Slashdot Mirror


Roll-Up Monitors A Step Closer To Reality

gwernol writes "CNN are covering the merger of two of the leading companies in the field of OLEDs. This brings the dream of flexible plastic monitors and TVs a step closer to fruition. You can find out more at Cambridge Display Technology who have acquired Opsys. CDT's technology paper on light emitting polymers (in the Research & Technology section of their site) is interesting reading."

215 comments

  1. Can I? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Can I put one of these on one of those old fashion window shades? You know, the kind that rolls up real fast and spins for a few seconds. Very popular in old cartoons.

    1. Re:Can I? by docbrown42 · · Score: 2

      Can I put one of these on one of those old fashion window shades? You know, the kind that rolls up real fast and spins for a few seconds. Very popular in old cartoons.

      Ah, just like in Back to the Future 2?

      --
      Ed Wedig
      Graphic design services
      docbrown.net
    2. Re:Can I? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd also get your old Tom stuck in it at every opportunity!

  2. Sweet! by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can't wait until this stuff can be put like wall paper and connected to the house backbone. Just a quick calibration so it can map images to it properly and presto. Just imagine all the cool stuff you could do with it. I still think having a camera pointed at the sky out in the middle of the pacific so you could have a truely starry night on your ceiling would be amazing!

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    1. Re:Sweet! by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      And waking up to spam in the middle of the night because you know they'll find out how to do it.

      Stars replaced by Nigerian offers and penis implants! And life-size pr0n pop-ups...

      I can't wait!

    2. Re:Sweet! by Kamadan · · Score: 1

      Oh great. I change my computer desktop wallpaper every other day. Now I have to redecorate my house every other day when I change a room's wallpaper. Joy.

    3. Re:Sweet! by the_Bionic_lemming · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, and then every 5 minutes a loud blaring ad would come on for a new Chevy Trailblazer, followed by an Ad for Herpes medication, and followed up with a Burger King ad..

      I mean really - look what happened to the net...LOL

      --
      _ _ _ Go for the eyes Boo! GO FOR THE EYES!
    4. Re:Sweet! by apankrat · · Score: 1
      :I still think having a camera pointed at the sky out in the middle of the pacific so you could have a truely starry night on your ceiling would be amazing!

      .. and it will be a total waste of bandwidth as an average Joe wont ever be able to tell true ecuatorial sky from a randomly generated set of bilnking pixels :)

      As an extension to your idea though, it'd be cool to be able to spray some extra galaxies here and there onto an actual skies .. just juice it up a bit, you know .. :)

      --
      3.243F6A8885A308D313
    5. Re:Sweet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you and the assclown who gave us the no-go lowdown on the predator suit ideal should get together.

    6. Re:Sweet! by Razzak · · Score: 1

      Heh heh heh...

      You're obviously from LA.

    7. Re:Sweet! by charon_on_acheron · · Score: 1

      I'm sure many people can tell when certain constellations are visible. Although most folks in the cities can't see the stars anymore, so you might be right.

  3. Heh by Find+love+Online · · Score: 3, Interesting

    CDT's technology paper on light emitting polymers

    When I first read that, I thought they had invented some way to put OLEDs on paper not written a paper about OLEDs :P

    Well, one can dream, can't that? (Actualy, that can't be to far off. IIRC you can 'print' plastic on paper, and people have made electrically conductive plastic, if they could be merged with OLEDs....)

    Hehe, how cool would it be to be able to buy a off-the-shelf ink jet printer and print electrical circuits, with built in OLED displays and all kinds of other craziness :)

    1. Re:Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Knowing the price of inkjet cartridges, it'd probably cost more to print your own monitor than buy one.

    2. Re:Heh by x01mOiRe10x · · Score: 2, Informative
      --
      "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy." --Benjamin Franklin
  4. they were prophetic... by p_rotator · · Score: 3, Funny

    Mr. McGuire: I just want to say one word to you - just one word.
    Ben: Yes sir.
    Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?
    Ben: Yes I am.
    Mr. McGuire: 'Plastics.'
    Ben: Exactly how do you mean?
    Mr. McGuire: There's a great future in plastics. Think about it. Will you think about it?
    Ben: Yes I will.
    Mr. McGuire: Shh! Enough said. That's a deal.

  5. Of all the latest technology... by C60 · · Score: 1

    This one truly has me excited.

    The potential uses for roll up displays are just about endless. I've had a dream of pulling up the "monitor" from my laptop for just about as long as I can remember.

    Can't wait to see full wall panels made. IMAX at home baby. Slashdot can follow me through the house. Yum.

    And if you want true excitement, porn everyewhere! (not like it wasn't there already)

    --
    Karma: 0 (But I wield a mean +10 Vorpal Apathy)
  6. These OLEDs technologies are pretty promising by f97tosc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    but the article fails to explain why this merger is such an important step in the development of new display technologies.

