Sony keeps OLED hope alive with ‘budget’ monitor line (video)

Sony Trimaster EL PVM-1741
It was just two short months ago that Sony had us drooling over its latest OLED monitors. But, at the double-take-inspiring price of $16,000, its safe to assume the company isn’t moving too many of these professional-level displays. For film and TV production companies turned off by the high-priced BVM line, Sony has announced the PVM-2541 and PVM-1741, which arrive at less than a third of the cost. The 25-inch and 17-inch screens (we’re sure you can guess which is which) will retail for $7,400 and $4,900, respectively, while boasting the same 1080p, “Super Top Emission” panels (explained in the lengthy video after the break) and 10-bit drivers of their more expensive cousins. The one trade off is the significantly smaller, 89-degree viewing angle. Good thing movie editors are used to huddling uncomfortably close together.

Continue reading Sony keeps OLED hope alive with ‘budget’ monitor line (video)

Sony keeps OLED hope alive with ‘budget’ monitor line (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 16:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia X7 first hands-on! (updated with video)

The Nokia X7, everybody! Like the E7, this is a 4-inch AMOLED handset with an 8 megapixel EDoF camera, though unlike its more buttoned-down business-oriented sibling, this is an entertainment handset through and through. Check it out in pictures below and we’ll bring you more impressions of it and the new Symbian “Anna” UI very shortly. Video forthcoming too!

Update: Video now embedded after the break. We can’t yet speak of the improvements Nokia has made on the browser front, but its long overdue inclusion of a virtual portrait QWERTY keyboard is much appreciated, as is the real-time home screen scrolling. It’s still not as smooth as you’d see on other devices that have been doing it for a while, but it’s preferable to what we had in the older Symbian iteration.

Physically, the X7 is a pleasure to hold and to handle, a hallmark of Nokia construction, but we must once again protest at the so-called nHD resolution of 640 x 360 on this device. It’s justified by the need to keep consistency with the company’s existing ecosystem, but it’s a step behind the cutting edge. At least it’s composed of the delectable AMOLED stuff that Nokia’s been using lately, and colors and images look positively delicious, if a little pixel-light. Stereo speakers at the bottom and a generally svelte profile make it an appealing little pocket rocket for multimedia, but bear in mind it comes with a 680MHz processor, so it can record and play back 720p video, but may be challenged by more intensive tasks.

Continue reading Nokia X7 first hands-on! (updated with video)

Nokia X7 first hands-on! (updated with video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 04:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia X7 with Symbian ‘Anna’ now official on Three UK (Updated)

So, it’s official. The Nokia X7, unfit for a US launch, has finally found a home with Three in the UK. The heavily leaked stainless steel handset runs an updated Symbian^3 “Anna” (aka, PR2) OS that finally introduces a vastly improved browser and portrait QWERTY with split-view data entry among its 50 new enhancements. Rounding out the specs are an 8 megapixel cam with dual-LED flash, 4-inch OLED ClearBlack display, HD video recording, and 256MB RAM / 1GB ROM with an 8GB memory card tossed in the box. You’ll find the press release, video, and more pic after the break.

Update: Nokia tells us that the X7 features 720p video recording, and a 680MHz CPU — presumably the same old (and we mean old) ARM 11 proc and found in the N8 and E7. Oh, and it’s the same Broadcom BCM2727 GPU and 8 megapixel EDoF camera we reviewed in the E7. The X7 will be available in Q2 with a price set at €380 before taxes and subsidies.

[Thanks, Will B.]

Continue reading Nokia X7 with Symbian ‘Anna’ now official on Three UK (Updated)

Nokia X7 with Symbian ‘Anna’ now official on Three UK (Updated) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Apr 2011 03:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Scientists improve blue OLED efficiency, don’t promise everlasting light

Although this is not the first time we’ve seen an efficiency increase in blue OLEDs, it’s worth noting that their proposed cap of productivity up to this point was a lowly five percent. It’s exciting to learn, therefore, about a breakthrough by professor John Kieffer and graduate student Changgua Zhen from the University of Michigan, which has resulted in them successfully increasing azure diode power efficiency by 100 percent. The duo, accompanied by some bright minds in Singapore, manipulated performance controllers by rearranging OLED molecules in a computer model, improving material characteristics. In simple terms though, we’re still looking at a measly ten percent efficiency, so we’ll see where they take it from here.

