Samsung and DisplayNote Partner to Simplify Screen Sharing in U.S. Classrooms

Samsung and DisplayNote have partnered to bring DisplayNote’s Montage screen sharing software to select Samsung Interactive Displays in the U.S. education market.

The integration embeds the software directly into the displays, allowing teachers and students to share content from multiple devices without requiring additional hardware or setup.

The companies said the partnership is designed to reduce technology challenges in classrooms, including delays caused by connecting devices, switching presenters and managing different systems across rooms.

DisplayNote Montage supports content sharing through apps, browsers, AirPlay, Miracast and Google Cast, along with features such as moderator control and touchback.

Samsung said the integration is intended to help schools create a more consistent experience across classrooms, making it easier for teachers to start lessons and for IT teams to manage deployments at scale.

“As school leaders work to improve classroom engagement across a wide variety of hardware and software ecosystems, there is a growing need for technology that strengthens the connection between teachers and students,” said Dr. Micah Shippee, Director of Education at Samsung Electronics America.

DisplayNote said the partnership also addresses the need for standardized classroom technology across districts, where IT teams are managing large numbers of learning spaces.

“Too often, classroom technology still creates friction for the people it is supposed to support. Teachers need to be able to walk into a room and start the lesson with confidence, while IT teams need solutions that can be deployed and managed consistently at scale. By combining Samsung’s reach in education with DisplayNote’s software experience layer, we are helping schools create classrooms that simply work better, every day,” said Ed Morgan, CEO of DisplayNote.