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Popular Mechanics January 2007 John Matson |
Tech Watch: Theater Home A new wave of ultra-efficient light-emitting diodes could one day turn your entire house into a flat-panel display. |
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. |
Fast Company October 2004 Lucas Conley |
Conducting the Future Plextronics may be sitting on the next (small) thing. Thanks to nanotechnology, the Pittsburgh-based startup has figured out how to make plastic carry a charge. |
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 |
Popular Mechanics March 12, 2008 Emily Masamitsu |
Flexible OLEDs Double Efficiency as Organic Light Prices Lower Imagine being able to shoot a bullet through a light bulb without plunging into darkness. That's the promise of ultra-efficient organic light emitting diodes. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2009 Peter Fairley |
Plastic Solar Cells Roll Into Unlit Villages Printed roll-to-roll organic PVs may not be the most powerful, but they're cheap. A scientist at Denmark's Riso National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy has found a cheap way to integrate LEDs, photovoltaic cells, and ultrathin lithium batteries into a potentially life-saving lamp. |
The Motley Fool October 7, 2010 Travis Hoium |
Should Cree Be Worried About OLEDs? OLEDs pose the biggest threat to the surge in LED usage. |
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 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. |
Chemistry World March 18, 2008 Lewis Brindley |
OLED Displays Brighten up Chinese chemists have discovered a soluble and simple-to-make iridium complex that boosts the efficiency of organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 Ritchie S. King |
Expectations Dim for OLED Lighting High costs could keep white organic-light-emitting diodes off the shelf |
The Motley Fool January 20, 2006 Dan Bloom |
Is the Price of Power Getting You Down? Nanotechnology may dramatically lower solar cell production costs. Investors, take note. |
Chemistry World Jon Cartwright |
Rollerball Writes Electronics Straight to Paper Electronic circuits can be fiddly to make: engineers have to snap components onto a board or etch designs onto a copper surface. Now a US group of researchers has demonstrated that all you really need is a pen and some paper. |
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. |
Fast Company February 1, 2010 Kate Rockwood |
How GE Creates Sheets of OLED Light Anil Duggal leads the GE team that's creating OLED lighting sheets, which are produced the way ink is applied to newsprint. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 Tekla S. Perry |
OLED TV Arrives For the past decade, two television display technologies -- liquid crystal and plasma -- have fought for supremacy, and although the LCD won the battle, it is about to lose the war. A third contender's is the organic light-emitting diode, or OLED. |
Chemistry World November 23, 2007 Jonathan Edwards |
OLED Chemists Have a Bright Idea Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) can be made more cheaply and easily thanks to a new molecule made by Chinese chemists. |
Wired August 2000 Paul Kunkel |
News Flash Scrap the presses - print and the Web are racing toward the biggest media merger in history. |
Fast Company August 2004 Ryan Underwood |
Lighting the GE Way GE is working as hard as it can to kill off its lightbulb business -- before someone else does. |
Information Today September 2000 |
E Ink Agreement with Lucent Will Help Develop Electronic Paper Agreement may accelerate the time when e-books and newspapers resembling flexible plastic sheets will be available for millions of users. |
Chemistry World October 31, 2011 Jon Cartwright |
Organic LEDs set to become displays' flexible friend Researchers in Canada have created organic light-emitting diodes on flexible plastic substrates that retain the high efficiency of their non-flexible counterparts. |