June 25th, 2026
InfoComm 2026 has officially wrapped, and three days at the Las Vegas Convention Center confirmed something we’ve felt building all year: enterprise organizations are done patching together point solutions for signage, wayfinding, and room management. They want one platform that actually talks to their existing systems, and they came to Booth C5753 to see it.
Here’s everything that happened at the show, from the big wins to the conversations on the floor.





DX Pro™ Takes Home Best of Show From Two Publications
DX Pro™ won Best of Show awards from both Commercial Integrator and AV Technology at InfoComm 2026. Two of the industry’s most respected publications, two separate judging panels. That distinction matters because together they tell a more complete story about where 22Miles is right now: a platform strong enough to win on its own merits, and proof in the field that it delivers when the stakes (and the screens) are at their biggest.
AV Technology’s Best of Show: DX Pro™ Wins in the Digital Signage Software Category
Our most significant platform leap yet, and a direct answer to a problem that’s plagued enterprise AV for years. Digital signage, wayfinding, videowalls, interactive displays, and space management have traditionally been deployed as isolated projects, each with its own software, vendor relationship, and support contract, leaving IT teams with a fragmented stack they can’t easily govern, scale, or even fully see.
DX Pro was built to eliminate that fragmentation entirely — one web-native platform, with fleet-wide governance (Alert Center, Device Overview, self-service license management), enterprise-grade emergency override capability, native integrations with Microsoft Places, Zoom Enterprise, Teams, Outlook, SharePoint, and Google Workspace, and two AI-native tools, AI Template Designer and AI Map File Creation, that put professional-grade content and wayfinding map creation in the hands of any team, not just specialists.
Commercial Integrator’s Best of Show: Splash at Thrive City Powered by DX Pro™ Wins in the Digital Signage Software Category
DX Pro made a splash at InfoComm, literally! Splash at Thrive City is a case study in treating digital infrastructure and physical architecture as inseparable, and it’s exactly the kind of deployment that makes the Commercial Integrator award feel earned.
At the center of the venue is an 840-square-foot curved LED wall, fabricated by SNA Displays, making one of the most striking installations of its kind in any sports venue in the country. Wrapping the entire perimeter is a sweeping LED ribbon ticker delivering live scores, stats, and branded content simultaneously and continuously, independent of the primary screens. Across the venue’s multi-zone layout, including the private Full Swing Golf simulator bays, nearly 100 displays distribute up to 8 simultaneous live IPTV feeds.
What makes it a genuine showcase for DX Pro is what’s running underneath all of it: every surface, from the main floor bar monitors to the golf bay panels, is managed through a single 22Miles CMS platform — DX Pro™, running on BrightSign Series 5 media players. That single-platform architecture enables real-time zone switching, automated ad scheduling, and instant event reconfiguration, all without touching hardware or requiring manual intervention.
For integrators, the takeaway is just as important as the spectacle: this kind of deployment is normally where large venues fragment into separate systems for IPTV, video walls, signage, and ad scheduling. DX Pro’s hardware-agnostic CMS collapses all of it into one system, with BrightSign Series 5 players providing a stable, scalable backbone for a 24/7, high-energy environment. Remote monitoring across every device simplifies troubleshooting, template-driven content creation keeps branding consistent, and the cloud-based architecture means new screens and zones can be added as the venue grows.
Splash at Thrive City delivers the ultimate fan experience powered by 22Miles’ DX Pro.
Inside Booth C5753: Live Demos of DX Pro, 22Miles’ Enterprise Visual Experience Platform
If you walked the show floor, you couldn’t miss us. Booth C5753 was built around live, hands-on demos of DX Pro, 22Miles Enterprise Visual Experience Platform, and the booth team made sure every conversation started with what attendees actually came to solve.
A few things attendees consistently gravitated toward:
- The AI Template Designer and AI Map File Creation tools inside DX Pro, which let teams build and update signage content and wayfinding maps without waiting on design or IT resources.
- Enterprise communications use cases — Microsoft 365, Zoom Enterprise, Cisco, and Google Workspace integrations that let DX Pro plug directly into the tools enterprise teams already run their day on.
- Microsoft Places (MTR) integrations, which generated some of the most detailed conversations at the booth all week (more on that below).
- Wayfinding and content management working as one system, instead of two separate tools bolted together — a direct answer to the vendor sprawl most enterprise and IT buyers are actively trying to undo.
