , and any component variation thereof is applicable to be integrated into a consumer created housing of their choice. Specifically, the housing of the nano stem camera  400  is only one of hundreds of possible housing options of which the aforementioned camera components can be integrated within. The present invention, as taught in the process of  FIG.  160   , permits consumers the ability to buy a kit of a fully functioning camera and then modify that camera for the application they so desire. For example, the nano camera  402  or similar small camera such as the small camera  394  need not be integrated into the nano stem camera  400  elongated tube housing but a housing of an entirely different shape and functionality. 
     As illustrated  FIG.  160    the steps of this embodiment of the present invention are described in the following steps. The consumer in a STEP 1  2020  accesses an online library of 3D models of camera housings, and can optionally manipulate those 3D models. STEP 2  2022  the consumer uses their own computing device with 3D model software for use with their own 3D printer. The consumer may optionally select a housing online, modify the housing, if available for modification, and have a third party print the 3D model of the selected camera housing. STEP 3  2024  the selected 3D model is printed “formed” and the consumer integrates the various camera components and encapsulated inside of the 3D printed camera housing. Some parts need not be encapsulated such as a low voltage power wire  392 , a high voltage power wire  2028 , a low voltage power supply  2029 , and an outlet plug  2026 . 
     3D printed housings can be made of numerous materials, but most are plastic based. It is conceivable other materials such as metal or even wood may be automatically milled out from a 3D model into the desired housing. The camera components to be housed may be any common camera components including, but not limited to, batteries, sensors, electronics, storage devices, lenses, wires, etc. The camera housing 3D models may be used for videoconferencing, actions sports, toys, camcorder, still camera, waterproof, clip-on, security, scientific, drones, stealth in size for hidden camera uses, and many more styles of housings. Also, the consumer may access a 3D modeling program and create their own housing from scratch. All the features and connections related to cameras, camcorders, micro cameras, action sports cameras, wearable, professional cameras, pan/tilt/zoom cameras, broadcast cameras, IP addressable and so on are all applicable to the present invention. Those skilled in the art will appreciate the numerous options to build custom cameras for specialty purposes with the present invention. 
     As described previously, the present invention is used by politicians, which includes campaigning and security purposes. The prior art  FIG.  2    peppers ghost has been tried for political campaigns. It proved to be extremely difficult to set-up and tear down and needed to be used in dimly lit environments or used inside a draped off box or metal shipping containers so that the dim reflection of the image on the inclined stretched plastic film  26  could be seen. The sheer complexity of setting up such a large apparatus at many temporary events limits its potential use as an effective campaign system. Further, the lack of image brightness in common room lit environments greatly limits its potential wide scale adoption. What is needed is an augmented reality effect where a live or recorded image of a politician or any speaker can appear standing in a room at a podium and be convincingly realistic. Further, what is needed is a system that only one person can set-up in just an hour and the image is very bright under normal room lights. Further, what is needed is a rapid deployable delivery system for both moving physical components and also network connectivity at each location for the temporary event. 
       FIG.  161    resolves the aforementioned problems with the peppers ghost illusion for campaigning with rapid deployable events at many locations.  FIGS.  118 - 120    teaches an augmented reality transparent display podium  1130  and  1148  where the image is formed directly on the rear projection transparent podium screen  1132  making it much brighter than the Prior Art inclined stretched plastic film  26  with a dim reflection. The advantages are this solution is much brighter, much more compact and requires very little set-up as compared to the peppers ghost systems. For the sake of clarity “holographic podium” in the context of  FIG.  161    shall mean the solution as taught in  FIGS.  118 - 120   , but also includes all other embodiments of the present invention that creates the appearance of a person is standing in the physical space of the room and can be configured as a portable system that can be easily moved from location to location, to support, for example, a political campaign, a nationwide product marketing launch, or in-store events of famous persons interacting live with crowds as a hologram. This includes the embodiments of  FIGS.  24 - 26 ,  97 - 117   , and the stage embodiments and other relevant embodiments described herein. Further, a mobile media news or entertainment network can deploy this solution with show hosts, guests and entertainers interacting with audiences at many locations and also broadcast the show events to TV or webcast to personal computing devices. Audience members at the events and online are able to participate live in these events by social media, by text, by phone, by webchat or other communication means. 
       FIG.  161    teaches a rapid deployable augmented reality holographic podium campaign system. The solution has a single person set-up for a temporary event and can be repeated day after day. With dozens of these systems deployed, thousands of events communicates the candidates or speakers message whether recorded or live. For a live event,  FIG.  161    first teaches the use of a vehicle on location at a temporary site  2038 . A fleet of vehicles have installed communications gear such as satellite, internet, and bonded wireless to image a live feed of the candidate. Further, the vehicle has all AV and staging for an event including a backdrop with, for example, a candidate&#39;s name and creating a complementary background behind the holographic podium. The single person can set-up the holographic podium  2040  at the temporary location and then the podium can receive the recorded or live feed of the speaker/politician  2042  via internet, bonded wireless or satellite. The politician location has a remote studio  2030  with a black drape or green screen with chromakey black so the speaker/politician will look as if standing at the holographic podium in the midst of the room. The studio produces audio and video of the speaker/politician for transmission  2032  and transmitted to the holographic podium location  2038  and also numerous locations with the same holographic podium set-up  2044 . Further, the speaker/politician can be broadcast live and also via webcast content delivery network  2034  to numerous types of personal internet devices  2036  such as tablets, phones, and notebooks. Conceivably, twenty audiences at twenty locations could see live the speaker/politician and a combined total attendance could be well above 10,000 people with another 100,000 attending online with millions watching on TV. It is also an embodiment of the present invention to incorporate an online donation system engaged by persons observing the holographic podium in-person or online and making donations by their cell phones and personal computing devices. 
     Further, as it relates to  FIG.  161   , since the production of the speaker/politician is on a black background, that black background is the image that is sent to the holographic podiums. A black background may not be desirable for webcast and broadcast. In that case a black background can be removed or a green screen could be used in the production with another background added other than black. Still even more compelling is to webcast from an actual holographic podium with a camera capturing the actual effect so web audiences can see the speaker/politician on the holographic podium. The present invention can use any numerous modes of video, audio, and data transmission and may be one-way video or two-way video, multicast or multipoint. Each event and campaign program will have various expectations of live interactions. With some transmission methods a delay of 2 seconds and even 30 seconds are common. In such a case, the speaker/politician could be cued by a moderator or questions could be delivered from a social media account asking questions in real-time to the speaker/candidate. Such a scenario would reduce the awareness to the audience of a significant transmission delay. 
       FIGS.  64 - 77    illustrates the ultra HD display  601  and its ultra HD screen  602  and its various unique embodiments. Primary to that is the use of the large flat panel ultra HD display  601  used in a close up work zone  620  where it is placed on or just behind a table or desk. In such a case, the large ultra HD screen  602  forms an immersive display that has a screen portion  600  that can display a computer image from a PC, an image from a videoconferencing appliance, movies, TV video games, and any other video sources. Further, what is in the vacant area  607  surrounding the screen portion  600  of the ultra HD screen  602  can form TV lights  605 . To further advance the present embodiment is a personal show control device  2054  as seen in  FIG.  162   . The device  2054  is a box that can be purchased by a consumer and connected to the ultra HD display  601 . The device is a unique and powerful multi-viewer, switcher, scaler, and purpose based computing device in which many video signals can be seen simultaneously on the ultra HD screen  602  and each of those many video signals can be resized and repositioned. 
     Uniquely, since the personal show control device  2054  can image scale a signal from a PC monitor, settings for wide screen can be selected and used, for example, for immersive gaming and computing. Essentially, the computer image would be like a wide format movie and letterboxed top and bottom. Or the device  2054  can receive multiple monitor inputs from the same PC and their multiple images can be arranged side-by-side, as if having multiple computer monitors on a desk. By doing so, the clutter of many displays on a desk is done away with one sleek large immersive display. Each of those images can be repositioned and resized anywhere on the ultra HD screen  602 . As for PC gaming, the multiple video monitor inputs can be seen side-by-side and the images can be seamless forming what looks like an immersive and extremely wide aspect ratio gaming experience akin to having 2 or 3 monitors on the desk and each showing a portion of the video game. 
     The personal show control device  2054  is preferably a purpose built device that has inherent features, such as, but not limited to, an android based IPTV box. Apps can be downloaded and the consumer can use the device  2054  for more than the shown control of resizing and repositioning multiple image sources. Furthermore, the android based device can have a modified GUI so that it is customized by the user and also has specific video display features such as variations of the TV lights  605 . Also, the app based ecosystem of android and similar computing platforms will provide many options for future device enhancements with online updates. For example, videoconferencing software may be included and other collaboration apps. Further, for one possible variant, an image source may be a one or more images from a PC and that image would then be seen within an android GUI providing, among things, an imaged wallpaper (not shown). The image manipulation of multiple images and maintaining the highest resolution, while being selectably resized and repositioned on the ultra HD screen  602  requires specific image processing power. That image processing can be aided by specialized chips from firms such as i-Chips USA based in San Jose Calif. 
     The personal show control device  2054  primarily is designed to have one video output to one ultra HD display  601 , but more than one video outputs are conceivable. Audio output may be embedded in an ultra HD ready HDMI output and audio may also be split out to, for example, optical connection. The user is given, one of many control means, the ability to select the sound associated to the selected video image seen on the ultra HD screen  602 . The device  2054  and numerous inputs, including many HDMI or other standard video connections, may or may not carry audio. It also optionally has USB and preferably many USB connections to hook up a camera, a microphone, and other peripherals. The device  2050  may also have wireless streaming capability so that audio and video from personal devices, such as a mobile phone, may appear as one of the images on the ultra HD screen  602 . 
     The personal show control device  2054  can be controlled by the user by several means including a remote control, a mouse, a keyboard, and a personal device app. Also uniquely, the device  2054  can be controlled by a secure website, such as a social media site and through a personal logged in account. The device  2054  is also intended to be used in an enterprise where the information technology staff can access any particular device  2054  for status and remote operation and also access all devices  2054  for, for example, remote upgrades. 
     As seen in  FIG.  162    multiple audio/video sources  2050  are connected to the device  2054 . A controlling means  2052  by at least one of an app, a secure website, a remote control, a keyboard, a mouse, and by transmission means of radio frequency, Bluetooth and infrared. Further, the controlling means has selection of the video source to be displayed, resizing screen segments for each selected video source, repositions screen segments of each video source and audio from one of the audio video sources. The device  2054  is a computer with an operating system, produces internal video sources of at least one of a wallpaper, TV lights, and an operating system image GUI. Further included is image processing and scaling to maintain each segments highest resolution matching the ultra HD display resolution. Resolution matching is scaling to best utilize the ultra HD display  601  native resolution. However, a resolution less then native may be acceptable for some video sources. Conceivably, image enhancement could apply when the source video is lower resolution then the segment of the ultra HD display  601 . The device  2054  further has at least one output to an ultra HD display  601 . The device  2054  is attached to the ultra HD display  601 . Though present embodiment of  FIG.  162    is presented as a consumer purchasable device that can be connected to an ultra HD display  601 . It is to be expressly understood the device  2054  may be, alternatively, integrated into the ultra HD display  601 . 
