Nanosys and LG Innotek agree deal for newfangled LED-backlit displays

For the nitty gritty of how Nanosys’ proprietary LED backlighting technology works, check out our earlier coverage here — what you really need to know is that the company promises a significantly wider color gamut from its displays, while reducing power consumption by up to 50 percent. Quantum dot LEDs have shown their faces before, but now there’s the big hulking heft of LG Innotek — LG’s component manufacturing arm — behind what Nanosys is offering, which indicates we might actually see the release of nanotech-infused displays within the first half of this year as promised. The early focus appears to be on mobile phones, which gives us yet another next-gen feature to add to our list of requirements for our next phone. Check out the full PR after the break.

Continue reading Nanosys and LG Innotek agree deal for newfangled LED-backlit displays

Nanosys and LG Innotek agree deal for newfangled LED-backlit displays originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jan 2010 21:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Up Close and Personal With the Pixel Qi Display

pixel qi display

Pixel Qi’s low-power displays that can switch between color LCD screens and e-reader-like black-and-white displays was labeled vaporware in 2009.

But the company silenced its critics by offering some hands-on time at the Consumer Electronics Show with the screens that are already in production.

“We are going mainstream in 2010 in millions of units and we are leading with netbooks,” says Mary Lou Jepsen, founder of Pixel Qi.

Conventional LCD screens offer bright, glossy images but consume too much power. The images they display are also not visible in sunlight. It’s one of the reasons electronic paper, a low-power black-and-white display that can be seen clearly outdoors during the day, has become a rage among e-book readers. Pixel Qi promises to bridge both worlds.

Pixel Qi’s 3Qi display operates in three modes: a full-color LCD transmissive mode; a low-power, sunlight-readable, reflective e-paper mode; and a transflective mode, which makes the LCD display visible in sunlight.

The company is currently producing displays in the 10-inch screen size. They will debut on netbooks. Last year, research firm ABI expected 35 million netbooks to be shipped. That makes it easier to predict demand for these devices and produce displays in large volumes for them, Jepsen says. By the end of the year, Pixel Qi’s screens are expected to be in e-readers and tablets.

Here’s a closer look at the screen:

Transmissive mode:
pixel qi display2

Pixel Qi display’s transmissive mode is similar to how traditional LCD screens work.

An image on the display is composed of millions of individual pixels. Each pixel is divided into three sub-pixels: red, green and blue. Controlling the intensity of light available to each of these sub-pixels helps produce a color image.

Now, each of the subpixels are further divided into transmissive and reflective modes. In transmissive mode, the screen is primarily lit from the rear using a backlight. When the light reaches the LCD panel, it passes through polarizers that allow it to light up the required combination of subpixels.

The resultant reflected light is picked up by the eye. Pixel Qi’s full-color 10-inch screen has a resolution of 1024 by 600 pixels. It almost feels like a conventional LCD display though the colors aren’t as saturated and the image isn’t as vivid.

Still it is a remarkable sight especially when you know that with the press of a button that screen can be transformed into a black-and-white electronic paper display.

At its peak, the Pixel Qi’s display consumes far less power than conventional LCDs. Peak power is 2.5 watts.  Turn off the backlight and you can shave 2 watts off, giving you an extremely low-power display.

Reflective mode:

pixel qi vs kindle

With the press of a button (Fn + F2 key sequence during the demo), the screen switches to a black-and-white display that evokes the E Ink screen seen on the Kindle, Sony Reader and Barnes & Noble Nook.

In the reflective mode, the backlight is turned off  and the ambient light hits a layer of mirror on the display that reflects it back completely. The result is a much higher resolution than in the LCD mode and a screen that plays just off the grayscale rather than creating colors.

In this mode, Pixel Qi’s display looks similar to the electronic paper displays. The key point here, the company says, is that in reflective mode though the screen looks and acts like a E Ink display, it still uses the LCD technology and is cleverly engineered it to mimic an E Ink-like feel.