    Tor

    1. Re:These OLEDs technologies are pretty promising by saider · · Score: 2, Informative

      The last sentance does:

      The two companies hope to blend their technologies to improve the lifetime of the dendrimers.

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    2. Re:These OLEDs technologies are pretty promising by verch · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The article has pretty much 0 content, but I suspect this is an important step because one combined company with no cash struggling to survive while developing a product that is really far off can last twice as long as two seperate ones. Maybe even long enough to see the product come to fruition, or more likely long enough for some major electronic component maker to buy them and really bring the products mainstream.

    3. Re:These OLEDs technologies are pretty promising by MWelchUK · · Score: 1

      AFAIK Cambridge Display Technology won the most prestigious Engineering prize in the UK this year, so I doubt thay are too strapped for cash.

  7. Back to the Future 2? by HTMLSpinnr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does this remind anyone of Back to the Future 2? I could easily envision this as becoming a "picture window" type device in every home.

    --
    $ man woman *
    -bash: /usr/bin/man: Argument list too long
    1. Re:Back to the Future 2? by mustangdavis · · Score: 2
      "Does this remind anyone of Back to the Future 2?"


      I can already see the headline:

      <b>Fox sues Cambridge Display Technology for patent infringement, copy right, and prior art. Addtional suits pending against Hasbro for hover board.</b>


    2. Re:Back to the Future 2? by presearch · · Score: 3, Funny

      >rm -rf /bin/laden
      rm: /bin/laden not found

  8. Mergers by zymano · · Score: 0

    Whenever companies merge from the same field it's almost always a sign of price fixing and corruption. Mergers shouldn't be allowed. Always results in higher prices. Look at the Airlines.

  9. Re:Dream?!? by mnmonte · · Score: 1

    or less gun violence in America Its not guns that kill. Its the people. Rather on get into this on /. though. I do agree with you however. What would the point of a roll up monitor be. If you need something this small get a thin line or better yet. DONT USE A COMPUTER AT ALL.

  10. Re:Dream?!? by eclectus · · Score: 3, Funny

    This will allow me to get closer to the dream of portable e-books that work like regular books, but it doesn't solve the problem of dog-earing a page to mark it. Dog-earing these simply marks ALL your pages, and that, my friends, is not very useful.....

    --
    This signature is a waste of 42 characters
  11. "CNN are"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    try "CNN is"

    1. Re:"CNN are"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try correcting a real error instead of making yourself look even dumber than usual.

  12. Alright Campers! by SBrickWork · · Score: 1

    "Remember scouts, now that we've got these roller-lcd's, we can bring our computer games with us camping!".. "and i swear to god i'll frag your little asses all night!" doesn't quite seem to be as authentic as a tent and sleeping bag

    1. Re:Alright Campers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "and i swear to god i'll frag your little asses all night!"
      • At least it'll be better than some of the things Scout masters have been accused of doing to the Weeblows' asses at Scout camp
    2. Re:Alright Campers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right, that is not authentic. Most ScoutMasters say: "and I swear to god I'll frig your little asses all night."

    3. Re:Alright Campers! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and i swear to god i'll frag your little asses all night!

      Actually, that's quite authentic. Depends what you mean exactly by "frag" though.

  13. Re:Dream?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Seriously, who lusts after consumer crap?"

    Think about how much less material we could be using if we had 'roll up' monitors, as opposed to CRTs or even LCD monitors.

  14. Requests and uses by tcd004 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Make an ultra-durable polymer version that I could use as a cutting surface with an X-acto knife.

    A semitransparent version for use in tracing.

    Clothing - afterall, if you can make a sheet of this stuff, you could conceiveably make a fiber out of it, no?

    Just thinking out loud.

    tcd004
    If I had my own oil company, I would...

    1. Re:Requests and uses by SBrickWork · · Score: 1

      And just think of the possibilities of your wardrobe!

    2. Re:Requests and uses by goodviking · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is already reasearch being done on fiber optic fabrics. See: TV On A T-shirt

    3. Re:Requests and uses by Bozovision · · Score: 2

      No, you probably can't make a fibre. The pixel addressing would be a huge issue, but that's not necessary providing you have a flexible substrate material.

      Jeff Veit
      www.tanasity.com and www.tangledtime.com

  15. Roll another one... by jaredcoleman · · Score: 2, Funny

    If they make these really energy effiecient it will give new meaning to "Rolling a green one".

  16. Paper link- anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CDT's technology paper on light emitting polymers (in the Research & Technology section of their site) is interesting reading.

    Did you actually read it? Because I get a broken link.

  17. light in one direction? by hebertpa · · Score: 1

    What s the deal with light only going in one direction. I thought that displays where supposed to beam light in multple directions so that you could see it from different angles. I don't see how not haveing an active matrix screen is an advantage of this technology.

