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Technology Research News February 11, 2004 |
All-plastic display demoed Researchers from Philips Research in the Netherlands have demonstrated a fast, flexible computer display that is nearly as thin as paper. |
CIO January 1, 2003 Mindy Blodgett |
Thin Is In Displays for computers and handheld devices keep getting lighter and thinner, and now two new technologies -- OLEDs and E Ink -- promise to take this trend to the next level in 2003. |
Chemistry World June 5, 2009 Nina Notman |
Color e-books just over the page E Ink Corporation is to be brought by Prime View International in Taiwan for approximately $215 million. The companies say this should speed to market the colored ink devices that are currently being trialled. |
CIO August 1, 2001 John Edwards |
Easy Writer Digital paper promises to revolutionize publishing... |
Technology Research News February 26, 2003 |
Stamp bangs out plastic circuits Today's transistors are etched from silicon wafers in a multi-step process that involves laser beams, chemicals and clean rooms. A simpler process would make for cheaper computer chips, and a gentler process would allow for transistors of different materials. |
Technology Research News November 5, 2003 |
Process prints silicon circuits Researchers from Princeton University have demonstrated a way to use a flexible stamp to print thin-film transistors. The researchers' eventual goal is to directly print electronics on flexible surfaces. |
PC Magazine April 28, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Digital Paper Display Yes, those are Japanese characters on Sony's LIBRIe e-book reader ($380 street), the first commercial product using Philips' and E Ink's electronic ink display technology. |
Wired August 2000 Paul Kunkel |
News Flash Scrap the presses - print and the Web are racing toward the biggest media merger in history. |
Technology Research News July 28, 2004 |
Process prints silicon on plastic The components could be used in flexible large-area displays, radiofrequency ID tags, sensors, and flexible applications like reconfigurable antennas. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2008 Monica Heger |
At Long Last, Plastic Electronics Goes Commercial Plastic Logic begins production today, racing with Polymer Vision to get flexible e-readers into consumers' hands |
IEEE Spectrum February 2009 Mark Anderson |
Inside the Plastic Electronics Revolution IEEE Spectrum tours Plastic Logic's new fab in Dresden, Germany, where it will make its Kindle-killing e-reader |
Technology Research News February 9, 2005 |
Nanotubes on plastic speed circuits Many researchers are working to make plastic electronics that are as fast as today's silicon electronic components -- with the promise to enable flexible, inexpensive and very-large area computer screens. One group of researchers has taken a significant step closer to this goal. |
Technology Research News May 21, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Flexible display slims down Researchers from E Ink Corp. have produced a high-resolution electronic display that is 0.3 millimeters thick. |
PC Magazine March 10, 2004 Alfred Poor |
Flexible Display Forecast After years of slow but steady progress, momentum is picking up for one of technology's Holy Grails: the flexible plastic display. |
Technology Research News November 19, 2003 |
Plastic display circuit shines Researchers from the University of Tokyo have taken a step forward by fabricating on a glass surface a circuit that contains an organic light-emitting diode and an organic thin-film transistor. The diode was bright enough to be used in a display, according to the researchers. |
Technology Research News June 4, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Plastic transistors go vertical Researchers from the University of Cambridge in England have brought inexpensive, practical organic transistors a step closer to your grocery cart by devising a pair of processes that form small, vertical transistors from layers of printed polymer. |
Technology Research News March 10, 2004 Kimberly Patch |
Tiny pumps drive liquid circuits Researchers from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Lucent Technologies' Bell Laboratories have combined microfluidics and organic electronics to make a tunable plastic transistor that could enable low-cost methods to drive, control and monitor labs-on-a-chip. The device can also use tiny amounts of fluid to adjust optical devices. |
Technology Research News April 7, 2004 Eric Smalley |
Angle speeds plastic transistor Going with the flow is a good way to pick up speed, particularly for plastic transistors. Rotating the crystal 180 degrees can change the transistor's performance by as much as 3.5 times. |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Otis Por |
Just Two Words: Plastic Chips They can endow just about anything with computer smarts -- and they'll be cheap |
IEEE Spectrum January 2007 Willie D. Jones |
You Tell Us: Flexible Plastic Displays Here's an invention Caesar would have found familiar: a scroll that displays the news and then rolls up for easy storage. However, it is made not of parchment but of plastic. |
Technology Research News December 3, 2003 |
Carbon boosts plastic circuits Researchers from the California Institute of Technology have devised an inexpensive way to add better-conducting organic source and drain electrodes to organic thin-film transistors. |
BusinessWeek September 20, 2004 Otis Port |
The Signs They Are A-Changin' Startup Magink's "digital ink" may change everything from billboards (a $5 billion U.S. business) to laptops. |
PC Magazine May 18, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Debut of the E-Paper Watch Seiko Epson and E Ink have announced the first watch ever to use an electronic-paper display. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2011 Wager & Hoffman |
Thin, Fast, and Flexible Semiconductors Amorphous oxide semiconductors promise to make flat-panel displays faster and sharper than today's silicon standby. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Alfred Poor |
What's New With Displays Our guide explains state-of-the-art display technology and looks ahead. |