But unlike an E Ink display, even in the reflective mode, Pixel Qi’s display burns power. E Ink displays don’t consume power while you are reading the text on the screen. It just draws power when you turn the page.

Pixel Qi’s display keeps refreshing at 60 Hz per second so it can’t offer the week-long battery life that an E Ink-based reader does. Pixel Qi says it’s working on displays with lower refresh rates (such as 30 Hz and less), but it isn’t there yet.

Transflective mode:
pixel qi

Play Slumdog Millionaire and stand in bright sunlight and you can still get a pretty good idea of what’s going on on the screen. Pixel Qi’s display scores over its rivals because of the transflective mode that allows viewers to use the LCD-like display even in bright sunlight.

Traditional LCD screens tend to go dark when turned on in direct sunshine. Pixel Qi solves the problem by adding a special layer to the display. The layer is a partial mirror since a part of it transmits the light and part of it reflects the light.

“It’s like a typical mirror layer found in most displays but with holes punched out in it,” says Jennifer Colegrove, an analyst with research firm DisplaySearch. This allows for a composite mode where users can adjust the backlight and still see the LCD screen with reasonable brightness.

If the details about how the displays work are a little hazy, then it’s because Pixel Qi has been very tight-lipped about how it has re-engineered traditional LCD displays to create a screen that can operate in three modes. Pixel Qi has filed more than 20 patents around the technology.

The company is now working on creating touch overlays for its displays to turn them into touchscreens, Jepsen says.

Photos: Priya Ganapati


LG’s 15-inch OLED TV Is a Petite Beauty

LG OLED TV

LAS VEGAS — Peeking out from under the 82-inch LCD TVs and the 55-inch 3-D display at LG’s booth is an attractively thin display that would be lost if it weren’t for its stunningly bright images.

Meet the 15-inch OLED (organic light emitting diode) TV. The ultra-slim TV — it has a thickness of 0.1 inches, or 3.2 millimeters — was introduced at the Consumer Electronics Show this week.

CES 2010OLEDs are an attractive alternative to traditional LCDs because they consume less power, display colors better, and can be thinner and lighter. Most major display makers are looking to offer OLED screens, but few have brought large OLEDs to market. In 2007, Sony first introduced an OLED display, the Sony XEL-1, which cost a whopping $2,500 for a mere 11-inch display. Other companies such as Samsung are showing prototypes.

LG is among the first to start selling an OLED TV. LG’s 15-inch TV is water resistant so it can housed in high humidity areas including the bathroom, says the company.

The TV can be wall mounted or set on the countertop but that beauty still comes at a price: The 15-inch OLED TV will cost about $2,000.

lg oled tv2

Photos: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


The Invisible OLED Laptop to End All Laptops

It’s only a proof of concept, but this is laptop with a clear OLED screen—but a stone’s throw from those floating 3D displays of Avatar. Practical? Not necessarily. The future? OBVIOUSLY.

The resolution is less than a 1000 wide, and less than 600 tall on this 14 incher. It’s pixely, but let’s not quibble.

You see right through the 40% translucent screen, then something appears on the screen (like a white background), and you can’t see through it anymore.

Are you processing this? No, you can’t be. It’s only 2010. Man wasn’t prepared for this kind of technology yet. The brain hasn’t evolved enough. We’re primates. Squirrels. Slugs.

Maybe in 100 or 200 years, the great artists of the world will reflect on what’s happened today and make some sort of sense of it all. Until then, we’ll just keep on breathing, in, out. Until then, we’ll weep.

Samsung’s Impossibly Thin 3D TV Tempts Hollywood Producer

led9000

LAS VEGAS — If you had any doubt that the big thing in televisions this year will be 3D, then Samsung’s CES press conference would have finally convinced you. The company is throwing its rather large manufacturing weight behind 3D in the home, bringing not just TVs but 3D Blu-ray players and home theater systems into stores this year.