    --
    madness takes its toll please have exact change
    1. Re:light in one direction? by Ari+Rahikkala · · Score: 1

      Damn you, you stole my post idea. In fact, if all light goes in one direction, all you will see is one spot at a time. I smell something very wrong here...

      Perhaps it's just meant to be cool. After all, if all light from it goes in only one direction, people will see a reflection of the stuff on the screen on your face, just like in movies :-).

    2. Re:light in one direction? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 2

      I imagine you can see it from different angles. If it only shined light out in one direction, it would be fully coherent light, and OLEDs would make great lasers. It owuld also make a fairly worthless screen, because you could only see a few pixels per eye at any moment - it would be hard to read.

      I think the "one direction" refers to back and front as opposed to side to side.

      But then, maybe I'm ill-informed.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
  18. How long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How long until some whack job duct-tapes a bunch of these to a blow-up doll for his personal pleasure?

    1. Re:How long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were the first whack job to think of it...

    2. Re:How long? by Tumbleweed · · Score: 2

      Considering that porn drives technology, it'll probably be among the FIRST applications for this new technology.

    3. Re:How long? by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 2

      a condom. to give you the penis of her desires?

    4. Re:How long? by still_sick · · Score: 1

      About an hour or so after I can get my hands on enough of the stuff.

      --
      ...Also, I didn't know Buggalo could fly.
  19. So the real application is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what eles?!?! Pr0n!

    Now instead of rolling up nudie mags and heading off to the stall to do yo thang, you can roll up the monitor, hook it up to your cell and hit the best the web has to offer!

  20. Razors? Razors? We don't need no stinkin' Razors! by echo · · Score: 2

    "...some of whom have just opened factories for the first generation of monochrome OLED displays used in cellphones and razors."

    Razors?

    Umm.. did I miss something?

  21. Problems by Jus+ad+Bellum · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So are there any problems with these like the 20-30 year delay that it took to get a decent blue LED???

    I'm sure back in the day they were talking about LED TV and it wasn't until the past 5 or so years that the technology was there. Not that I would't mind a high res, super thin, and sexy monitor/tv. It sure would be a killer app for most TV's out there, and a good way to combine a coumputer station and TV...

    1. Re:Problems by Bozovision · · Score: 2

      Yes, blue is the colour that they have the most problem with - it's the most unstable. In the labs they have blue up to 1000's of hours lifetime. But to compete with consumer goods like TV's and monitors they need much better performance.

      Imagine your TV is on for 4 hours a day, and you keep it for 10 years. That's 14600 hours, with no margin of error.

      It is quite likely that they will overcome the problem with blue...at the moment there isn't a full theoretical model for why Light Emitting Polymers work, and progress is through empirical testing.

  22. Finally! by johnalex · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I can't believe this - my 3rd post to /. in one day. Must be a slow Monday...

    Back in 1994, I attended a demo of the newest Apple hardware: the PowerMac 6100, 7100, and 8100. Those PowerPC 601 processors just blew me away! :-)

    As part of the demo, the Apple guys showed us a video of upcoming technology, including a computer that folded like a book. The computer used an "avatar" that the user controlled by speaking naturally, as if to a person.

    The Apple guys then asked us what was the missing link preventing anyone from producing the contraption. The answer: "folding glass." Of course, we know now (and probably did then, just we didn't want to admit it) that the CPU's and graphics processors of the time would have choked on the OS needed to pull off the magic.

    --
    JA
    http://www.johnalex.org/
    1. Re:Finally! by Jus+ad+Bellum · · Score: 2, Funny

      The computer used an "avatar" that the user controlled by speaking naturally, as if to a person.

      You're sure that it wasn't just a dream about Ask Jeeves again?

    2. Re:Finally! by phillymjs · · Score: 5, Interesting

      As part of the demo, the Apple guys showed us a video of upcoming technology, including a computer that folded like a book. The computer used an "avatar" that the user controlled by speaking naturally, as if to a person.

      Ah, that would be "Knowledge Navigator," John Sculley's attempt at being a visionary. KN was what he wanted the Newton to eventually become. The video was originally made in the late 80's-- now it's almost 20 years later, and we're still quite a bit away from a device that can do what KN is capable of.

      ~Philly

    3. Re:Finally! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The computer used an "avatar" that the user controlled by speaking naturally, as if to a person.

      Was the avatar named Clippy? *j/k* Why is it whenever Microsoft does something, everybody hates it, but whenever Apple presents something everybody drools about it? I think it must be all that wacky tebacky Jobs's minions smoke.

    4. Re:Finally! by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2

      Bill Nye the Science Guy's early work!

  23. Scary. by FreeLinux · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We hear lots of hype regarding this great new technology. Companies developing the technology start acquiring each other before there is even a deliverable. Stocks soar....