This is also where Tomer Mann, our Chief Revenue Officer, spent most of his show:
“Content, wayfinding, and enterprise controls for digital signage were the big topics at our booth. MTR was a big topic as well, with lots of conversations about MTR takeovers and MS-based integrations.” — Tomer Mann, Chief Revenue Officer, 22Miles
Tomer also noted real interest in the PLACES integration specifically, strong enough that conversations went deep on how it works, even as some prospects were candid that they’re still early in their own MTR rollout planning. And while DX Pro and Microsoft Places conversations dominated the more advanced end of the booth traffic, foundational digital signage was still a hot topic, including detailed side-by-sides on how 22Miles stacks up against Appspace, which came up often enough to be one of the week’s defining threads.
We also saw the heaviest foot traffic from enterprise and education organizations specifically, which tracks, since those are the two verticals juggling the most screens, the most locations, and the most legacy systems that don’t talk to each other.
So what does that mean if you’re evaluating a platform right now? A few patterns are worth paying attention to:
- Microsoft Places and MTR integration is moving from “interesting” to “on the roadmap.” If your organization runs on Microsoft 365 and is starting to think about room and meeting tech, this is the moment to ask vendors how (and how well) they integrate, not after you’ve already committed to a platform.
- “How does this compare to Appspace?” is a question worth asking out loud. It came up constantly for a reason: buyers are actively comparing depth of feature set, not just price. If you’re shopping for digital signage software platforms, a direct side-by-side is more useful than a feature checklist.
- Consolidation is the real driver, not just new tech. Whether the conversation started with wayfinding, content management, or MTR, it almost always ended on the same question: can one platform replace several of our current tools? That’s the question to bring to your own evaluation.
- You don’t need to be “new” to benefit from re-evaluating. A lot of the people we spoke with already know 22Miles or are current clients, which tells us this is as much about expanding what you’re already using as it is about switching from something else.
Troy Hanna's ADA Session: "Beyond ADA: Designing Wayfinding for Everyone"
One of the most talked-about moments of InfoComm 2026 didn’t happen at the booth at all — it happened in room W233, where Troy Hanna, Senior Sales Consultant at 22Miles, led a packed session on accessible wayfinding design.
Troy’s session went beyond a surface-level accessibility overview, providing real-world examples of how 22Miles builds accessibility considerations directly into digital signage and wayfinding solutions, rather than treating it as an afterthought.
In Troy’s own words:
“The audience responded best to the educational portions of the presentation, particularly the overview of ADA Titles I, II, and III and the four core WCAG principles. Attendees appreciated the real-world examples and discussion around how 22Miles incorporates accessibility considerations into digital signage and wayfinding solutions. There was strong engagement from higher education and enterprise attendees, with several questions focused on practical accessibility implementation and future digital wayfinding requirements.” — Troy Hanna, Senior Sales Consultant, 22Miles
The audience makeup tracked closely with who showed up at the booth all week: higher education and enterprise attendees leaning in hardest, with the most pointed questions centered on implementation — not theory. People aren’t asking whether accessible wayfinding matters anymore. They’re asking how to actually build it.
A Booth Everyone Was Talking About
Beyond the awards and the session, one of the more unexpected wins of the week was how visible 22Miles was outside our own booth. Plenty of attendees told us they noticed our presence at booths all over the show floor.
TD SYNNEX, in particular, called out how well it worked for them: they had our InfoComm show map running right at the front of their booth, positioned just inside the main entrance, and it noticeably helped pull traffic in. Their ask for next year says it all: two screens instead of one.
Behind the Scenes: The Smoothest Setup and Breakdown Yet
Award wins and booth conversations are the visible part of InfoComm — but none of it happens without the work that takes place before the doors open and after they close. Setup and breakdown for a booth like ours, across three packed days, is its own kind of project: hardware staged and tested, every display licensed and configured correctly, content loaded and verified, and then the entire thing broken down and packed out on a tight turnaround.
This year, that process ran better than it ever has, thanks to Kevin Kwasneski, 22Miles’ Product Delivery Specialist, who managed it start to finish.
“This was the most successful, smoothest InfoComm we’ve run yet.” — Kevin Kwasneski, Product Delivery Specialist, 22Miles
Huge props and a sincere thank you, Kevin — you were a rockstar this week, and the team felt the difference.
A Huge Thank You to Our Partners
None of this happens in a vacuum. InfoComm is a team sport, and this year’s booth, sessions, and demos were only possible because of the partners who showed up alongside us: Microtouch, Shuttle, Neat, iAdea, Crestron, Poly, Bluefin, and BrightSign.
From the hardware powering our displays to the integrations running live behind every demo, these partnerships are a core part of what makes DX Pro work the way enterprise customers need it to.
Thank you to everyone who stopped by Booth C5753, sat in on Troy’s session, asked the hard questions, and helped make this our best InfoComm yet. We’ll see you in 2027.