The TVs were the focus today, and consist of LEDs, LCDs and even a plasma model. The star, though, and the one that Jeffrey Katzenberg couldn’t keep his hands off (more on that in a second), was the 9000-series. This 3D TV features a proprietary 3D engine that, like Toshiba’s new sets, can convert 2D video to 3D (although Samsung presented this as a temporary solution until more 3D video is available). The 9000-series will come in screen sizes from 19” to 65”, but that wasn’t why Katzenberg was fingering the thing and gawking at it as the presentation wore on. One look at the photo will tell you the answer — the TVs are thin, as in a third of an inch thin. Turn one of these sideways and it all but disappears. Add to that a gorgeous steel body and you get a TV that even an impossibly rich movie mogul will covet.

Better still, the 9000 series will come with a large touch-screen remote. And why waste that second screen when you aren’t actually doing any controlling? Samsung lets you watch live TV on the remote itself while the big screen continues to play your 3D movie.

Samsung is jumping on the App Wagon, too, and in the spring there will be a range of free apps (they’re not called applications any more) in its own store, called “Samsung Apps”. The store will be open, so anyone can write software for your TV, and paid content will follow in the summer, followed by software for other platforms such as phones.

So why was Katzenberg on stage? Because his company Dreamworks has, along with Technicolor, teamed up with Samsung to get some 3D content onto the televisions. After a rather monotonous speech, he announced the company’s first 3D Blu-ray title, Monsters vs. Aliens. These 3D movies will, he optimistically predicted, “reduce piracy”.

Samsung’s New Lineup of Led Hdtvs Raises the Bar for Tv Excellence [Samsung]

See Also:


Samsung’s 2010 LCDs & plasmas include the skinny, touchscreen remote controlled LED 900

Samsung’s just gushed its 2010 TV lineup, and chief among the troops is the 9000 series LED with built-in proprietary 3D processor and, more importantly, full support for a full color touchscreen remote control, integrated with WiFi and IR. Paired with the ultra-slim 9000 series (right), you can watch broadcast directly from the handheld and swipe it to the TV to enjoy. The 8000 and 7000 series also enjoy 3D capabilities, as does the 750 LCD set. Left out of the 3D fun? The 6500 LED and 650 LCD models — sorry gang. All models are reportedly Energy Star 4.0 compliant and the premium ones also come with Internet@Home with apps including Netflix. All the press releases after the break.

Continue reading Samsung’s 2010 LCDs & plasmas include the skinny, touchscreen remote controlled LED 900

Samsung’s 2010 LCDs & plasmas include the skinny, touchscreen remote controlled LED 900 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 18:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceLEDs, Plasmas, LCDs  | Email this | Comments

3M unveils 10-finger multitouch LCD display at CES

3M‘s just announced it’ll unveil its previously gabbed about multitouch LCD — at CES 2010 which, if you live under a rock and don’t know anything at all, is just getting under way in Las Vegas. The beautifully named 3M Display M2256PW is a 22-inch, high def (1680 x 1050 resolution) multitouch LCD for professionals (and professional consumers) who require up to 10-finger input with a fast response time. The Windows 7-compatible display also boasts DVI and VGA video inputs, an audio input, and USB ports. 3M is set to show off some conceptual applications currently in development for its platform at CES as well, so we’re pretty excited to see this one in action. Keep an eye here, we’ll be checking it out any day now! Full press release is after the break.

Continue reading 3M unveils 10-finger multitouch LCD display at CES

3M unveils 10-finger multitouch LCD display at CES originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

The Hunt For the Perfect Screen

As I stood in the corner of a small, cluttered optics lab at MIT, the professor flipped a switch. The room filled with an electrical buzz, and suddenly a holographic video popped out at my face.

The 3-D image was of a human rib cage, and it rotated in midair. And the holographic rib cage rattled me.

It was my first experience with a Display Of The Future, and it set me on a mission. In the subsequent years, I’ve been hunting down display prototypes, talking with experts, and visiting labs. In short, I’ve been on a quest for the perfect display.