    Then, the bubble bursts leaving no real technology, thousands holding worthless stock and a CEO retiring in the Caribbean.

    Haven't we seen this before????

    1. Re:Scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jeez. If it were up to people like you, we'd never get anything done. Go find a rock to hide under.

  24. sheet-thin monitor walls by bluhatter · · Score: 1

    My monitor is as thin as a sheet - in fact, it IS a sheet! All you need is a cheap (or expensive, depending on the size of your wallet) projector and a bedsheet and you've got yourself a screen you can fold up and iron!

    --


    bluHatter
  25. COOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cooollllllllll. Takes out his pen. opens it. Unrolls the oled display inside, watches some mpegs. :)

  26. *yawn* wake me when this is real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is it just my imagining, or has this story been seen about once a month for the last couple of years? OK, not necessarily on /., but I'd swear I've been seeing "Cambridge Display Technologies to have flexible screens Real-Soon-Now" stories for a LONG time. Followed, every time, by the obligatory "gee wow, I can't wait to get a screen I can roll up when I'm not using it" comments. Unfortunately, I'm feeling too lazy/tired at the moment to go searching for previous stories - so if all this is my imagining, slap me down to -5 Offtopic :-)
    I'll get excited about this technology when it actually ships in a usable form. Until then, I just see these periodic "newsvertisements" as a means for CDT to raise their public profile and raise a few more investor $$$....

  27. I don't dream of them being roll up so much... by TerryAtWork · · Score: 4, Insightful

    as excellent, large and cheap.

    Any signs of progress of THAT front?

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  28. Re:Razors? Razors? We don't need no stinkin' Razor by merriam · · Score: 1

    Presumably they mean shavers.

  29. Re:Razors? Razors? We don't need no stinkin' Razor by Scutter · · Score: 2

    Some electric razors are starting to be built with LCD screens to display bettery life and cutting head life, razor cleaning schedules, etc. While it's an odd thing to mention in the article, it's conceivable that the razor manufacturers would like to do something more complex, similar to the stuff you see on car stereos these days.

    --

    "Tell me doctor, with all of your defenses, are there any provisions for an attack by killer bees?"
  30. don't you know? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One less competitor means more profit for one company... meaning more investment capitol.

  31. Reuters Article by nekdut · · Score: 5, Informative

    Reuters has an article regarding this technology as well:

    Reuters Link

  32. I can see this being abused by CrypticOutsider · · Score: 1

    As funny as it would be for voyeurs to pull down the shades to get a peep, I think that this would probably end up being abused by advertisers.

    In an era where you have fuzzy hat pitchers on your television because of superimposed images behind home plate, I can see people in high rise buildings being paid to display stuff in their windows, perhaps even in a cooperative fashion.

    (for the record, an exhibitionist, not a voyeur :)

  33. OLED Clothes by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 5, Funny

    Color-changing clothes would be cool, but what do you do when your battery pack dies and your clothes go off? :)

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    1. Re:OLED Clothes by saskboy · · Score: 1

      There are people very interested in this kind of technology. For one thing, human body heat could be the power source for the clothes, so your clothes don't "power down" when a battery dies.
      Then your shirt, pants, and underwear will need an IP address, so your girlfriend can display her face on your shirt to see why you are still sitting at the bar instead of going home. Your underwear will be receiving DOS attacks, and your pants will get Spam from Coke who will say, "Can't beat the real thing" on your butt.
      This technology could be cool, but look for major annoyances too.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    2. Re:OLED Clothes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what do you do when your battery pack dies and your clothes go off?

      Go all gothic like and paint your fingernails black?

    3. Re:OLED Clothes by taniwha · · Score: 1
      what do you do when your battery pack dies and your clothes go off?

      rumor has it that these sorts of new clothes are first going to be marketted to the Emperor class .. apparently marketting is planning on pointing this out as a feature

    4. Re:OLED Clothes by VitrosChemistryAnaly · · Score: 1

      "Color-changing clothes would be cool..."

      Yeah, that's what I thought in 1991 when I got a hypercolour shirt for my birthday.

      Guess what...

      It turned out that color-changing clothes weren't cool. :)

      --
      "It's a tarp!" -- Dyslexic Admiral Ackbar
    5. Re:OLED Clothes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You turn into a goth. :)

    6. Re:OLED Clothes by peu · · Score: 0

      Simply: recharge your t-shirt Li-ion's with piezoelectric chargers pumped by your own body movements...

    7. Re:OLED Clothes by Havokmon · · Score: 1
      Yeah, that's what I thought in 1991 when I got a hypercolour shirt for my birthday.

      It turned out that color-changing clothes weren't cool. :)

      Well, only for the fat geeks who's armpits were constantly a different color...

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
    8. Re:OLED Clothes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there's still no direct way to create electricity from heat that's not hot enough to combust anything... maybe the movement from your body could power it.. like those watches...