InternetNews October 23, 2009 |
Freescale, E Ink Team for Improved e-Book Viewing Integration of E Ink technology into Freescale processors will result in improved performance and longer battery life. |
The Motley Fool March 25, 2004 Tim Beyers |
Sony's Inky Venture The consumer electronics giant will bring inky e-books to Japan. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2005 Justin Mullins |
Shedding Light On Organic Transistors The first single-crystal organic transistor that can be switched on and off by light is giving physicists a unique peek into the way photons interact with organic semiconductors. The new device could have a major impact on the way OLED displays are manufactured. |
Technology Research News October 22, 2003 |
Nanowires boost plastic circuits The move is on to develop flexible, cheap, plastic electronics, but so far organic circuits have fallen far short of silicon chip performance. Researchers from the Hahn-Meitner Institute in Germany have moved the field forward with a new way to make flexible transistors. |
Technology Research News December 15, 2004 |
See-Through Circuits Speed up Researchers have moved transparent semiconductors forward with an indium gallium zinc oxide mixture that can be deposited on plastic, is transparent, and potentially performs one to three orders of magnitude better than today's plastic transistors. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Rosaleen Ortiz |
Ohio Engineers "Ink" New Electronic Paper Technology Electrofluidic displays could make colorful electronic paper |
IEEE Spectrum February 2013 Andrew J. Steckl |
Electronics on Paper Paper electronics could pave the way to a new generation of cheap, flexible gadgets |
IEEE Spectrum March 2010 Jason Heikenfeld |
The Electronic Display of the Future Kindle, iPad, Droid -- these compact mobile devices are essentially all display. But the screens aren't all we'd like them to be. Yet. |
Technology Research News June 18, 2003 |
See-through circuits closer The transparent computer displays featured in the film Minority Report were made possible by special effects, but real-world transparent electronics are on the horizon. |
InternetNews July 1, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Lucent Extends R&D Roots The company's Bell Labs partners with Irish government on research center in Dublin. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2005 Stephen Forrest |
The Dawn of Organic Electronics Organic semiconductors are strong candidates for creating flexible, full-color displays and circuits on plastic. |
Technology Research News July 14, 2004 |
E-ink drawing pad closer to paper The device could eventually be used for freehand computer input, including cartoon drawing and adding annotation to documents. |
InternetNews July 2, 2010 |
Amazon to Jazz Up Kindle Display With E Ink E Ink, a prominent maker of display technologies for e-reading devices, is upgrading its electronic paper display product to improve contrast and outdoor reading experience. |
Fast Company Mark Sullivan |
Report: Samsung To Ramp Up Manufacturing Of Flexible iPhone Displays Samsung's display business is planning to spend $7.47 billion to expand its capacity to manufacture flexible OLED displays for future mobile devices, including iPhones. |
Technology Research News December 17, 2003 |
Organic transistors get small Researchers from Cornell University have shown that it is possible to fabricate useful organic thin film transistors that have a channel length as small as 30 nanometers. The smaller the channel, the faster the transistor. Previously, organic TFT channel lengths were limited to about 100 nm. |
IEEE Spectrum February 2007 Marlowe Hood |
E-Newspapers: Digital Deliverance? Dozens of major newspapers are experimenting with electronic reading devices. The only sure thing about the future of e-newspapers is that the readers, editorial content, and business ideas will keep evolving quickly. |
Chemistry World December 10, 2009 Simon Hadlington |
Flexible organic flash memory Researchers have succeeded in making an elusive component of organic electronics: a flash memory transistor that can be incorporated into a thin, flexible plastic sheet. |
PC Magazine December 4, 2003 |
Bits & Bytes (v22n23) Israeli startup Lenslet is demonstrating an optical processor called EnLight, which the company claims can perform a supercomputer-level 8 trillion operations per second... Xerox's PARC has developed a plastic semiconductor transistor array made entirely using jet printing |
Technology Research News December 17, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Microfluidics make flat screens A new method for making big, cheap flat screen displays is a bit like making muffins. Pour liquid polymer into microfluidic channels aligned above an array of electrodes, let cure, and you have organic thin film transistors. |
Technology Research News June 1, 2005 |
Computer Displays: Points of Light Different types of displays use different means to produce and control pixels. CRT, LCD, and plasma technologies manipulate light electronically. Another way is through micro-opto-electro-mechanical systems (MOEMS). |
Technology Research News March 23, 2005 |
Layers promise cheap circuits The challenge is making organic transistors that work well electronically. |
Chemistry World July 24, 2008 Simon Hadlington |
Nanotube mesh boosts plastic electronics Circuits on light, flexible surfaces could provide a range of products from paper-thin displays to intelligent food packaging and smart clothing. |
The Motley Fool September 8, 2008 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
A Kindle Killer? Sony and Amazon may have to make room for a third electronic ink reader. |
Technology Research News January 28, 2004 |
Nanotubes tied to silicon circuit Connecting minuscule nanotube transistors to traditional silicon transistors enables the atomic-scale electronics to communicate with existing electronic equipment. |
Chemistry World December 5, 2014 Matthew Gunther |
Shining a light on rewritable paper Rewritable paper that does not use ink but instead uses dyes that respond to ultraviolet light has been developed by US scientists. |