     All of the embodiments of the present invention may be incorporated into business models that are based on rent, lease, service and temporary use, which includes charging for that temporary use or service. This includes tickets to watch events on any of the disclosed stage embodiments. Such events may be placed online with tickets offered for sale. Further, the web sales presence will assist the hotels, with the stage installed, to be marketed with discounts such as “dine plus show” or “dine plus show plus stay.” The hotels will have a new marketing approach to build up the exposure of their property. Further, private events will be drawn to the hotel property due to the affordability of the stage and production capability described herein. For example, it is conceivable the present invention described for install into the hotel multi-purpose room  2  may reduce the cost for custom video production and large scale audio visual shows by as much as 80%. As a result, the hotel will have a magnet service and technology installed which will attract clients to book events and procure the entire hotel offering including rooms, event, and convention services. Also, the online presence for marketing reveals the entire global network of the room  2  stage experiences. Further, the online presence reveals date and times for such events with ecommerce ticketing sales and booking. The online presence also reveals the massive network of content categories to choose from, including, but not limited to, live theater, movie theater, fantasy sports, video gaming events, gambling events, educational events, professional training events, political events, product launches, concerts, sport events, faith based events, diplomatic events, corporate events, charity events, to name a few. 
     Advances in display technology are all readily integrated and anticipated to enhance the present invention in the future. These advances such as being thinner, brighter, higher resolution, auto-stereoscopic, new types of light sources, new types of light emitting image devices and so on are all readily integrated into the embodiments of the present invention. For example, short throw projection lens technology has made great leaps forward in recent years and offered by firms, such as Panasonic for a wide range of projectors. These ultra-short throw and bright projectors can be used with any of the embodiments described herein including, but not limited to, the embodiments of  FIGS.  19 ,  21 ,  59 - 63 ,  78 - 82 ,  97 - 125   . A short throw projector would also aid in the Prior Art  FIGS.  2  and  3    to reduce the bulk and complexity of setting up the inclined stretched plastic film  26 . The present invention includes in room  2  the film  26 , positioned upright and, optionally other components, such as the screen  18 , and stowed and concealed behind the image display concealment substrate  40  (not shown). All other embodiments described herein are applicable to that novel use of the film  26 . Those skilled in the art will appreciate the modifications of projection configurations to accommodate the novel objectives of the present invention. 
     The following claims are thus to be understood to include what is specifically illustrated and described above, what is conceptually equivalent, what can be obviously substituted and also what essentially incorporates the essential idea of the invention. The embodiments are in no way limited by its application and can be utilized as an ATM machine connected to a network, a kiosk running multiple applications, and connected to numerous services via videoconference, a personal conferencing system, a group conferencing system, a stage conferencing system, a personal entertainment system, a group entertainment system, a home videoconferencing systems, a home entertainment systems, to name only a few applications. Ideally, the embodiments herein are used throughout the travel industry including hotels, cruise lines, airports, airplanes, commuter trains, and train stations. They can be used as ticket/token machines, help desks, subject matter expert terminals, and digital signage in any type of travel, shopping or leisure locations. Also, any and all networks connecting the present invention are applicable to, but not limited to, connecting homes, offices, buildings, corporations, governments, healthcare professionals, and educational institutions. Also, any embodiment of the present invention may be used for accessing virtual worlds, navigating through virtual worlds, interacting with virtual worlds including interacting with virtual characters or live people, creating content for virtual worlds, and integrating videoconferencing into virtual worlds. 
     Multi-format productions are an embodiment of the present invention where the black void illusion or other types of holographic (all forms of augmented reality display) concerts or events whether being live, delayed, or stored and forwarded may also be transmitted to personal computing devices, TVs, and the like. Also, holographic concerts or events can be captured live on stage by a video production team with one or more cameras for a live broadcast of the event and streamed for live PC device and TV for pay-per-view access. The production can be multi-format in that a VR production is captured, as well as a traditional live switched video broadcast/live stream. The use of the numerous types of transparent screens described herein and the black void illusion described herein will enable a holographic illusion of a speaker or performer and that talk or performance can be streamed to other holographic event venues, smaller holographic displays that may, for example, be in a person&#39;s home and to millions of personal computing devices, TVs, and the like. For example, superimposed AR where the image of the person appears to reside in the live video taken of an environment on a phone or tablet and the imaged person appears superimposed in that environment can be seen on that phone or tablet screen. Superimposed AR can include 2D video image of a person to a highly advanced 3D capture and display of image of a person. Therefore, “observers” and “audience” as defined herein should also be understood as extending to people at locations other than where the present invention is installed and thereby enabling reach to millions of people at the same time on their phones, tablets, notebooks, desktop PCs, and TVs. 
     Hence, it is an embodiment of the present invention to capture a speaker, performer, singer and the like against a black background or green screen (or other isolating color) which can ultimately be presented as a black background on the present invention transparent displays (imaged as transparent and see-through) or black void illusion display and also have that same image presented as a transparent background thereby permitting a superimposed AR image over a live camera feed of a real environment captured by phones, tablets, and other camera and display systems. For example, a live concert could be in one city while the singer is in a studio in any other city being transmitted to the live concert venue and also the same video production can be utilized in a streaming application to numerous phones and tablets capable of creating superimposed AR. The singer, for example, could be seen on the phone or tablet appearing to be performing live in the person&#39;s room standing on the floor or standing on a table. Consumers can access the concert website or application and pay a fee to watch the concert and select to view the concert in standard format, multi-camera selection format, VR format, and AR superimposed format. Also, merchandise can be sold in a store in the application or website before, during, and after the concert or event. Such shopping experience could present content in standard format, VR or AR. 
     The multi-format production for VR, mobile AR, and hologram displays, such as the black void illusion, described above is also ideal for creating, for example, a daily news program, a talk show, an interview show, a sports show, a sitcom, and a drama. Live productions can originate from a studio or a special satellite van and/or production van with wireless transmission capability for location based video productions. AR productions can be set up quickly for green screen and the like for productions in multiple locations in a single day. Also, image isolating technique can be used during productions instead of a black, green or blue screen. The same mobile van can also capture VR and traditional video for VR/AR streaming, broadcast, and videoconferences. Likewise, home studios for stars and subject matter experts can be placed permanently in their homes for quick access to be seen on a recorded or live AR/VR program. 
     Further, the multi-format VR/AR production can present video recorded or live to a phone, tablet, web, and TV application with numerous features. For example, an AR and/or VR network can be offered with numerous shows and the shows play live or are accessed from a database of recorded shows. Also, AR/VR programs can be accessed by being embedded as a menu option while watching a specific AR/VR program and also may automatically present the next AR/VR program in a line up. AR/VR programs may be presented to users based on user history preference or watching habits. Further, AR/VR programs may offer a store for merchandise, including audio and video content downloads such as songs or movies. Further, all types of advertising may be presented in AR or VR with optional prompts for user response. 
     It is primary embodiment of the present invention that a multi-format production transmits a live or recorded image with the intent to be seen on a personal augmented reality device and also on an AR holographic system, including the black void illusion, as described in numerous inventions herein, capable of producing a proportional life-size human. Further, the transmission can present a live image from a production site of any type of programming such as a news program and concert. Further, the multi-format production system may include VR. Personal AR devices can include superimposed AR as described above and also head mounted systems, such as Microsoft HoloLens, Meta, and Magic Leap Glasses. For such head mounted systems all the inventive features described above for superimposed AR are equally applicable. 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is to access live streaming through and/or recorded/stored videos at a video delivery site which may be a private dedicated server or a site such as You Tube and have videos of persons and objects seen against, for example, green screen hat then can be accessed by an AR application on a phone, tablet and the like. For example, a live video podcast of a person, or any kind of program, could be video captured and streamed to the video delivery site and that video would then be accessed by an AR app to superimpose that person on an image of an environment captured by a phone or tablet camera. Further, the video could be streamed through the video delivery site to thousands of users watching it on the video delivery site and also they can access it through the AR app. That AR app may also have a layer of actionable control such as polling or a store to purchase items, or simply present AR advertising which may be user demographic, habit, preferences and other data targeted. Viewers may see the video of the imaged person or object at the video delivery site with a green screen background and will also enjoy that same live video as an AR image on their phone, tablet and the like. To make the image on the video delivery site more enjoyable the color black maybe a background instead of the more common green or blue. In that case black would be the key color for the image isolation by the AR app. Also the video image, whether streamed live or uploaded to the video delivery site, may have included in post or real-time a matte for the key used by the AR app. While 2D images of people work well as AR images 3D images and 3D capable AR apps can be used as well. Further, the AR app could be programmed to add a shadow or reflection for a person seen on screen, to name only a few image manipulating options. The multi format production may also capture a person for a streamed live show or recorded video show and produced against green screen, or equivalent variant, and that show is seen with a virtual set enjoyed by the You Tube community and also is offered to the community of viewers and fans as a AR app for their phone, tablets and the like. 
     The imaged speaker  68  (or any other imaged person described herein) is seen amongst the black void on image screen  43  (or other variants described herein) as introduced and described in  FIG.  4 A ,  FIGS.  7  &amp;  8   , and elsewhere, creating the illusion that the imaged speaker  68  ( FIG.  7   ) is standing in the black void of a stage since no visible reference of the image screen  43  is recognizable to the audience in the sitting zone  14 . The “imaged speaker  68 ” is also referred to in text as the “imaged person  68 ” and for clarity are used interchangeably and have the same meaning in that the speaker may be a performer or any role of person on the image screen  43  appearing to be on stage. Also, the imaged speaker  68  may be interpreted as multiple people imaged on the image screen  43 . The vertical reflective substrate  60 , as well as sections  74 ,  76 , and panels  84 ,  86 , and  88 , and the like, are optional. Reflecting a foreground upon the image screen  43  or the surrounding black mask  46  is as well optional. 