    9. Re:OLED Clothes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      remember we're talking about clothes made our of light emitting polymers. the fact that there's no efficient heat > electricity method yet doesn't mean there won't be one at some point in the future. i mean, come on. programmable freakin' clothes! have an imagination

    10. Re:OLED Clothes by cyberbrian · · Score: 1

      Just make sure you have installed the latest security patches to your nectie firewall.

      B.

  34. Very good to hear! by PhysicsScholar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Even though most folks think that LCD monitors are the paramount devices through which to interact and view data on computer machinery, they're wrong.

    This isn't bad, however, because the up-and-coming OLEDs (as detailed in the introduction to this particle story) are much cheaper to produce and should mature faster than LCDs did in the 1990s, which was their early testing period.

    With OLEDs, one also finds a much-increased video brightness, faster response times (no ghosts while gaming or watching DivX ;-) rips), much enhanced durability, and lighter, to boot!

    Finally, these run much hotter but are much less prone to being affected by temperature fluctuations. This means it could easily serve as a server monitor in a 100 degree PowerEdge server closet or as the primary video output terminal at a physics laboratory in Iceland (where I study in the summer).

    --

    Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science, Dalhousie University, Halifax, N.S., Canada, B3H 3J5
  35. Already done -- in prototype by mfago · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check out the image at the lower left.

    They used to have a movie of this screen being flexed while an animation played on it. Really awesome. Clicking on the link now leads to a much less impressive movie...

    1. Re:Already done -- in prototype by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 2

      well - I dont know - that is still pretty cool. Except you can tell that its really not *that* flexible... the person was being very careful with that thing.

      I love these though. but I would like to start legislation now preventing advertisments on clothing.

      I want to make a nightclub and have the whole floor covered in that stuff - then have a thick plexiglass false floor about 6 feet above that - then project airiel views, space views and satellite images over the whole floor. and do that zoom in thing from the matrix.

      Although the only problem is that it would cause the place to be the most popular for the LSD & E popping kids who just show up to lay on the floor and feel like they are flying...

      Still would be fun though.

    2. Re:Already done -- in prototype by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Although the only problem is that it would cause the place to be the most popular for the LSD & E popping kids who just show up to lay on the floor and feel like they are flying..." ....

      You say it likes its a bad thing ..... :)

    3. Re:Already done -- in prototype by mfago · · Score: 1

      Except you can tell that its really not *that* flexible... the person was being very careful with that thing.

      Yea, the older movie (with the car) showed them really flexing the dickens out of the screen, all while the screen played the animation.

      The newer movie is much less impressive, not just because of the dorky logo, but because they don't really flex the screen very much.

      Anyone have an old copy of the "car" animation?!

    4. Re:Already done -- in prototype by Big_Breaker · · Score: 1

      I think the main issue is that the driver isn't very flexible. Notice that the cable has to plug into something... that something addresses the pixels. I'm pretty sure there are more physically flexible ways to drive the screen, just not in the prototype.

  36. The better video link.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.universaldisplay.com/foled.php

  37. I love this idea .... by mustangdavis · · Score: 2

    Although it sounds like this may be several years off, this could revoultionize LAN parties!!

    Just think, no more strained backs while carrying you're 21" rolled up monitor to your buddies garage!

    I also wonder how these things will deal with creases, fading, glare, etc ... Hopefully better than a LCD does ....

    1. Re:I love this idea .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just think, no more strained backs while carrying you're 21" rolled up monitor to your buddies garage!

      ...no more strained backs while carrying you are 21" rolled up monitor...

      I don't understand.

    2. Re:I love this idea .... by adamfranco · · Score: 0

      I think the killer app will be having a really wide (like 2-3 feet) screen that you can wrap around in front of you so that you can get some peripheral vision while fragging.

      Think of it. Not being confined to a cramped 1600x1200 screen....

      I know that I'd love one.

      --
      "When ideology and theology couple, their offspring are not always bad but they are always blind." -- Bill Moyers
    3. Re:I love this idea .... by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      Think of it. Not being confined to a cramped 1600x1200 screen....


      I cope with the 1200x1600 by pretending I'm viewing the world through futuristic video techno-goggles.

      Seriously though, I think the real killer ap would be wall displays. A 10k x 10k display that covering all the walls of a room, converting it into a holodeck (kinda), providing nice, very energy efficient ambient lighting, or just making for some nice wallpaper.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  38. Next logical step... by Hayzeus · · Score: 5, Funny

    Fold up and edible! I could watch Beverly Hillbillies reruns on a bean burrito! Play Quake on a Hot Pocket! Quick -- somebody get me a DARPA grant...

