Home
  Home | Forum | News | Links | Search | Contact Us  
Advertisement
StudyPark
Free Domains Hosting at .co.nr

Free Web Hosting

Learn Make Money Online
Check How I Earned






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Main Menu
Home
Welcome
Forum
News
Links
Contact Us
Search
Our Services
New Devices and Gadgets
Publish Your Articles FREE!
Lok Sewa Aayog
Computer Officer
Upload Images of Exam Materials
Computer Operator Preparation
Tutorials
Photoshop Tutorials
HTML Tutorials
Tips and Tricks
Computer Tips and Tricks
Photoshop Tips and Tricks
Recent Links
Suscribe to get updates
Friends Links

Rockr's World
Bollywood Pics

Free Technical Ebooks
Free Ajax Video Tutorial

Make Money Online Suggestions

Multiple Choice Questions
MS-Excel, MS-Access,
Operating Systems,
PowerPoint


List your link here!

Flexible Monitors PDF Print E-mail

Digital paper, active displays on billboard sized posters, and digital photographs that can switch from scene to scene are all promised by a new HP technology.

Researchers from HP's Bristol labs have unveiled prototypes of a new display technology today that they claim can lead to very large high resolution colour displays printed on plastic. "We feel this is a substantial advance in the development of the thin, flexible displays we're all looking for," Huw Robson, manager of the Digital Media Department of HP Labs Bristol, told ZDNet UK.

Although similar at heart to current LCD technologies, HP's system has half a million micron-wide pillars per square millimetre of display which force the liquid crystals to stay in whatever position they adopt when pulsed with electricity. This makes the display able to retain an image after power is removed - HP showed a prototype that retained an image from two years ago despite being unplugged for the duration -- you can see this in our gallery from the event.

The pillars are imprinted in liquid transparent plastic which is then cured by ultraviolet and bonded to a flexible plastic backing. Similar techniques are used to produce other physical components of the display, which can then act as guides for inkjet deposition for the pigment filters and so on. Electrodes are formed by a combination of very thin metal wires and conductive plastics.

"There are many different techniques here, and we had to make them all work together," said Robson. "We could go to market with what we've got, there's no killer issue yet to solve. We've solved the science". However, he said that the current technology was transmissive - it needed a backlight -- and reflective displays that worked in ambient lighting had many advantages. "We're working on that, but we're not going to tell you about it yet", he said. "Commercial products are probably in the middle of the three to eight year time zone". Costs were similar to existing LCDs for small displays, he said, but HP's technology scaled up to very large displays with much lower projected increases.

Many subtleties of the display technology remain to be examined, Robson said. "By changing the geometry and spacing of the pillars we can make pixels that can be set to differing greyscale values by varying the switching pulse." As the pixels take a long time to change - updating the complete display can take several seconds - the technology is not suitable for video, but because the pixels can be printed at hundreds per square inch the display can approach paper quality. "For very large displays", he said, "you can just update the area of the display you need to change" ".

Flexible Monitors

Holbein's Ambassador contemplates life in plastic - the current prototype can display 125 colours, but a full palette is promised for production

 

Source : www.cnet.com.au

Comments
Add New Search RSS
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Website:
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 
 
:angry::0:confused::cheer:B)
:evil::silly::dry::lol::kiss:
:D:pinch::(:shock::X
:side::):P:unsure::woohoo:
:huh::whistle:;):s:!:
:?::idea::arrow:
 
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.

3.23 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
< Prev   Next >
Exam Preparetion | Computer Officer | Computer Operator