     The black void illusion is applicable to the stage and also to smaller displays, portable systems, a stage built into travelling trucks, digital signage, movie theaters, billboards, museum displays, medical imaging displays, control rooms, and any other potential application and configuration described herein or other logically derived from the teaching of this text and figures. For example, for smaller displays the surrounding black mask  46  may be a black painted wall or pop-up black colored sign, among many other options. A display such as an enhanced black capable display such as a 65″ QLED or OLED display is placed in front of or adjacent to the surrounding black mask  46 . The black display becomes absorbed in the surrounding black mask  46  creating the back void illusion. Objects and people imaged in the black void appear floating or present in the large black environment and visibly do not look contained in the smaller display but within larger black environment. The surrounding black mask  46  may be adjacent to the display or behind it a few inches, a few feet or more. Also, a physical object such as a podium housing, a table, a kiosk and the like can be placed below the display creating the illusion of a person recorded, broadcast or live standing or sitting at the object. So a compelling black void illusion can be created without the need for a head-to-toe video production and the surrounding black mask  46  need not fully surround the image on the smaller display. Even a torso video shot of a person self-created from their desktop PC, notebook, tablet or phone and can be seen on the smaller black void illusion display. In such a case, a person in their home could appear in any part of the world recorded, broadcast or video conferenced standing at a black void illusion podium or sitting at a black void illusion table proportionally life-size. It is preferred a frameless TV display is used or a frame can be concealed with black paint, cloth, and the like to make it disappear amongst the surrounding black mask  46 . 
     All of the present invention is applicable to entertainment mediums, including displaying any type of production. For example, the imaged speaker  68  within the black void illusion, or other imaged persons disclosed herein may be recorded or live. The imaged person may be an entertainer, singer, religious leader, politician, teacher, and so on. The imaged person may be a digital recreation, a prosthetic make-up enhanced person, a look alike, and/or any combination to resurrect a famous singer, politician, historical figure, and other living or deceased people. Characters may also be digitally created as an animated character that is realistically human or cartoonish. Further, the person  1078  may be a synthesized created person which uses a combination of make-up and computer generated imagery, such as placing the digital animated head of a person onto a real videographed body. This technique often speeds production time and saves on production costs. These digital characters may be recorded or live interactive from an AI application, animation system, video segments, or real-time performance animation to interact with a single user or an audience. The performer using one or more processes of performance animation may be recorded, local or remote and may connect via broadcast or telepresence so the experience is fully interactive. All of the variations described above are, for simplicity, defined herein as imaged persons and are interchangeable with an imaged singer, an imaged character, and the like. The images may originate from a recorded source, a broadcast such as a common video/audio satellite feed which may be two-way audio and one-way video, and telepresence. Specifically, the above variations of the imaged speaker  68 , or other imaged persons as described herein, are applicable to many applications and configurations of the black void illusion described herein. 
     The imaged speaker  68  appears on stage and described herein as originating from a transmission from a recorded playback device (either local or remote), a broadcast or a telepresence connection. As previously taught, any of the imaged persons described in this specification when seen on stage should be proportional life-size with some flexibility to modify that true proportionality, if not noticeable to the observing user or audience as being unnatural. It is to be expressly understood that the definition of a proportional life-size person as used in the entirety of this specification and claims means within an approximation of what is observed as natural appearing to a single observer or to an audience. Hence, a proportional life-size person as imaged on any of the described inventions herein may be smaller or larger than the actual person being videographed. Also, the imaged person&#39;s feet are aligned to the stage floor to maintain realism of the experience. For matters of definition, a stage floor can be any floor a person naturally appears to stand upon. The stage floor may be the actual floor of the stage or may be a raised floor simulated with props and scenery. A stage floor also may be one of many floors of a scene, such as a balcony in a certain stage set design. Further, the stage floor may be reflective to present a reflection of the speaker  68  on the stage floor. 
     The imaged speaker  68  is viewed by an audience of one or a multitude. The names of “observer,” “user,” “viewer,” “audience,” and the like are interchangeable as it relates to the present invention and all have in common that they observe the imaged speaker  68 , or other described imaged person herein, amongst the stage environment. Further, the image screen  43  can display a background that the image speaker  68  is seen amongst and may interact with that background image. The image screen  43  may also be constructed in many layers creating depth illusions on stage. These multi-layered effects are compelling experiences which can image the imaged speaker  68  standing amongst a star field, a forest or whatever one can imagine. Also, the content displayed on the image screen  43  may be coordinated with content upon multiple layers of image displays on stage enabling compelling stories. It is to be expressly understood that all the described embodiments and features are applied to the stage may well apply to the black void illusion and applied to any type of display application, such as digital signage or a corporate telepresence room. 
     In all the above described configurations, the black void illusion is that of the imaged speaker  68  appearing real and on stage. Further, actors, a band, an orchestra, props, to name a few, can be placed in front of the image screen  43  further providing contextual realism to the imaged speaker  68 . For example, a recorded singer may appear on stage with a live musical talent, such as a band or orchestra creating the illusion that the singer is present on stage interacting with and singing perfectly with the band or orchestra. Likewise, characters imaged upon the screen  43  can be seen with live acting talent in front of the image screen  43 . Likewise, the imaged character on the image screen  43  may interact with live acting talent. The image screen may also be stage forward with actors, a band or orchestra to the left and the right and behind the imaged speaker  68 . In such a case the image screen  43  may be in sections on stage, curved or angled, permitting live people on stage to appear to be behind the imaged speaker  68 . 
     Also, it is a primary embodiment of the present invention to build and/or retrofit the described systems into movie theaters and incline movie seat theaters as an alternative venue to the large hotel multipurpose room  2 . In such case, a new or existing movie theater with or without inclined seats serve as a new multi-purpose exhibition space. The black void illusion of the present invention lends itself perfectly to creating the appearance of imaged live or recorded people on stage when in fact they are video images seen in a movie theater. Front projection movie screens may create this illusion, as described previously, but is frustrated by the lack of contrast of the light colored front projection screen among other factors. This may be overcome by projecting upon screens that preserve a deep black level, such as black fabric and other front projection screen technologies. The image display  42  with its image screen  43 , constructed of, for example LEDs, may be used to show movies at a movie theater instead of front projection. Or the display  42  may be used for events other than watching film so the lights in the room can be fully on. Some configurations may use common front projection screens for movies that mechanically retract revealing the image display  42  serving as a secondary screen option to create the black void illusion and other common video content. 
     The present invention uniquely increases the cost effectiveness of deploying LED display technology, as well as other display technologies described herein, into a movie theater since it can be used under full light for events other than film watching and also provides the black void illusion and other illusions of a live stage with imaged real people, live transmitted or recorded, on stage. Exhibitors and studios can now offer with the present invention a live stage appearing show before the movie begins, interludes during the movie, and after the movie. Also, special live stage appearing “movies” simulating a live performance is now possible. Additionally, stars can appear live via broadcast and videoconference to create a more compelling entertainment experience. Further, the formats of traditional movie and a live stage can be mixed throughout a performance. Further, real actors present in the theater can interact with live transmitted or recorded actors and characters on the image screen  43  and are lit on stage with stage lighting as described previously. Lastly, all of the uses, applications, and configurations described herein for the hotel multipurpose room  2  built for or retrofitted with the present invention are applicable to movie theaters and inclined seat movie theaters. Hence, the present invention enables a movie theater to be constructed with an LED image display  42  with an LED image screen  43  which permits two modes of use of displaying movies and the black void illusion described herein creating the appearance of life-size proportional people on stage and imaged live, recorded, broadcast or video conferenced. 
     It is to be expressly understood, all of the relevant embodiments of the present invention are intended to be installed into an inclined seat movie theater as well as a non-inclined seat movie theater. Such mechanical, optical and electrical systems, such as the stage floor, lighting, drapery, retracting drapery, show control, and any other common stage technology will be evident to those skilled in the art after fully understanding the disclosed embodiments related to the large hotel multipurpose room  2 . For example, the stage lighting rig  124  may be self-supporting or be mounted to the side of the theater walls and hidden from audience view (not shown). Also, the left roll-up panel  84 , the right roll up panel  86 , and the center roll up panel  88  can be mechanically affixed to the ceiling or supported by columns (all not shown) and when lowered converts the movie theater into a theatrical live stage with a proscenium framing a stage opening where actors reside, or in this case any live person(s) on stage and any imaged person(s) appearing on the image screen  43 . It is a primary embodiment of the present invention to convert and retrofit a movie theater with a rapid retracting proscenium so that the movie theater can be used in a first mode of use as a common movie theater, such as a typical multiplex with no proscenium, and as a live theater stage with full proscenium enabling the black void illusion. The stage with stage floor, in the movie theater may be constructed to easily set-up and dismantle or remains permanent in the theater and optionally mechanically retractable. Also a stage with stage floor may not exist as a functional stage and be one of simulated in the actual video image on the image screen  43  where the imaged speaker  68  appears to stand or a retracting prop stage made of fabric or other material that simulates a functional stage. The image of the simulated stage with stage floor, or at least the simulated floor portion of the stage, can be created to create a virtual stage with floor seen in the bottom portion of the image screen  43 . Numerous video effects and animated effects can increase the realism of the image of the stage with stage floor where the imaged speaker appears to be standing. Techniques using shadows, reflections, light beams, depth perspective in shape and even color can all be used to create the image of a realistic stage and stage floor even though it does not physically exist (not shown). Also the prop stage with stage floor, as mentioned above, or even a real stage may have a selection of floor materials from shiny reflection to light absorbing material depending on the effect wanted for the imaged speaker  68  appearing to be on stage. All methods to roll up, fold, hingedly swing, retract, conceal, to name a few, to create the proscenium with theater drapery, panels, and LEDs are preferred, but not the only method or material to achieve the retracting proscenium. Also, the lower seats of the movie theater could be removed or remain and the stage is built on-top of the rarely used seats (not shown). Movie theaters are various sizes so each venue should have control of one or parts of the image display  42  on the image screen  43  to ensure the imaged speaker  68  is proportionally life-size. All of the benefits, embodiments, and features described for the hotel multi-purpose room installation, production, operation, distribution, and more described herein are applicable to the present movie theater invention. That also includes user created shows using online storyboarding tools and access to large augmented reality object libraries and stage light set-ups that are real and virtual (all previously described). 
     The Peppers Ghost illusion may also be applied to embodiments described herein for hotel multi-purpose rooms and movie theaters. The Pepper&#39;s Ghost illusion is improved upon by the present invention in numerous embodiments, yet provides performance challenges as compared to the direct view black void illusion as described herein. As seen in Prior Art  FIG.  2   , the Peppers Ghost illusion is extremely bulky and cumbersome. Attempting to retrofit the Peppers Ghost illusion into an inclined seat theater is highly problematic because the vertical viewing angle of the audience is obstructed by the angle of the stretched plastic film  26  (not shown). The present invention overcomes this drawback and permits the audience seated in inclined seats to have an unobstructed view by tilting the optic at a steeper angle and correspondingly to the reflected image source from below. The configuration is seen and discussed in  FIGS.  78  and  79    and directly applicable to inclined seat movie theaters where the angled film  720  reflects the slanted image screen  736 . The slanted image screen  736  may be any display including front projection with multiple projectors which are used to create a large single image. The angle film may be stretched plastic or any other substrate that achieves the characteristics as described for  FIGS.  78  and  79   . All of the benefits, embodiments, and features described for the hotel multi-purpose room installation, production, operation, distribution, and more described herein are applicable to the present inclined seat movie theater invention, retrofitted to existing theaters or designed into new theaters, with the Pepper&#39;s Ghost illusion. Further, movies can be played on the system and the angled film  720  can be designed to retract for a direct view of a movie screen or fold down into a stage floor or upon the display source the angled film  720  reflects (not shown). Lastly, the angled film  720  can be configured to reflect an image display from above and also enable a high vertical viewing angle for people seated in an inclined seat theater. 