Scientists improve blue OLED efficiency, don’t promise everlasting light originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 26 Mar 2011 20:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Physorg  |  sourceUniversity of Michigan  | Email this | Comments

Gadget Lab Notes: The Guts of the Nintendo 3DS

The parts of the Nintendo 3DS layed out for all to see

Gadget Lab Notes is an eclectic roundup of gadget news briefs and intriguing products that catch our eye.

The Nintendo 3DS Gets Dissected By iFixit
The guys at iFixit announced that the 3DS is “the most camera-laden device we’ve ever taken apart,” with two cameras used for 3D recording and one for displaying 3D images. The motherboard features a Nintendo 1048 0H ARM CPU and a Fujitsu MB82M8080-07L, among other chips, and two LCD layers are used to create the parallax display that results in 3D footage when viewed from the right distance. The 3DS got a repairability score of 5/10, which means it’s not too impossibly difficult to tear apart.

Nintendo 3DS Teardown [iFixit via the Giz]

Thanko’s EARINALM Earphones Have a Built-In Alarm
If you’re taking a nap on the bus or the train, you may prefer falling asleep to your tunes rather than to the random bustle going on around you. But then how do you know when to wake up? Thanko’s EARINALM earphones solve that problem with a built-in alarm clock on the remote control. When the alarm sounds, its ringing will replace your music. It’s available for 2980 Yen, about $36.

EARINALM Earphones [Thanko via Akihabara News]

Japenese Human-Shaped Mobile Phone Is Designed to Relay Voice and “Human Presence”
Japanese researchers have created a mobile phone robot called Elfoid. Shaped like a palm-sized pseudo-human and covered in a “skin-like” outer layer, it’s designed to transmit both voice and “human presence,” which is done by mimicking the speakers head and upper body movements. They hope that by making the phone feel like the person you’re speaking with, you’ll feel closer to them (as opposed to being creeped out that you’re dialing your friends and loved ones on a voodoo doll-like skin phone that’s wiggling in your ear).

Mobile Phone With Human Touch and Elfoid, A Pocket-Sized Android

Zero Xu Is The First Street Motorcycle With a Swappable Battery Pack
Zero’s Xu electric motorcycle is the first model to get juice from a removable, exchangeable power pack. The integrated charger powers up the pack in 2 hours, but an optional standalone charger can quick-charge it in about half that time. The Xu, which starts at $7,995, is definitely designed more for short-distance commuting than cross country treks: it only has a 30-mile range.

Xu [Zero via Designboom]

OLED Display and Camera Are Combined in Bi-Directional OLED Prototype
The Fraunhofer Institute’s prototype bi-directional panel intersperses CMOS photoreceptors between AMOLED pixels so that the display can display and observe objects at the same time. Such technology could be used in wearable displays, or give your smartphone or tablet screen additional functionality as a scanner.

Bi-Directional OLED Microdisplay [OLED Info via Slashgear]


NanoPhotonica develops S-QLED, OLED to develop inferiority complex soon

Ahh, the wonders of OLEDflexible displays, great viewing angles, and low power consumption. However, the folks at NanoPhotonica have “perfected” a quantum dot display technology called S-QLED that allegedly has superior picture quality, uses 30 percent less power, and costs three-quarters less than its OLED competition. The company is gearing up for mass production and is in talks with several OEMs to start producing S-QLED displays, but unfortunately there’s no timetable for when they’ll get to market. Guess we’ll have to wait a bit longer to see just how perfect these QLEDs really are.