Now You See It

Even though holographic video blew me away when I first saw it, I quickly composed myself. It’s simply not the sort of thing that will be commercially available any time soon.

I talked to Gregg Favalora, 3-D expert and founder of Actuality Systems, about the commercial viability of high-resolution 3-D video. His company broke resolution records with its display-a 100-million-voxel (3-D pixel) device that made images for radiologists and engineers hunting for oil reserves. The details of these 3-D images look eerily realistic, but Actuality had a heck of a time finding the right market for it.

In the end, the company only sold 30 systems at $200,000 each and it has now ceased engineering operations. And that MIT holographic video system I saw in a few years ago is still trapped in the lab. The lesson: no matter how extraordinary your technology, it’s impractical for the people unless you can efficiently manufacture it in large numbers.

I See Practicality

At the opposite end of the price spectrum is LCD. It’s cheap as dirt thanks to the billions of dollars of factories built over the past two decades. I wanted to get a look at the way LCDs are made and try to find clues for how a more interesting or useful display-like a reflective e-reader or an OLED screen-could scale up and become cheap.

So I took a trip down to Applied Materials in Santa Clara, California, a company that supplies 90 percent of the LCD industry with manufacturing equipment. What I saw was impressive: the newest fabs are built around sheets of glass—backplanes of LCDs—that are the size of a garage door. They’re only as thick as six sheets of paper, and each one can yield eight large screen TVs.

The machines that deposit electronics on the glass are behemoths-taller than I can reach and with an area slightly larger than a garage door. In a fab, six of these machines are arrange circularly, and from above they look like a giant mechanized flower. The sheets of glass slide in like a floppy disk into a drive, and come out coated with thin film transistors.

The bigger the glass, the more displays can be pumped out of a factory, and the cheaper all sizes of LCD displays become. According to Sid Rosenblatt, the CFO of Universal Display Corporation, a big fab can make six 50-inch LCDs every three to four minutes. At that volume, how can anything else compete with LCD?

Fitting In


Well, instead of beating them, startup Pixel Qi decided to join them. The company’s screens are all LCD—built on the same lines and with the same materials as any other liquid crystal display—but with an additional mode in which the power-hungry backlight is off, and the display reflects ambient light.

I’ve seen Pixel Qi’s displays and visited with Mary Lou Jepsen, the startup’s founder and the former CTO of the One Laptop Per Child project. Jepsen spends most of her time in Taipei, the capital of Displayland, but on a sunny day last fall, I caught her at her houseboat in Sausalito. It was the perfect time and place to try out an LCD that is most impressive in bright light.

In its reflective mode, the display is black and white, similar to a Kindle or Sony Reader except it’s faster-capable of video, albeit in monochrome. The first batch of Pixel Qi screens is scheduled to come off the line this month. Jepsen says more designs that further reduce power consumption are on the way. In one, she explains that the screen, when not needing to refresh, should be able to shut down the central processing unit(and wake it up within milliseconds when it’s in use).

As for a color reflective mode, Jepsen says it could be possible in a couple of years. The concept, which involves a particular arrangement of liquid crystals, is based on her PhD thesis, but it’s admittedly a more complex design than the first Pixel Qi screens. Her first priority, she says, is making sure that Pixel Qi can ship its first products quickly and successfully.

Bright and Beautiful

While Pixel Qi might be making cheap displays that are easy on the eyes and energy efficient, they can’t compare to the beauty and simplicity of OLED screens, in which each pixel emits its own light. The whites are whiter, the blacks are blacker, and the overall image is just gorgeous.

Even better, the manufacturing process is as simple as it gets. It’s layer of organic material that can be printed between two layers of electrodes. This means that OLED displays have the potential to fold, roll, and be built over large areas.

Concepts I’ve seen: a paper-thin, flexible display slammed by a hammer without breaking, a display that’s see-through when the power’s off, and large area OLED coating that act as a window, a wall, or a display, depending on its mode.