     Alternatively, as described for  FIG.  149    open weave fabrics and various types of mesh, as well as other transparent image screens described herein, will create an impressive illusion of the image speaker  68  and objects floating on stage in a movie theater. This, as well as all direct front and rear projection embodiments described herein, are applicable to be retrofitted into movie theaters and incline seat movie theaters. All of the benefits, embodiments, and features described for the hotel multi-purpose room installation, production, operation, distribution, and more described herein are applicable to the present movie theater and inclined seat movie theater invention, retrofitted to existing theaters or designed into new theaters, with front and rear projection transparent screens. 
     The image speaker  68  may be any type of human image transmitted by means such as a live broadcast feed, a videoconference, and a recorded playback from a remote or local device. The image speaker  68  may be a singer or actor, live or recorded and interact with or perform in conjunction with live talent on stage, such as live singers, actors, a band or an orchestra. The imaged speaker  68  may be a live performance animation or recorded digitally created human. The digital human may also be a synthesized combination of a videographed human body with a digital head. The digitally created human may be a character with humanoid characteristics, such as a cartoon character. The imaged speaker  68  is also referred to in the text as an imaged person being generically any role of a person imaged by the present invention. 
     The image display  42  possessing the image screen  43  is ideally an LED screen which today represents the required specification of the present invention (see  FIG.  4 A ). LED fine pitch displays are becoming more affordable. 1.9 mm pixel pitch LED displays or finer have proved adequate to display people proportionally life-size so long as the audience is about 20 feet away from the screen. Finer or less fine pitch displays are all relevantly applicable to the present invention. Most all LED displays now provide connectors between modules so that a very large surface area, largest enough for a movie theater screen, can be fabricated with no visible seams. True deep black levels are critical for the success of the black void illusion previously described. Advances in LED, making the actual emitter dark in color, greatly enhances the black level. Also, constructing LEDs with deep black levels are made possible by a black matrix mesh between the pixels, further enhancing the black levels. LEDs include any type of LED screens and all advancements to that display art. For example, chip on board LEDs, surface mount device LEDs, and micro LEDs are all under the category of an LED based image display  42 . Sony Cledis LED technology certainly is applicable to the present invention because of its superior black level due to the fact that the micro LEDs allow much more black surface area. Samsung Cinema micro LED is also a superior choice type of LCD. Micro LED displays have a black surface area surrounding the micro LEDs greater than the area consumed by the micro LEDs. This increased black surface area is a critical factor in the true black performance of the display and providing the highest quality black void illusion described herein. As a result, the black void illusion can be enjoyed even in normal room lighting. No matter the LED technology a primary embodiment of the present invention is to incorporate a surrounding black area of mesh or paint or black color around individual LED lights to increase the black levels of the LED based image display  42  with its image screen  43  and thereby vastly improving the black void illusion of the present invention. Further, a primary embodiment of the present invention is to enable the black void illusion by using micro LED. Further, a primary embodiment of the present invention is the LED display screen, including micro LED screen, has a non-LED black surface area greater than a LED light source surface area. This applies to the image screen  43  of the display  42 , or other display with screen described herein. Exotic coatings that enable super black qualities, such as Vanta Black, can as well be applied. Gloss and dull black finish may also be incorporated for particular effect that may improve the black level of the LED. The LED may be also support 3D which may or may not require an audience to wear glasses to support the 3D experience. 
     An embodiment of the present invention is to place lights at one more parts of the proscenium of the stage creating the observational phenomenon of the eye stopping down the black level to compensate for the brighter light and therein making the black void appear blacker. This technique to increase the apparent black levels of the image screen  43  is an embodiment of the present invention. For example, LEDs may make up the proscenium arch (left, right, and top of the stage opening) and may have video content (not shown). The light emanating from this may be sufficiently bright to increase the apparent black levels of the image screen  43  as observed by an audience. Also, the proscenium arch made of LEDs give additional depth cues and creative options for an event or show. Lastly, this may be scaled down to a meeting room size or even desk size with a light source surrounding the image screen  43 . One example would be a futuristic portal that looks like a black void with surrounding lighting defining the portal in which to gaze into. The surrounding lights, whether LED or not, may also be retractable as described similarly in the text. 
     An embodiment of the present invention is the image display  42  with its image screen  43  is deployed on stage in sections and those sections placed closer or further way from the audience (not shown). In that case, each section has video objects, including the imaged speaker  68 , which are surrounded in black and the edges of the layers of sections are unnoticeable since they are black-on-black. As a result, the black void becomes a multilayered 3D effect where, for example, video stage props/scenery elements can appear at differing depths of the stage from that of the imaged speaker  68  (not shown). Alternatively, multi-layered depth can be created with a curved or angled image display  42  with its image screen  43  at various distances away from the audience. Another embodiment of the present invention is physically moving the image display  42  by being mechanically positioned, flown in, carried in, or rolled onto stage and moved about creating a moving 3D depth illusion within the black void (not shown). Numerous impressive video effects could be created such as the imaged speaker  68 , seen in the image screen  43 , walking from back of the stage to the front of the stage and the image display  42  is matched in a mechanical rolling motion to match the walking of the imaged speaker  68 . 
     All of the above are applicable to numerous stage applications and is well suited to create virtual scenery systems for one of many types of venues including performing arts theaters, amusement park theaters, and dark rides with the black void illusion, described herein, seen as people ride through an experience. Video objects imaged upon the image screen  43  are seen amongst the black void illusion and all appear additionally three dimensional when possessing at least one of a mass, a reflectance, a shading, a motion, and a light beam. The image screen  43  displays continuous black which by definition herein means creating the black void illusion which need not be entirely black but have portions that are black and portions that are illuminated with video objects but all combined do not readily make the audience aware of the image screen  43  by revealing the edge of the display or video content that reveals the flat image screen  43 . 
     The black void illusion, described herein, may be modified for various applications. For touring concerts, the image display  42  may be massively large for an arena. In such a case, proportional life-size people can interact with animated objects or characters 20 feet tall or greater. In an arena, controlling the lights and creating a purpose built stage to ensure the image screen  43  remains black as possible is paramount to create the black void illusion. The image display  42  with image screen  43  displaying the black void illusion shows the imaged speaker  68  and volumetric video objects and may be built into a portable small stage and used, for example, for VIP security for corporate and government officials that need to appear in a hostile environment. The experience may, as well, be built into a large truck or truck trailer and the cargo hold has the present invention making it a quick set-up travelling stage. This black void depth illusion with the imaged speaker  68  and video objects, as described throughout the text, is applicable to be imaged in at least one of a meeting room display, a podium display, a kiosk display, a classroom display, a retail display, a desktop display, a portable display, and a large format display located in the room that is at least one of a hotel room, a hotel multi-purpose room, a convention center room, a theater room, a theater with inclined seats room, a cruise ship room, a house of worship room, a concert venue room, a meeting room, a presentation room, a studio room, and a classroom; the imaged person is at least one of a politician, a teacher, a speaker, an entertainer, a doctor, a clergy person, a business person, a sitting person, and a standing person. 
     The present black void illusion invention and its variants have also been demonstrated as an embodiment of the present invention to create entire theatrical scenes isolating in the void images of both small and massive virtual props, such as buildings, rooms, and even outdoor scenes, such as a forest. Further, merged scenes can be created where real props can augment virtual props enhancing the depth of a three dimensional scene. For example, a virtual building can be created with depth perspective cues, such as one or two point perspectives, and those perspective cues could extend to a physical prop building adjacent to the image screen  43  (not shown). In such a case, the prop serves as a visual cue of a mid-ground of the depth of the stage. The imaged speaker  68  and live actors on stage can appear to interact with and within these merged scenes. In some artistic variations of these virtual scenes, and more specifically, these merged scenes that combine both the virtual and the real forming a seamless theatrical setting, need not be isolated completely in a black void and could even fill the expanse of the stage. Further, depth perspective and forced perspective cues can be done with carefully formulated animation and videography seen on the image screen  43  creating a simulated floor, a simulated floor that extends the existing stage floor, a simulated virtual imaged stage light, a simulated light behind the imaged speaker  68 , and a simulated theatrical scene backdrop behind the imaged speaker  68 . 
       FIG.  9    illustrates the magnification screen  88  floating amidst the black void of the image screen  43  and creating an image frame within the larger image screen  43 . That portion of the screen may be a separate video signal that shows not only the magnification image of imaged speaker  68  but also can be any video or computer source. A primary embodiment of the present invention is to permit users to easily select a variety of artistic and depth perspective visualization of the screen  88 . For example, the imaged speaker  86  may have a slide deck presentation on his computer. He can certainly display it in a common 2D format on the screen  43 . However, the present invention enables the imaged speaker  68 , a show controller or any person to show the video and/or computer source through an image processing unit that can frame the image source in one of many artistic designs and may add motion, reflection, shadows, and perspective. So the simple slide deck presentation now appears to be a solid dimensional object floating in the black void space of the stage. Some show image processors now have this capability and advances in real-time graphics processing using gaming engines, such as Unity and Unreal Engine may be customized for this application. The image source from the personal computer is “pinned” into an animation combining the image source with the animated object is one possible method to achieve the desired results. Also, many computer and video sources can be animated and manipulated at the same time on the image screen  43 . Hence, the image frame of the magnification screen  88  can show more than a magnified image of the speaker  68  and can have its video source in an animated real-time rendered object that takes the shape of that object. Pinning the video source into the real-time animated object effectively combines the video source and the object as one complete object that can be manipulated in size, shape, movement, and other animated features. 
     Beyond manipulating a simple video or personal computer source, gaming engines open up an entirely new world to create elaborate virtual and interactive content with the present invention. On stage, the imaged speaker  68  can control and literally walk through any virtual scene or a person live on-stage can appear to the audience to be in the virtual scene as well. All of this is now possible and a primary embodiment of the present invention. When combined with the black void illusion the experience creates compelling visual experiences which may incorporate self-illuminated props, image map projected props, and even a video floor coordinated with the virtual scene seen upon the image screen  43 . Added to that a library of effects that can be easily called up and rendered in real-time permits novices to create the most advanced appearing stage presentations. Further, new types of video games could use this larger than life platform and even professional and military training could be conducted with the present invention. Further, the gaming engine technology may also be used to create the virtual stage light  87 , making it and many of them fully interactive and customizable for an event. Further, the virtual stage light  87  may be coordinated with a show control with real stage lights. 