    1. Re:Next logical step... by taniwha · · Score: 1

      of course .... when I was a kid fish&chips came wrapped in yesterday's newspaper - we'd read while we ate ... (unles you were unlucky and got the sports pages)

  39. How soon? by t0qer · · Score: 3, Funny

    Before I can build a predator suit out of OLED's?

    1. Re:How soon? by saider · · Score: 5, Interesting

      How soon before Tommy Hilfiger makes a shirt that has a spinning or flaming logo on it?

      How long before Tommy lets you download your own images to the shirt?

      How soon before that system is cracked and you're walking down the street with a picture of a guy f%^king a chicken on your back?

      It should be an interesting ride on the subway in a few years.

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    2. Re:How soon? by sharkey · · Score: 2

      How soon before that system is cracked and you're walking down the street with a picture of a guy f%^king a chicken on your back?

      Or you have a full-scale rendition of the goatse applied to your back.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    3. Re:How soon? by StuffYourReligion · · Score: 4, Funny

      How soon before that system is cracked and you're walking down the street with a picture of a guy f%^king a chicken on your back?

      LOL, it would certainly have to be a multithreaded attack.

      =groan=

      please mod this down, it's embarrassing

      --
      I have no special gift, I am only passionately curious. --Albert Einstein
    4. Re:How soon? by buswolley · · Score: 1
      what!?? Its already interesting on the subway.

      But you know what scares me?? I bet B Gates and M$ will find a way to make us all wear the butterfly insigna on these clothes

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    5. Re:How soon? by buswolley · · Score: 1

      great.. we are all going to become walking flashing corporate billboards!!! Flashier than the worst PrOn site.

      --

      A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.

    6. Re:How soon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How soon before that system is cracked and you're walking down the street with a picture of a guy f%^king a chicken on your back?

      I wouldn't imagine this happening... your Shirt, presumably wouldn't be connected to your computer for longer than it takes to transfer the files.

      I'm not sure, but I don't think there's been viruses (virii?) that infect Palmtops during the Sync?

      Then again, maybe I'm taking your joke a little too seriously.

    7. Re:How soon? by boolean0 · · Score: 1

      as it is, walking around campus i am assaulted by stickers for everything imaginable, bands, political positions, clubs and whatnot.

      i can't imagine having animated ones flashing at me constantly..

      although, it could be worse, they could have integrated sound as well.

    8. Re:How soon? by vrmlknight · · Score: 1

      Try looking up Phage it's a palm virus they way palm's are set up every app has full access to everything on it; it would only take one prc file that says it a game to do the damage. I believe that Pocket PC's have the same problem

      --
      This must be Thursday, I never could get the hang of Thursdays.
    9. Re:How soon? by duck_prime · · Score: 1
      How soon before that system is cracked and you're walking down the street with a picture of a guy f%^king a chicken on your back?

      LOL, it would certainly have to be a multithreaded attack.
      The problem will be very bad, with war-garbers probing for ports on your pants. Soon enough we'll see signs like this: No shoes, yes shirt, no service .

      Is this a denial-of-service attack?
  40. Mmm... Edible displays... by Mad+Bad+Rabbit · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, really! The OLEDs are supposedly nontoxic, and capable of being printed onto edible substrates, like rice
    paper or fruit leather. Edible gold foil could be used for the wiring. The battery and control chips would of course need to be in a separate module, clearly labelled "Do Not Eat."



    <;K

    --
    >;k
    1. Re:Mmm... Edible displays... by Arcaeris · · Score: 1

      Edible gold foil could be used for the wiring."

      People EAT gold?!?!?

      Where are these people, and how easy is it to remove their precious insides?

    2. Re:Mmm... Edible displays... by Mad+Bad+Rabbit · · Score: 2

      No foolin'. Search Google for "edible gold leaf" and see.

      It's mainly used for decorative garnish, on things like fancy cakes, exotic soups, gilded fruit or candies, etc. It costs about US $0.20 per square inch.

      Here's a newspaper article about it:

      Let Them Eat Gold

      >;K

      --
      >;k
    3. Re:Mmm... Edible displays... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes and of course there's Goldschlager, the cinnamon schnapps with gold flakes inside. About 5-7 years ago a local man tried to sue the company saying that the gold had somehow harmed him. Of course there is good scientific evidence that small amounts of ingested gold pose no problem to the human body.

    4. Re:Mmm... Edible displays... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small amounts of gold just go right through since your body can't do anything with it. Unless you eat a lot (in which case your body has to try to move this huge lump of metal around) you're fine.

  41. Re:Sweet! - Holodecs by pVoid · · Score: 1

    Imagine you combine this with the 3D display technology. Presto, all of a sudden your house would be a holodeck (minus the tactile feedback).

    DROOOooooooooooool.

  42. company mergers != products closer to reality by AugstWest · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Consolidation doesn't mean progress is happening, or that consumer products will make it to store shelves, nor does the fact that they're making very cool, very usable products. History is littered with companies that were about to produce amazing things that never came to fruition and imploded.