In terms of touch, I’m keeping an eye on a new type of technology that’s being integrated into the electronic foundation of OLED displays and LCDs too. It’s called in-cell technology, and there are a number of variants, but one type incorporates photodetectors into the pixels of a screen. It’s ideal for OLED displays, because it can be added without adding thickness, allowing them to maintain their sleek good looks.

If there were ever a perfect display, OLED is it.

The Holdup

In a conversation with Vladimir Bulovic, a professor at MIT (and star of the famous light-emitting pickle video) we waxed poetic on the possibilities of OLEDs. Bulovic believes that it’s only a matter of time before OLEDs take their rightful place at the head of the display industry. The reason we have to wait is simply bad timing. “If back in the 1970s, we had OLEDs, no one would even know what an LCD is today,” he said.

The widely understood problem with OLED displays, however, is that the technology doesn’t exist to mass manufacture them on large sheets of glass like those I saw at Applied Material. Therefore, their beauty is relegated to smaller screens like cell phone displays, Sony’s 11-inch (expensive) TV, and concept demos.

Engineers are working on the problem, of course. Bulovic told me about a former student of his, named Conor Madigan, who has an OLED-printing startup in Menlo Park called Kateeva. I got a hold of Madigan who said his company, which uses a hybrid approach to printing large-scale OLED display, is well funded (even in these difficult economic times) and the display industry is really starting to push large-scale OLED technology.

While it’s true that big display makers are promising big OLED screens in the next couple of years, I’m not holding my breath. Even when the technology for printing large-scale OLED displays arrives, it will still take significant investments to scale up manufacturing. It’s difficult for companies to justify investing too much money in OLED displays while LCD sales are still doing well and continue to get cheaper. Besides, these large-screen OLEDs will still be made on glass, just like LCD, which keeps things rigid, fragile, and heavy.

Past Glass

In order to have a light, flexible, rugged OLED display, it’s obvious that display makers must go with plastic instead of glass. Plastic Logic, is promising the world’s first plastic-backed screens with printed organic transistors, by early next year.

I’ve handled a proto-version of Que, Plastic Logic’s e-reader, at the company’s Mountain View headquarters and was impressed by the form factor. While it’s still rigid, it’s light as a thin stack of papers. And because it’s made of plastic, it’s robust. I felt like flinging it across the boardroom where I sat with the head of marketing and a public relations handler. I didn’t.

Here’s the bad news for Plastic Logic: it all comes back to scalability. At the recent Printed Electronics conference in San Jose, I had lunchtime conversations with people who just shake their head at Plastic Logic’s challenges. A number of them expressed skepticism that the manufacturing process could scale.

Printed organic transistors currently can’t compete in speed with amorphous silicon transistors used in LCDs and OLED displays. And the company’s printing technology is done in a single fab in Dresden, which could make it difficult to produce the e-reader in large volume. In other words, it won’t be cheap or widespread, at least in the near future.

Roll With It


However, the folks at HP Labs think they have a scalable way to make plastic-backed displays with fast silicon transistors. On a recent tour of HP Labs I saw the proof: sheets of plastic, tens of meters long, are rolled onto tubes and are loaded and locked into a system that imprints silicon transistors onto the material.

Carl Taussig, the director of HP’s information surfaces lab, walked me through the process of the so-called Self Aligned Imprint Lithography. Plastic, with a shiny coating, spins on a series of cylinders, where it is exposed to chemicals, ultra-violet light, etching solutions, and ionized gasses. The roll-to-roll setups are compact, and they don’t require clean-room level purity that other display processes do.

Taussig, who is also responsible for inventing the DVD-RW, showed me prototypes, built with HP’s silicon-on-plastic transistors. One of these plastic backplanes controlled an E Ink display. Some of the pixels that were supposed to be black appeared gray, but these prototypes help the researchers find the problems in the roll-to-roll process. If they see a blown-out pixel, they retrace their steps to find where in the process the problem arose. 