     As described in  FIG.  4 A  the display wall side of the room  3  may be the large hotel multi-purpose room  2  with the massive image display  42  positioned near it. The image display  42  is vertically oriented substantially straight up with its image screen facing the audience. It is to be clearly understood that the large hotel multi-purpose room  2  may be another room entirely different such as a movie theater, control room, performing arts stage, meeting room, office and so on. Also the display wall side of the room  3  is presented for understanding the orientation and the image display  42  which may be close to or far away from any structural wall. Also it is descriptive to assist with understanding the orientation of the audience or user to the image screen  43 . The image display  42  covers a substantial portion of the wall it is placed near and “substantial” means a portion of the wall only with no further definition needed such as determining the exact portion of the wall that is covered. Lastly, the massive image display  42  need not be massive when applied to the numerous embodiments and configurations disclosed herein. For example, the present invention may be configured into a small conference system and placed on a desktop and the wall would simply be the wall behind the system opposite the audience/user. The present invention and its numerous inventive embodiments may be adapted to many other applications smaller or larger. 
     The image display  42  may be a front or rear projection variant as previously discussed which means the component of the front projection screen serves as the image screen  43  with an associated projector. As such the image display  42  should, in all novel inventions described herein, be considered to have the variant of being a projection screen with an associated projector component. The present inventions are conceived of and configured as either or both as terminals and systems. Terminals may, in one instance be a product that is opened and removed from a box or has components that need to be assembled to make the final solution. As systems the unique components and their unique relationship to each other and their unique functionality with each other is one of several types of a system. Whether conceived as a terminal or a system the black void illusion with the the continuous black surface need not be observed through or upon the inclined stretch plastic film  26  or any angled optical substrate (prior art  FIG.  2    and  FIG.  3   ). The novel inventions as described herein enable numerous products and custom build configurations for many applications. 
     As previously discussed a show control system for a movie theater is preferred since it currently automates what content will be played and at what time and also triggers various functions in a theater, such as dimming house lights. It is a primary embodiment of the present invention to enable a show control system to automate content and integrated elements that are intended to support the black void illusion in a first mode of use where the imaged speaker  68  (collectively the image speaker  68  or any other imaged person in the black void illusion illustrated or described herein) appears to be standing proportionally life-size on stage as if in a live theater. In a second mode of use, the show control returns the cinema back to its standard use as a movie theater which may display a superior HDR High Dynamic Range movie and further seen on an impressive direct view LED cinema screen. It does not matter which mode of use if defined by first or second, simply at least two modes of use. HDR movies in movie mode are stunningly improved over traditional digital projection. In live theater mode (recorded or live broadcast/telepresence), the imaged speaker in the black void can be a part of a preshow ad, a first act music performance, a lecture, political event, Broadway, esports, and any experience imaginable. Also, movies can have complementary live theater black void performances or speaker interludes before, during, and after the movie. 
     The show control rapidly converts the environment of the movie theater by controlling house lights, stage lights, virtual stage lights, mechanical systems, such as moving drapes and moving stage floors (described later). In the first mode of use, the intent is to present to the observers the visual impression of being in a live theater where they expect live actors and presenters to walk out on stage, and in a second mode of use, is a standard functional movie theater. Of course live people may come out on stage and perform but the present invention permits the image of people to appear virtually on the screen  43 . These imaged people may be live transmitted from another location or recorded images creating the impression of the essence of live. The live theater mode of using the black void illusion has numerous elements that are selectively deployed and controlled by cues from the show control system. The following are examples of what can be controlled. The frame rate of the video may increase from the common movie frame rate of 24 frames to assist in the illusion of the imaged people being live. Drapes left of stage and right of stage may appear mechanically flanking the theatrical stage. Further, a drapery valance may be mechanically lowered. Stage lights of any type may turn on and be coordinated to a performance, including lasers and other exotic lights. Stage lights can be positioned anywhere in the theater but may ideally be placed beyond the edges of the image screen  43  at near the same plane of the image screen  43  and also forward of the image screen  43 . An atmosphere device to produce haze may be added to make the stage light beams more visible. A left of stage light panel and a right of stage light panel and a top of stage light panel all may be illuminated to define the impression of a live theater as seen by the observers (which includes a concert venue and the like). The panels may be illumined LED, illumined drapes, illumined light boxes, illumined video displays, and the like and may be controlled in the state of on and off, in their intensity of illumination, color of illumination, pattern of illumination and even video image content illumination from a projection source or being inherently a direct view display. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that additional elements can be controlled by the show control system to support the modes of use. The programming may be done off-site or on-site and may be included in a DCP file (Digital Cinema Program) or uploaded by any means. 
     The first mode of use simulates the imaged speaker  68  in a movie theater that rapidly transforms creating a live theater and a second mode of use providing a standard movie experience as previously described and may be further enhanced by having layers of “hologram” effects. As described for  FIG.  149   , forward projection substrate  1506  is a partially transparent projection surface which may be moved into view by the observers during the mode of live theater. The substrate is placed between the image screen  43  and the observers. The substrate  1506  may display the imaged speaker  68 , magnification image  88 , the object image  90 , and the light beam  87 . No images need be seen on the image screen  43  behind. Or both the image screen  43  and the substrate may show images which are independent of one another or synchronized for certain visual effects, presentations, and storytelling. The image substrate  1506  produces an augmented reality image where the image content has a black background and that black background is displayed as transparent on the substrate  1506 . The image speaker  68 , seen on the substrate  1506 , may be a recorded image or transmitted live by broadcast or telepresence. Alternatively, the first mode of use for the live theater has the imaged speaker  68  not in a black void, but appear proportionally life-size, standing at a stage and amongst a full screen image of a proportionally real environment image on image screen  43 . For example, the image speaker  68 , being recorded or live transmitted, may be standing on stage, but also appearing standing inside an imaged room from one point or multiple-point perspectives creating the appearance of a live stage set. The set being an image of a real set and proportionally accurate to a real environment. For example, the audience would see the left and right walls and ceiling and back wall of the image—essentially looking into a room. Other real environment imaged sets, props, and scenes may be imaged so long as they are proportionally accurate that would be residing in the stage of a live theater. Autostereoscopic, stereoscopic, light field displays and other 3D type displays would enhance this illusion. Uniquely, the cinema room in live theater mode then is rapidly transformed back into a standard movie theater. All of the above is controlled by a show control system which also supports the synchronization of the various image sources and even the remote operation of the display devices and audio for coordinated programmed performances. 
     The two modes of use for a movie theater transforms rapidly into a live theater, creating hologram illusions of imaged people on stage and also requires special attention to audio mixing. The science and art of mixing audio for the movies is highly complex, but usually is done so in the context of enhancing the movies with surrounding audio. Voices emanate from the image screen  43  in movie mode for realism and environmental sounds leverage speakers positioned throughout the movie theater. For LED cinema, audio mixing should be done with the context of knowing audio speakers may not be mounted behind the image screen  43  which is challenging for voice positioning and also, the hard surface of the LED cinema screen may affect the final audio mix. Numerous virtual audio placement technologies and systems exist that can create the auditory illusion that sound emanates from a location other than the source audio speaker. All such technologies and systems are applicable to creating the illusion that voices originate from the center of the cinema screen even though no audio speaker is located behind and aimed through the screen. For example, audio speakers aimed and reflected off the screen  43  has proven to work sufficiently well. 
     The present invention conceives that an existing movie theater with an LED cinema screen is used to mix audio for movies, enabling the audio engineer a real world reference while audio mixing is occurring. Further, the present invention also conceives the imaged speaker  68  has vocals and any other audio mixed for parameters to simulate the acoustics of a “live music” venue. For example, image speaker  68  is a singer and when she sings her voice should appear to reflect off walls and reverberate as if in a live music venue, such as a concert hall, a bar stage or even an arena. Specifically, each mode of live theater and movie needs to have distinctively different audio engineering for each mode of use. 
     It is a primary embodiment of the present invention to create a virtual theatrical stage lighting system where the virtual light beam  87  ( FIG.  8   ) seen upon the image screen  43  may be one or numerous light beams with optional imaged light fixtures. Further, the virtual light beams  87  are created to appear ultra-realistic and being programmed or performed in tandem with real stage lights (such as side lighting rig  124 ). For example, real stage lights may be any type of stage light, such as moving head stage lights, and have the ability for modifying light output such as in intensity, color, light pattern, movement, beam pattern, to name a few. The virtual stage lights beam  87  and their imaged fixtures and even the visible atmosphere in motion in the light beam may be an animation, a video or a combination of both. The virtual light beams  87  are ideally programmed and performed using the same lighting consoles used for real stage light performances. These light consoles used for performances can be used for live shows using the black void illusion and also may be programmed for duplication in hundreds of movie theaters, hotels or other environments, using the black void illusion and thereby recreating the same exact show in many locations. The advancement of virtual lights imaged on stage which are proportional real size and simulating real light beams gives a lighting designer a new way to create impressive shows. It is primary embodiment of the present invention where virtual stage lights as described herein are programmed and/or performed real-time in coordination with one or a plethora of real stage lights. The lighting designer can select virtual lights and real lights to move in sequence, select similarity in color, and so on in numerous creative options all coordinated for a recorded or live show. Virtually imaged stage trusses and cabling and other stage elements will also aid in creating a virtual stage environment so observers will believe they are looking at real lights. The virtual light beams are ideally suited for the black void illusion, but will also offer creative opportunity for video imagery that is not in the depth of a black void. 
     Stage light pre-visualizers are currently utilized on computer screens to visualize what a light show would be like once installed. The animation on these systems are very crude and meant to simply communicate the idea of the show design. The present invention creates ultra-realistic animations of virtual light beams  87  and fixtures with the intent to be placed on a massive screen, such as image screen  43 , and coordinated with the virtual lights  87  in some applications with real stage lights. As such, the virtual beam of light must be convincingly real. The present invention teaches that a virtual light beam is animated with an atmosphere (any particulate in the air, such as fog, dust, smoke, vapor, and so on) and that atmosphere is in motion with perceived degrees of density that is seen by the observers in the virtual light beam. Further, light beam  87  may be aimed at, follow, and appear to fall upon and strike the imaged speaker  68 . Live and recorded effects can achieve this by changing light intensity upon the imaged speaker  68  from a studio light source. Alternatively, various techniques for real-time or post production can create the illusion that the virtual light beam  87  appears to strike the imaged speaker  68 . Further, the virtual light beam  87  may be aimed toward the floor and create a pool of light disposed on an imaged floor or that pool of light can be formed creating the impression of an actual floor. The animation of the virtual light beam  87  and its corresponding animated fixture source can be recorded or performed in real-time for an event. 