    What consolidation often means is that noone is investing in the idea, or that one of the companies couldn't survive long enough to get an actual product out the door.

  43. Totally off topic by caudron · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It is not "CNN are" it is "CNN is"! Who started that antigrammatical fad anyway? More importantly, when will it die. Not to be the Grammar Police, but that particular incorrect conjugation seems to be catching on.

    Now go ahead and mod me down as flamebait. I won't hold it against you. :)

    --
    -Tom
    1. Re:Totally off topic by rco3 · · Score: 1

      Wow, man, I'd be impressed except for one thing.

      It's neither wrong nor a fad.

      Why isn't there a -1, Just Plain Wrong mod option?

      --

      Ce n'est pas un vrai mouvement de robot!
    2. Re:Totally off topic by caudron · · Score: 1

      CNN is singular. That requires a verb conjugated in the singular to compliment it. The conjugation of "be" in the 3rd person singular is "is", whereas the conjugation of "be" in the 3rd person plural is "are"; As in "They are" or "It is". CNN is an It, not a They. Contrary to what some people may believe, CNN isn't a plural noun. It's a single noun requiring a singular verb. It is simply incorrect to say "CNN are corporate entities." It is correct to say "CNN is a corporate entity."

      This mistake seems to be driven by the misunderstanding that a corporation or group is plural. It is not. Ask your English teacher, Professor, Mom, Swami, HR Director, or Priest and they will give you the same answer I am. The grammar in that post is wrong and it is a very recent fad at slashdot.

      Read a newspaper or a book written by a real author sometime and ask yourself why they don't do it the way you seem to think they should.

      Again, not trying to get all Grammar perfect on anyone. I don't care if someone makes a mistake in typing (heck, I probably mistyped in this very message somewhere!) or even if someone legitmately doesn't know the right grammar/spelling rule, but in this case, this particular error seems to be gaining popularity, so I'm saying something.

      --
      -Tom
    3. Re:Totally off topic by program21 · · Score: 1

      Except he's right. While CNN consists of a whole lot of people, the organization is only one thing, therefore the singular 'is' should be used, as opposed to the plural 'are'.
      If it was "CNN reporters are..." that would be right.

      --
      This has been a test. Had this been a real emergency, we would have fled in terror and you would not have been informed.
    4. Re:Totally off topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry I can't mod you up as I'm just an AC.
      I'm glad to see someone else noticed this.

      Funny how something as stupid a bad verb conjugation spreads like a disease.

      I think it was a Seinfeld episode where the nice looking girl made a word up for an article and people started using it. Eventually it was being used on the evening news. Same concept here. One idiot does something stupid and other idiots follow like sheep.

  44. Re:Razors? Razors? We don't need no stinkin' Razor by pVoid · · Score: 1
    it's conceivable that the razor manufacturers would like to do something more complex

    Battery Life: 2 hours remaining

    Blade Life: 28 yards of cutting remaining

    hair thickness: .492mm

    Keratin density: 28%

    Minerals - Iron: 4 ppcc

    Warning! Mr. Smith, we recommend you take some iron suplements.

  45. Pr0n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Roll up pr0n!!! Sign me up!

    Wooohoooooo!

  46. Fahrenheit 451 by theCat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I notice that the /. crowd has already taken up the call for wall-sized monitors. I hasten to direct anyone with such notions to the Ray Bradbury classic "Fahrenheit 451". It is a disturbing work on many levels, and you can Google a lot of analytical treatments of the themes in the book.

    Particular to the current thread, in the book there are wall-sized display devices used in the predictable fashion; not to view above the sky full of live stars or weather a la Hogwarts in Harry Potter (which sounds delightful) but to take a small room and create a large, totally synthetic environment with an extended synthespian family, all via subscription service. And there you sit all day, listening to their dramatic, interesting lives while your own dull, wasted existance drains away. So if you like, views into a crafted world with fake people, custom made for unneeded people. Homeowners in the book measure themselves successful based on how many walls they own; four walls is just enough.

    Entertainment is emmersive enough. Do we really want to be flood with non-reality? Or Unreal Tourny, for that matter? The stars overhead sound good, and so does an "invisible wall" that projects an outside view of your backyard, or anywhere else in the world for that matter (the crater of an active volacanoe sounds nice!) But that's NOT where this is headed, you know. People historically ignore nature and real people and embrace entertainment instead.

    --
    =^..^= all your rodent are belong to us
    1. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 2

      This is already happening - and what funny is that when I mentioned this to some people i know - they totally disagreed and couldnt believe that I was saying what I was saying.