Continue reading NanoPhotonica develops S-QLED, OLED to develop inferiority complex soon

NanoPhotonica develops S-QLED, OLED to develop inferiority complex soon originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 05:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony announces 17-inch and 25-inch Trimaster EL professional OLED monitors

The last we heard of a reasonably sized Sony OLED display was way back in June, even though it was just the panel itself rather than a full package like the XEL-1 OLED TV. But yesterday, Sony unveiled a couple of new OLED monitors for its Trimaster EL professional range: on the left we have the BVM-E250 25-incher, accompanied by the BVM-E170 17-inch sibling on the right. The “Super Top Emission OLED” panels on both models boast an RGB 10-bit driver, 100 cd/m2 standard luminance, 1920 x 1080 resolution, plus an impressive 178-degree viewing angle both vertically and laterally. We’ll save the rest of the technical details for you video nuts in the press release (along with a video) after the break, but let us warn you that these don’t come cheap: the E250 will be available in mid-April for around ¥2.4 million ($28,910), and the E170 in June for around ¥1.3 million ($15,710).

Continue reading Sony announces 17-inch and 25-inch Trimaster EL professional OLED monitors

Sony announces 17-inch and 25-inch Trimaster EL professional OLED monitors originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Feb 2011 05:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink AV Watch, MacWorld, OLED-Display  |  sourceSony  | Email this | Comments

Mitsubishi creates giant curved OLED, probably won’t fit in your living room (video)

Mitsubishi creates curved OLED for retail installations, wouldn't fit in your living room anyway

Display companies like Mitsubishi still don’t make a big-screen OLED we can buy, yet look at this, a curved display created by the company that looks to be about four feet tall and maybe 10 feet around. Okay, so a 3mm pixel pitch wouldn’t look too great standing anywhere within about 20 feet of the thing, but that’s why it’s designed for malls and big stores, places where its 1,200 nit brightness can shrug off ambient light. It was unveiled at ISE 2011 and there’s a video of it doing its thing after the break, but surely it won’t be long before they’re all over Las Vegas.

Continue reading Mitsubishi creates giant curved OLED, probably won’t fit in your living room (video)

Mitsubishi creates giant curved OLED, probably won’t fit in your living room (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 04 Feb 2011 10:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Venue ready to order now for $500 unlocked, shipping February 18th

In classic Dell fashion, the company’s most legitimately appealing Android handset yet has just gone up for sale with nary a peep marking its arrival. If you’ll recall, the US announcement for the Venue wasn’t exactly overloaded with facts and figures, we were basically told that it’s coming, and hey, here it is now! A cent under $500 buys you an unlocked Android 2.2 device — with either AT&T or T-Mobile 3G bands, your choice — equipped with a 4.1-inch WVGA AMOLED display, an 8 megapixel camera, and some of the best looks on any smartphone yet. The preliminary shipping date we’re seeing is February 18th, let’s hope that’s a much more concrete number than we’ve experienced with the Venue Pro, eh?

[Thanks, Spiridon and Tanjot]

Dell Venue ready to order now for $500 unlocked, shipping February 18th originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 Feb 2011 16:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cowon D3 Plenue priced at $370, or $100 per inch of AMOLED

Want yourself a “Prestige” portable media player to make even legit smartphones blush in envy? Then the D3 Plenue from Cowon might just be for you, what with its 1080p video playback, 32GB of storage, Android 2.1 OS, and 3.7-inch, 800 x 480 AMOLED display. It’s just that today we’re finding the Prestige label also extends to its price, which Amazon has set at a mighty $370. That’s not terrible when contrasted against unsubsidized pricing for comparable smartphones, but then this isn’t a smartphone. Availability of the D3 Plenue is limited to an undated pre-order for the moment, giving you at least a little more time to deliberate on the value this souped-up PMP represents.

Cowon D3 Plenue priced at $370, or $100 per inch of AMOLED originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Feb 2011 05:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink OLED-Info  |  sourceAmazon  | Email this | Comments