     The imaged light fixtures described above and seen in the figures with the virtual light beam  87  are imaged virtual light fixtures which are ideally 3D modeled and animated to look like real light fixtures. 3D models can be rendered over time but it is preferred to be real-time for immediate visual presentation and control (such as performed from a light console for a live show). The present invention enables dozens and even hundreds of virtual and real lights and fixtures to be coordinated for impressive events and shows. As originally conceived the present invention recognized the advancement of videogame engines and the power to control virtual lights and virtual fixtures with any type of control protocol such as DMX. The performance of the virtual lights  87  and virtual fixtures can be live and recorded. Recorded can be a video and/or can be programmed to activate automatically with a show control system. A light designer/director can create shows for live events, recorded video presentations and automatically engaged programmed virtual lights, virtual fixtures and even coordinated with real light fixtures. The lighting design/director can also control the virtual lights live from remote locations and even at multiple locations at the same time. The virtual light beam  87  emanates from the imaged virtual light fixture and convincingly makes the audience believe they are observing real light fixtures and light beams on stage. The imaged virtual light fixtures can be any type of light fixture and any type of stage light fixture including strobes, moving heads, wash lights, spot lights, scanners, to name a few. The imaged virtual light fixtures are ideally suited for the black void illusion, but will also offer creative opportunity for video imagery that is not in the perceived depth of a black void. The virtual stage light beam  87  and the imaged virtual light fixture are visible upon the image screen and display simultaneously with the image of a recorded person or a live transmitted image of a person. The live transmitted person can be a videoconference with live two-way audio and video or in a live broadcast mode of use (all described throughout the text). Further, light beam  87  may be aimed at, follow, and appear to fall upon and strike the object image  90 . Various techniques for real-time or post production can create the illusion that the virtual light beam  87  appears to strike the object image  90 . The object image  90  can be any video object including abstract forms, graphics and realistic images of real world objects such as virtually imaged stage props, scenery and backdrops. 
     The stage floor  52  may be integral with the retracting stage system  44  or any type of stage. All embodiments described herein for the retracting stage system  44  need not be retracting for certain applications. The stage floor  52  may function as a stage where people can walk on it or be a prop floor with no intention to support people, props or equipment. In such as case the stage floor  52  is used to support the illusion of being a stage with floor to the audience. The stage floor  52  is positioned at or near the bottom side of the image screen  43 . It is to be expressly understood that bottom side of the image screen  43  may be lower or higher than the stage floor  52 . The stage floor  52  is integral with any type of stage and that stage is positioned at a bottom of the image screen  43  and that bottom being the bottom side of the image screen  43 . The stage floor  52  may of any size including built into a small terminal, kiosk, portable pod, or simply is an actual room floor where the imaged conferee  68 , or any other described imaged person herein, appears to stand, walk about and reside at. The image display  42  with its image screen  43  is vertically oriented substantially straight up, and is still vertically oriented if it is at a slant or a dimensional shape. 
     As described previously, the surrounding black mask  46  aids in the black void illusion ( FIG.  9    and throughout) since it expands the peripheral view of black surrounding the black-appearing image screen  43 . The mask hides the edge of the image screen to create the continuous surface of black beyond the display. The mask extends beyond the perimeter of the image screen  43  to whatever the application and configuration requires. For example, it may extend above, below, to the right and to the left of the image screen. It may also extend forward, such as a black stage floor, a black ceiling, a black left wall, and a black right wall. For example, the stage floor  52 , the stage ceiling  54 , and the stage walls  149  may be made of the same material as the surrounding black mask  46 , creating an expanding depth of the black void. In some applications, such as some movie theater configurations, it is preferred to create a “cave” so the black masking  46  extends forward to the theater ceiling, left and right walls, and the stage floor which all will expand the expanse and depth of the black void. The black mask may be made of any material or paint. In movie theaters stretched black fabric can be made off-site in sections or stretched in venue. The floor may be any kind of floor such as a real theater stage floor, a black partially reflective floor, a prop scenery floor, a portable staging floor, a normal room floor and the like. In some applications of the black void illusion, the ending point of the black mask may be noticeable to the observer. For example, the black void illusion may be built integral with a TV set in a kiosk. The surrounding black mask may be black glass that extends much wider and taller than the actual TV screen creating a larger black void to see objects and people in the expanded black void. 
       FIG.  9    illustrates, and elsewhere in this description, multiple images of objects, such as props, people, and light beams in the black void. These images of objects should not be cut off by the edge of the screen. Typical film making is the art of filling a rectangular window while the black void illusion generally does not permit images to be cut off at the edge of the top, left, and right perimeters of the display. The bottom perimeter of the screen  43  (or where the stage floor is adjacently located) may cut off imaged objects since it is natural to have objects resting and standing on a floor. Specifically, the imaged speaker  68  may walk in front of the imaged volumetric object  90  or the magnification image  88  (not to be confused with the roll up center panel  88  of  FIG.  8   ) and when doing so may cast a reflection or shadow upon the object  90  or the image  88 . The object  90  and the image  88  can be any object and any image. The objects and images may be computer generated with computer generated reflections and shadows in real-time or in recorded production. Also, they may be videotaped live or recorded and thereby inherently casts shadows and reflections. Likewise, the image speaker  68  (essentially a video object) may have shadows and reflections cast upon their personage. Further, the imaged speaker  68  may be a costumed or animated character in any and all applications of all aspects the inventions described herein. 
     The imaged speaker  68 , the image  88 , and the object  90  may also cast a shadow or reflection upon a floor or forming a floor and seen in the image screen  43 , which maybe LED, projection or any display technology. Lastly, the image  88 , the object  90 , and the imaged speaker  68  may cast a reflection on a physical floor, such as a stage floor; or a simulated reflection or shadow can be simulated upon an imaged floor. With a stage floor positioned adjacent to the image screen  43  and at or near the bottom of the screen  43 , the floor may reflect the imaged speaker  68 . The floor is ideally black, but may be other colors and with varying degrees of reflectivity. That floor reflection (or other floor color, pattern, shadow, etc.) may be further enhanced with an imaged floor on the screen  43 , creating a seamless real floor to imaged floor. 
     The reflection of the imaged speaker  68  upon a stage floor greatly enhances the black void illusion. However, a reflection on a stage floor may be undesirable for some content, such as a movie. The movie would clearly be seen as a reflection and distract from the movie viewing experience. To reduce the reflection upon the stage floor or any floor as seen by the observer, may be covered, angled, lowered or removed from view. In a cinema during a hologram presentation mode, the stage floor would be near or at the bottom of the image screen  43 . In movie mode, the floor may be lowered to separate the reflection from the image screen  43 . The stage floor may be lowered by any mechanical means, such as rigid chain, worm screw, scissor lift, and the like. The lowering and raising mechanism may be motorized and initiated automatically by a programmed show control. That show control may be programmed with initiating cues originating from a DCP (Digital Cinema Program). 
     The present invention of the black void illusion conceived in all its possible applications includes the image source as being any type of image display. This includes all image displays commercially available and not yet available. Numerous image display technologies have been proposed and prototypes demonstrated, such as light field displays, to name only one, which are applicable to all the possible configurations and embodiments of the present inventions. A further embodiment of the present invention is is a projection based image display that uses any type of ambient light rejecting (ALR) projection screens in either rear and front projection in combination with the black void illusion. In movie theaters, where ambient light is controllable, black levels may be sufficient to create an impressive black void illusion if the front projection screen is sufficiently dark. ALR front projection screens are one of several technologies that rejects ambient light from one or more directions, improving the black levels of the image and thereby used to create the black void illusion. As seen in  FIG.  16   , the optional hanging sheet polarizer  159  is used to improve the contrast of the massive front projection screen  160  by darkening with alignment with the ambient light polarizers  156 . This is one of many ALR technologies applicable to the present invention. Some ALR technologies incorporate micro-louvers to black out unwanted ambient light from one or several directions. ALR screens provide darker blacks levels for a given ambient light environment over traditional white, silver, and other light colored screens. ALR screens also serve to reduce the wash out on the front projection screen when stage lights are used in the room. 
     A further embodiment of the present invention is to use black and or dark front projection screens, such as black cloth, textured black plastic, and and other black screen substrates—all herein black projection screens as a type of the massive front projection screen  160  (and any other front projection screen applications in various types of rooms and products). To overcome the dim image of the black screen, the present invention teaches the use of projectors with increased lumens to form a bright image on the black screen. For example, multiple projectors are used to impinge a black screen to increase the brightness of the image. In a cinema, multiple digital movie projectors, laser projectors, and so forth may be combined to form a single image. Laser projectors and new ultra-black projectors such as those comprising light steered technology can all aid in maintaining a very bright image on the black projection screen. Such system is capable of true HDR (High Dynamic Range) with black levels not possible with common projection screens. Further, the present invention teaches a novel use of two front projection screens in a single cinema. One front projection screen is any type of standard front projection screen that is removed, such as by motorized roll up, revealing a second ALR or black front projection screen (not shown) (either screen or both screens may be physically removed from the path of the projector(s). The projector(s) aimed at the screens may be adjusted for each mode of use with more light impinging the black screen and less light impinging the standard screen. Each screen may be designed with perforations for audio speaker transmission. Certainly all of the above applies to any application of the black void illusion and includes rear projection as well with dark rear projection screens. 
     All of these variants of display technologies are applicable to the image screen  43  and any other display and image screens described herein. This includes any type of 3D display technologies that does and does not require glasses, such as light field displays. LED displays that require passive or active shutter glasses are all variants of the present invention and all descriptions, figures, and claims of image screens include such 3D variants and are applicable to the black void illusion. For example, the image screen for some applications may be 2D with no glasses and some maybe 3D requiring glasses. Also, the black void illusion may be used with 3D glasses showing a 2D or 3D image of the speaker  68  and then correct proportions or exaggerated 3D for sets, props, and scenes. Further, the imaged speaker  68  may be entirely in a virtual or real set and appear proportionally life-size on a massive display simulating a real stage. Ideally, imaged speaker  68  would be imaged by an LED screen with passive or active glasses creating the 3D stage environment. 