In another demonstration, I saw a new type of reflective display developed at HP that was about the size of a smart phone screen. It has color and video and is one of the best-looking reflective screen I’ve seen. Technical details were sparse (they will come out early next year), but Taussig told me that part of the trick is to make a pixel out of three layers of color dyes that take incoming white light and reflect specific colors of it back at you, something like the way that butterfly wings reflect light.

Within Two Years

While Taussig doesn’t think roll-to-roll will replace LCD processes anytime soon, he hopes it can help plastic become the foundation for reflective displays as well as emissive displays like those made of OLEDs. HP has licensed its roll-to-roll technology to PowerFilm, a thin film solar manufacturer. And recently, PowerFilm’s subsidiary Phicot has started to commercially developing the process for electronics. The first products will be displays for soldiers that may be integrated into clothing or wrap around their arms.

Combining HP’s roll-to-roll manufacturing with OLEDs and a reflective reading technology is the closest thing to the perfect display that I’ve seen. So I ask Taussig how long it’s going to take to make the process reliable. He’s optimistic that Phicot can iron out the problems soon. “To be successful we need to roll this out within two years,” he says, since the first plastic displays will hit the market in 2010.

In talking with Taussig, it’s clear to me that even though he’s a researcher, he’s focused on making plastic displays practical. He knows the only way to do that is with solid, cost-effective manufacturing. Once the manufacturing problems are solved, he says, plastic displays become inevitable. “My grandkids will never believe that we made displays with glass,” he says. “Everything will be on plastic.”

I can’t wait. The perfect screen will be lightweight, energy-efficient, and able to take various forms—flexible, transparent, and with touch or some other form of gesture recognition. I want colors so vibrant that images look real enough to grab. Still, I want to read on it without feeling like I’m staring at a flashlight. And it’s got to be cheap.

So far, the displays I’ve seen come close. And while nothing yet gets it all right, there are some up-and-coming technologies-and, crucially, emerging manufacturing processes-that give me confidence that the perfect display is on the way.

Kate Greene spends most of her day staring at the screens of her MacBook Pro and iPhone. She became a journalist by way of physics, where she worked in a basement lab with lasers and a lot of liquid nitrogen. Currently, she writes for publications like The Economist and Technology Review and goes on display hunts for Gizmodo. She can be found on the Internet at kategreene.net and on twitter

Apple Releases Fix for 27-Inch iMac Display Problems


Apple has issued a firmware update to address display issues affecting many brand new 27-inch iMacs.

The update, labeled 27-inch iMac Graphics Firmware Update 1.0, is 683KB large and requires Mac OS X 10.6.2. Installation instructions are available at Apple’s website.

Customers complained in support forums about display and performance issues with the 27-inch iMac shortly after its Oct. 20 release.

Via MacRumors

See Also:

Image courtesy of Apple


Barnes Noble Improves Nook With Firmware Update

nook_large_wide

Barnes & Noble has rolled out the first firmware update for its Nook e-book reader that includes performance updates in areas such as page turning of e-books and formatting of downloaded books.

The $260 Nook, which started shipping earlier this month, was criticized for its slow refresh rate as users flipped pages and for a software interface that didn’t entirely seem ready, as Wired.com pointed out in its Nook review.

The firmware update 1.1.0 attempts to fix some of these problems. The update improves the start-up time for features such as ‘My Library’ on the device. It also ensures that the device displays the correct time on its status bar, has better page numbering for books and removes some formatting-related issues.

Meanwhile, some users have ‘rooted’ the Nook or hacked the device’s firmware to gain system level access. This allows them to run on the Nook apps such as Pandora, a browser and other programs that Barnes & Noble does not support officially.

The latest firmware update does not lock the rooted Nooks, says nookDevs, a group that has created a wiki and an online forum for Nook enthusiasts. “The update is safe, if you’ve had your device already rooted,” says the group on its website. “It will stay this way.”

But that’s if you got a Nook in the first place. With some customers worried that their pre-ordered Nooks won’t arrive in time for Christmas, Barnes & Noble has sent an e-mail promising a $100 gift voucher to anyone whose Nook doesn’t make it.

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com