     As described herein the display wall side of the room  3  is a first wall of a room that the image screen  43  is positioned at and faces the audience for observation. All configurations of the black void illusion, whether it is a massive system for a touring concert in an arena or a small desktop display, the first display wall side of the room  3  is applicable. As previously described, the large multipurpose room  2  may be any kind of room or environment for any kind of human gathering space, not just a hotel meeting space. Further, the meeting room background  998  serves as a reference and is interchangeable with the display wall side of the room  3  as well as other figures and descriptions herein. The display wall side of the room  3 , no matter what the room functions as (cinema, ballroom, meeting room, etc.), is presented as a reference point to establish the physical space the system resides in to understand that the image screen  43  faces an audience, a user, an observer, and the like. As such, the wall  3  may be any area behind the non-viewing side of the screen  43 . Since most image displays are planar and vertically oriented, the reference to the placement in a physical space is sufficient. However, it is a primary embodiment of the present invention that the image screen  43 , and any other described display and image screen herein, may be any dimensional shape and not necessarily vertically oriented. The present invention in all of its applications should be understood that the first wall of the display side wall of the room  3  may actually be the ceiling where the audience looks upwards or even the floor where the audience looks down. 
     Dimensional shaped includes an image screen  43  that forms a dome in which the audience is partially or fully immersed inside the black void illusion. With advances in dimensionally shaped LEDs and other direct view display technologies, a dome may be constructed as a planetarium, concert venue, a theme park ride, a flying theme park ride, to name a few applications, and all may incorporate the black void illusion. A singer/performer/speaker may be live on one side of the dome and simultaneously also be seen as a live broadcast image on one or more sections of the dome in the black void illusion. Essentially, this dome theater enables multiple stages in the same dome with live, recorded, and broadcast performances. Further, black projection screens will also provide the black void illusion. The image screen  43  may also be vertically oriented, yet also dimensionally shaped, forming a partial or full circle around the audience or user. The display wall side of the room  3  may also be the perimeter of an outdoor festival or concert venue in which the perimeter of the event space itself creates the wall  3  by the placement of the image display  2  in the space. Lastly, the black void illusion may have multiple sides and being a fully immersed environment where more than one wall is a black void illusion. For example, an LED display cube with two or more walls, floor, and ceiling creates the black void illusion as described herein. Such application is ideal for applications in theme parks, motion rides, museums, cinemas, music venues, and brand activation experiences. 
       FIG.  154    illustrates a further primary embodiment where the hotel multi-purpose room  2  has a temporary audio and video production sound stage which is logically applicable to movie theaters instead of a hotel multi-purpose room  2 . A primary embodiment of the present invention is a rapid studio conversion system utilizing a movie theater for watching movies in a first mode of use and for a temporary augmented reality studio and video production sound stage in a second mode of use. All the descriptions relevant to the hotel multi-purpose room  2  described as a sound stage is applicable to a movie theater. An intent is to create a global network of augmented reality soundstages at movie theaters which can be used off hours from normal movie play times. Lighting may be permanently mounted to the theater walls and ceiling and concealed to not be noticeable by patrons when watching a movie. For creating images for the augmented reality effect of the black void illusion, a camera may capture a person against black or a chromakey screen and then select a black background for playback. A removable substrate, such as a black substrate or a chromakey substrate, is permanent in the theater and hidden from room by retracting into the walls, ceiling, or floor. The substrate conceals the image screen  43  during productions and a camera positioned on an audience side of theater is aimed toward the substrate with the talent (person being videotaped) being videotaped is between the substrate and the camera. Alternatively, the image screen  43  can be a black or a chromakey color and the talent is positioned between the camera and the image screen with the camera capturing the talent and the image screen  43  together. This way, a soundstage for video and audio recording can be deployed rapidly for productions. Exotic chromakey systems such as ReflecMedia brand may be used. Lastly, LED cinema creates new challenges for designing the walls and ceiling of the cinema with or without the studio option. LED emits light and the walls and ceiling of the cinema become illuminated which can draw an observer out of the movie experience. The present invention further conceives the use of light absorbing material and also louvered light traps to greatly reduce the illuminated walls from the emitted light of the LED movie screen. 
     Another embodiment of the present invention is to conceal the massive image display  42  and its image screen  43  (see  FIGS.  4   a  and  4   b    and elsewhere) by actually imaging content on the image screen  43  that matches the large hotel multipurpose room  2  décor, and it is to be clearly understood that the image display  42  need not be massive and may cover a smaller portion of the wall, including TV sets positioned at a wall and in rooms other than the hotel multipurpose room  2  (example in a home living room). Careful attention to brightness, resolution, color, texture, and pattern of an image that matches the room  2  décor and specifically the wall the display is positioned at, will conceal the intrusion of the image display  42  and image screen  43  in the multi-purpose room  2  (or any room). In a first mode of use a variety of image content can be viewed by the audience and any observer. In a second mode of use the actual room wall décor has matching image décor content imaged upon the image screen to partially conceal the screen and creating the illusion of a continuous décor wall in the room. Smaller content sections can be imaged in the matching décor image content to create unique ways to present information. The matching image décor content may be created by as simply as taking a photograph of the actual room wall décor and played back and imaged as the matching image décor content. That photograph may also be a video and both may be image manipulated to create a realistic match. It is an embodiment of the present invention that an image of a videoconferencing participant is superimposed in front of the matching décor image content creating the illusion that imaged participant is viewed by the observers to be standing or seated with a continuous décor wall which is partially the real décor wall and partially the matching imaged décor wall. The image of participant may cast real or simulated reflections and shadows upon the matching décor image content to add greater sense of realism and depth. 
     As previously stated, “The present stage invention is also ideal for showing live sports at many locations to large audiences with sports figures, commentators and giant volumetric objects appearing 3D on stage” and further stated the present invention is ideal for the programming of “fantasy sports,” “sport events,” and “gambling events” which together is a sportsbook. The entirety of the present invention and embodiments are applicable to any type of meeting, gathering or entertainment space including presentation rooms, hotel multi-purpose rooms (commonly a ballroom), and theater rooms (such as a cinema). All of this includes these rooms being a sportsbook for watching and wagering on sports games. All of the previous rooms mentioned includes integration of a sportsbook functionality serving the visual presentations needed to engage users/observers in the activities common to sportsbooks. Bars, restaurants, cinemas, hotel ballrooms, and purpose-built venues all can function as a sportsbook and would additionally benefit from all aspects of the present invention. The present invention is intended to be a prime attraction of a sportsbook with a display system configured to be installed as a restaurant room display, a bar room display, a hotel multi-purpose room display, a movie theater room display, a retrofit for a sportsbook room display, and a purpose designed room display. It is to be clearly understood that it is a primary embodiment of the present invention that a sportsbook integrated with the image display experiences and functionalities discussed herein are applicable to flexible use venues (flex venues) so that a venue can be rapidly converted from being a sportsbook to another type of venue, such as a cinema, theater, hotel ballroom, concert hall, club, meeting space, and so on. In so doing, sportsbooks need not be the only service business model that is provided in the same real estate space. 
     Commonly the multi-view image layout at sportsbooks shows many sporting games so that observers can stay informed on the particular game they wagered on. Sometimes certain games are highlighted given a larger screen space if a particular game is of great interest to the observers. The highlighted games often present the dominant audio to engage the observers. Whether a single sports game image or multiple sports game images, all are sporting event content imaged upon a one or more image displays. The sportsbook experience has changed little in the past decades except as to improvements to the quality of the image screen technology. Sportsbooks attempt to create fan engagement with many displays or one large multi-view display showing numerous sports events. Yet the entertainment value is minimal and even boring. Whether multiple displays or a single large display, all are as defined herein as an image display residing in a sportsbook. What is needed is described and illustrated in all the specification, claims, and figures of the present invention. What is needed is enhanced fan engagement by creating visual presentations that are engaging and enhance live broadcast sports TV feeds. 
     An embodiment of the present invention is to create a sportsbook visual display system that combines live TV feeds of one or more sports games with live imaged people on stage to increase the informative and entertainment value of the watching and wagering experience. As seen in  FIG.  9    and all related figures with specifications, the imaged person  68  is seen amongst the black void with the magnification screen image  88 . The magnification screen image  88  can be any image including a live sports feed of a single sports game or a multi-view of many sports games. Imaged speaker  68  can be below, to the side or superimposed in front of the image  88  with a sports game image. Specifically, the imaged person image is at least one of residing solely in the black void, partially residing in the black void, and partially superimposed in front of and over a sporting event content, and solely in fully superimposed in front of and over sporting event content. If in front and superimposed a virtually processed shadow can be cast upon the sports game image of the imaged speaker  68 . The image speaker  68  can be commentators, entertainer, wagering expert, a cheerleader or any informative and entertainment personality which will enhance the game watching and wagering experiences. The body of the image person  68  may be partially in the black void and superimposed in only a portion the screen image  88 . The image screen  88 , as seen in  FIG.  9    and elsewhere can also be displayed in a perspective view to enhance a 3D depth of the black void (as previously described). The screen image  88  may also consume the entirety of the image display  42  and its screen  43 . In that case, the imaged person  68  is superimposed in front of the screen image  88  and is not in a black void. Careful attention to maintaining proportional life-size image and feet placement of the imaged person  68  will create the illusion the imaged person  68  is there in the room interacting with the sports game in the image screen  88  and the audience of observers. 
     The black void illusion describe throughout the present invention is applicable ideally to LED large format displays and, also, alternatively projection-based display systems. Another way to superimpose the imaged person  68  in front of the image screen  88  (or the entire screen  43 ) that is displaying a one or more live sports game broadcasts is explained for  FIG.  149    using the forward projection substrate  1506 . Other transparent displays may be used as described throughout the specification including reflection, transparent LCD, transparent OLED, to name a few. With such transparent displays, the imaged person  68  can be displayed on the transparent display and not the image screen  43 , and in a coordinated presentation where the imaged person imaged  68  is on both the image screen  43  and the transparent display. The stage the imaged person  68  appears to stand on may be a real physical stage, a prop stage, a floor of a room, and can be virtually imaged on the screen  43  of the display  42  (also as discussed throughout the present invention). The image person  68  may be a recorded image or a live videoconference as described throughout the present invention. Many imaged persons can appear on screen with the imaged person  68  creating entertainment shows for observers at the sportsbook. Even a live person in the sportsbook can appear on stage alongside a recorded or live image of the imaged person  68 . The display  42  can be a single display or comprised of multiple displays and can be any size depending on the type of sportsbook venue. A separate display may be used solely for the image person  68  to interact with the sports game image on the image display  42 . At times a single broadcast sports game may fill a large portion of the image screen  43  of the image display  42 . In that case, smaller displays with other games can be accessed by observers with smaller displays where they sit in the sportsbook venue and even displays such as tablets can be handed to the observers to select one or many games they want for a personal viewing experience. Also, live sports broadcast can be distributed in venue to the observer&#39;s personal phones, tablets, and portable computers. All known and future methods to engage a wagering using the described present invention is applicable. That includes touchscreens, eye gaze curser, hand gestures, voice command, and any type of visual prompt on the image screen  43  to initiate an action on a smaller display, such as a personal phone. Specifically, software applications such as online wagering using ones&#39; own personal computing device can be engaged based on interactive programming coordinated with the sportsbook venue display  42 . Such information may include game status, odds, promotions, discounts, and rewards, to name a few. 
     Additionally, all the embodiments of the present invention can be configured as rapid convertible cinemas and hotel ballrooms to present any kind of informative or entertaining experiences, including sportsbook events. Included in sports watching and wagering are displaying esports and fantasy sports information on the display  42 . Also, the display  42  can also be used to play video games for observers in the sportsbook venue (or any type of venue) and can also display 3D volumetric objects  90  of any size. Specifically, the present invention seeks to create an entertainment sportsbooks experience that creates the illusion of recorded or live transmitted images of people appearing to be real and being in the room interacting with images of live broadcast sporting events. This can be accomplished with any type of 3D displays including light field displays, autostereoscopic displays, and stereo image displays. The image display  42  can be an LED display, a front projection display, a cinema front projection display, a rear projection display, a light field display, an autostereoscopic, and a stereoscopic display. Certainly, VR and AR glasses can be added so observers can have a private and even possibly custom content/show experience in concert with the content presented on the image display  42 . Sportsbook events can also include all other aspects of the present invention including virtual stage lighting seen in the display  42  and its screen  43 . Such virtual lights may act in coordination with real stage lights and be operated as a live show or a preprogrammed show. Shows with the imaged person  68  can be presented as a live videoconference and a live broadcast. Also, shows can be recorded and played back at the sportsbook venue or recorded and played back as a single stream or broadcast. No matter live or recorded all shows can be delivered online or broadcast to one or more sportsbook venues. 
     As previously described “an embodiment of the present invention is the image display  42  with its image screen  43  is deployed on stage in sections and those sections placed closer or further way from the audience (not shown).” With that multilayered visual illusion described a further embodiment of the present invention enhances the black void illusion by having the imaged person or object appear at a forward plane in front of a background plane. The word “plane” is defined as a position of something in space and in this case the position of the display  42  (foreground position) in relation to the black mask  46  (background position). For example, the display  42  (with image screen  43 ) is positioned at the foreground plane and is substantially in front of the black mask  46  positioned at the background plane. The black mask  46  extends at least left and right (and optionally a back wall and ceiling wall above) wider than the image display  42  with its image screen  43 . A side walls left and right (and optionally a back wall and ceiling wall above) (all not shown) extend from the foreground plane to the background plane, thereby creating the illusion that an imaged person and imaged object is forward in the depth of the black void. The black mask  46  is positioned at the background plane substantially behind and extending left and right of the image screens&#39;  43  continuous black surface and thereby expanding the continuous black surface. The distance between the background plane (black mask  46 ) and the foreground plane (display  42  with its image screen  43 ) depends on the type of configuration. For large rooms with stages 10 feet to 20 feet will create the illusion well. For kiosks, the distance can be between 18 inches and 3 feet. For smaller countertop and tabletop displays from 6 inches to 18 inches. One of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate the various custom options to support a particular design application. Stage side  149 , for example, would extend further back away from the observers than the display  42  (not shown). Those side walls can be any color or externally or internally illuminated. Additional various lighting effects can be used with these walls and even be image displays with creative video content. These side walls may be actual room side walls, a physical theatrical set side walls, a housing side walls or other structure side walls. The side walls may also be of any shape and be partially transparent. Still further, the side walls need not appear as walls but as any light or structure that visually cues the observer of the spatial distance between the foreground plane (Image screen  43 ) and the background plane (black mask). For just one example, the side walls could appear as black with green illuminated grid lines simulating a science fiction holodeck. 
     Further, of particular concern is the visible transition between the black surface of the display  42  and its image screen  43  and the black mask  46 . An imaged person/object are surrounded in the color black on the image screen  43  and are observed by the observers as residing in a depth of a black void at the foreground plane and amongst the left and right side walls and forward of the background plane. Controlled stage lighting can conceal the transition so that observers only see the black void. Controlled room lighting is not always an option. In other use case applications, the present invention can be configured as a kiosk, videoconference display, presentation display, retail sales display, meet and greet with famous persons display, to name a few all of which are used in high ambient lit environments and thereby increasing the visibility of the transition. Concealing by minimizing the visible transition can be achieved by matching the black mask  46  and the image screen  43  with materials that support similar black colors and textures. For example, various cloths can be selected such as light absorbing black velour for the black mask  46  and is matched with various optical filters with tint and texture covering the image screen  43 . Fine black mesh can be placed over the image screen  43  permitting the imaged person or object to be seen through the mesh. That same mesh then is used for the black mask  46  matching perfectly with the covered image screen  43 . The mesh can also be continuous and shaped to transition to the background plane becoming the black mask  46 . Concealing the transitions between the image screen&#39;s  43  black surface and the black mask  46  is a primary embodiment of the present invention by providing a clear substrate between the observers and the display  42  and its image screen  43  and the black mask  46  (and side walls and optional ceiling above and optional back wall). The observers peer through the clear substrate and see the continuous black surface of the image screen  43  of the display  42 , the image of a person or object surrounded in the color black, the black mask, and at least the left and right side walls. The clear substrate can be glass or plastic (rigid or stretched) and as further described for the reflective transparent substrate  60 . The clear substrate has room reflections visible to the observers which is common when looking at reflections on a black TV screen. Those reflections assist in concealing the transition between the display  42  black surface and the black mask  46 . 
     It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art to take account the entirety of the specification and figures of the present invention and modify materials and fabrication to support this previously described illusion experience (and all configurations described herein). For example, floor reflections can be added making it looking like an image person is standing on stage. Content objects imaged on the image screen  43  in the black void should have shading, motion, and reflections to aid in the appearance of 3D dimensionality. The present invention can also be created with a portrait mode positioned so that it will accommodate the standing human image since in portrait mode the display is taller than wider. Retail store kiosks can be created with the described invention creating proportionally life-size people standing in the black void and communicating eye-to-eye with customers. The present invention can also be configured as a desktop display for presentations and meetings and personal computer screen use. Still further, the present invention is configured to enable life-size people appearing to sit on the other side of the table or office desk during a live telepresence video call. Networks for such displays will be used creating virtual office complexes with this display system used in numerous employees&#39; homes and offices enabling life-size imaged people sitting (or possibly standing at counters or standing desks) on the other side of a working surface  440  (table, desk, counter, etc.). Ideally the working surface  440  appears to extend into a second working surface imaged on the image screen creating a seamless looking table/deck between locations in a video call. Still further, the present invention is configured as a home theater allowing life size people to appear in homes (recorded, live broadcast or live interactive conferencing). “Observers” as described herein for all of the present inventions is interchangeable with a singular observer. Likewise, the word “audience” may also be a single user/observer. As with all embodiments of the present invention any type of image content controllability from eye gaze detection, touchscreen, common mouse, and curser, and the like are applicable to the described embodiment. 
     All of the present inventions described herein displaying the human form can be computer generated persons and characters. That person or character can be created by artificial intelligence and can be animated by artificial intelligence. Live responses provide a single observer, and even an audience, a sense of true conversational interaction computer generated persons/characters. Likewise, a videoconference deploys an avatar so the distant person and even the local person can hide their actual appearance. Performance animation is well known in the art and when connected with artificial intelligence mimicking the gestures and lip sync of the person is now highly life-like. All of the embodiments of the present invention descriptive of displaying an imaged person should be understood in its most broad terms as including computer generated imaged people and characters. 
     As previously described the present invention can be deployed in any type of venue and it is preferred that that venue utilizes the image display  42  (or any relevant display described herein) for uses beyond creating life-size people appearing to be in the room with observers (such as an audience). For example, it has been described that the image display  42  can display any type of common content in a hotel multi-purpose room and the same for a cinema displaying common movies. This dual mode use is fundamental to the present invention to maximize real estate and build multiple business models from a single technology deployment. Further, it has been previously described how these venues can also be used to create video productions to support live (videoconference and broadcast streaming) and recorded content. Further, it has been described throughout the specification the inventive objective is to create unique in venue production capabilities. As stated, “All . . . are applicable to numerous stage applications and is well suited to create virtual scenery systems for one of many types of venues.” Further, gaming engine software programs, such as Unity and Unreal Engine, are discussed which have the capabilities to create life-like scenery in real-time. 
     It is a primary embodiment of the present invention to create a dual modality use venue where the stage inventions of imaged life-size people on stage (example imaged person  68 ) are a first modality of use and a second modality of use is utilizing the image display  42  and its screen  43  (or any relevant display described herein) for virtual studio production. In the first modality of use, the proportionally life-size imaged person is observed by the observers to be standing on a stage. That stage may be any kind of stage described herein and even defined as the floor of, for example, a studio room, a meeting room, or classroom. Additionally, the person imaged may be residing in a virtual scenery or residing in the depth of the black void. The imaged person presented on the display communicates a message or performance of any type to an audience present in the room the display is placed. That room may be any venue such as a movie theater, multi-purpose hotel meeting room, a production studio, a bar, an event room, a classroom, and any room. Virtual studio production creates virtual scenery by displaying the virtual scenery content on the screen  43  which is captured by a camera. Typically, a live person in the room stands between the camera and the scenery on the display. At times an imaged person may appear in the scenery and even the imaged person and the live person can interact, all of which is captured by the camera for a virtual production. Virtual scenery can be a static image or having dynamic shifting perspective with the use of camera tracking systems connected to 3D animated environments. Hence, the virtual scenery and the camera movements are coordinated together. The virtual production also may include a ceiling that extends the virtual scenery above and, also, may include a floor which extends the virtual scenery below. In the first modality of use, the floor with the imaged person appears to stand on any stage described herein, and in a second modality of use for virtual production, that stage is optionally utilized to display content of virtual scenery on the floor. Hence, the stage floor in the second modality of use is an image display and presents a portion of the virtual scenery. The stage floor in the second modality of use is the studio floor during a virtual production unless something is custom constructed for a particular production. The relevant figures of the present invention clearly illustrates to one of ordinary skill in the art that the stages and displays described herein are effectively used to create immersive scenery for virtual production. The present invention enables virtual production studios to utilize the large format displays for displaying virtual scenery and to also be used for displaying meetings and events permitting audiences to enjoy productions with imaged life-size people. Further, the imaged person can appear live and recorded at a plethora of virtual production studios. The embodiments described enable virtual production studios to become rented event facilities with tremendous creative opportunities for customers and clients. 
     Those skilled in the art will appreciate that various adaptations and modifications of the just-described preferred embodiments can be configured without departing from the scope of the invention. The illustrated embodiments have been set forth only for the purposes of example and that should not be taken as limiting the invention. Therefore, it is to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced other than as specifically described herein.