      It was with regards to the show the "osbournes"

      I was asked by some co-worker if I watched it. I said hell no - and I cant believe that anyone would watch that crap. If you watch it for more than 5 minutes it makes you feel like the biggest fscking loser alive. Why waste my time watching some complete fscking moron who cant even manage to open a packaged DVD, sit in his huge house making 20 million for doing nothing but being his lame ass washed up self - all the while my valuable time and life tick away must-see after must-see moment on the tube.

      Anyone who watches any of these "reality" shows should take not and take a look at what the real reality is.

      The reality is that you are letting you life tick away while you watch other people live thier lives - and you waste your precious life and time doing absolutely nothing but rot.

      Kill your TV!

    2. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by koreth · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Burn your books while you're at it -- you could be out doing something rather than sitting on your ass reading about it.

      And if your friend starts to tell you about his day at work... what are you doing standing there idle while he yammers? Life is too short to waste time listening to other people go on about their banal, petty little lives.

      People who want to waste time winding down rather than accomplishing something useful every second of their lives are all losers who deserve to be ridiculed and belittled.

      Kill your campfire storyteller!

    3. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I can believe you are saying what you're saying, but I still disagree. I see the Osbournes as several things. Part of the show illustrates how "rich and famous" people have some of the same exact problems that us proles do (family problems, can't get the damn vcr to stop blinking 12:00, etc.). Of course Ozzy's reaction to these problems is always outrageous which leads to the second part: the show is meant to be humour! It's not meant to be something where you tune in just to see how these people live.. but the things they do are funny, which makes the show (to me) a comedy. Now you can go off on comedy all you want, but it's been around since Ancient Greece (of course in different forms).. so I don't think it can be all that bad of a thing. ...and if your time is so precious that you can't take 30 minutes to laugh a little, I think it is you who has to examine the priorities in their life.

    4. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by LordNimon · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      If you watch it for more than 5 minutes it makes you feel like the biggest fscking loser alive.

      Actually, after watching that show for 5 minutes, I thought the Osbournes were the biggest fscking losers alive. Especially Jack. Oh my god.

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    5. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 2

      HEHEHE - ok so maybe I sounded a little extreme there.

      I just really dont like the osbournes/real world/big brother/survivor type shows at all.

      They make me feel ill....

      but yes as the other poster says - some of it is funny - I just prefer not to watch any of those shows at all.

      but I agree Down with the campfire story teller!!

    6. Re:Fahrenheit 451 by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

      The difference is that you actually interact with your coworkers. Your friends change you and you change them. The osbournes on the other hand...that's not enlightening (like a bokk or a conversation can be), informative (except to show that yes, you haven't met the biggest idiots in tyhe world yet) or even interesting. It's scary, especially when you consider they actually get paid for that crap.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  47. Scary........ by Dragon213 · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else see a comparison between this technology and the "telescreens" in 1984??

    Call me paranoid, but suddenly, the words "Big Brother is Watching You" keep spinning through my mind.....

    --
    --CypherDragon
  48. Eleventh verse, same as the first by sh00z · · Score: 1

    The magical "five years to market saturation" phrase has been quoted since oh, about 1993. There's nothing new here, people. Please go about your business.

  49. what "more"? by fortunatus · · Score: 1
    who said you could find out "more" at http://www.cdtltd.co.uk/


    what a lousy site! i couldn't find much at all...

  50. I don't know about these roll-up monitors... by goldspider · · Score: 1

    ...I'm still kinda fond of the rigid kind that can stand up on their own.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  51. Re:Sweet! - Holodecs by Provocateur · · Score: 1

    ...and suddenly all those sci-fi movies featuring big fat CRTs suddenly became rather...dated.

    To the firms making them: please donate one to John Carmack, so he can forget about rocketry and go back to rocket launchers :-)

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  52. The Printer is Gorgeous by NeuroManson · · Score: 4, Interesting

    After visiting the Litrix website, I'm impressed by the sheer scale of the hardware involved with making the displays. For an adequate comparison, imagine two 2-drawer filing cabinets side by side. This means something spectacular; Anyone who can purchase the machinery can produce a display, and due to the sheer size, can even produce displays in a store front setting under their own brand stamping.

    This opens up a huge boon to the small computer retailer. Want to sell displays? Print 'em! Save a bundle on the costs of shipping heavy glass CRTs, and the risk of shipping fragile TFT displays.

    Due to pre and post printing processes, the likelihood of being able to "print your own" display are slim, since more than likely you still would need to test the leads to the polymer substrate, calibrate the individual displays, test for bad pixels, and laminate the whole pile together. In other words, don't expect to save a bundle by buying the fabrication hardware and doing it yourself, at least not until Avery or some other mainstream paper manufacturer comes out with a "EZ LEP" package, complete with inks you could only use once (logically, by the time the display dies, the ink cart will be dried out).

    Still, this does a good deal for both online retailers and brick and mortar shops, and opens up a world of possibilities.

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  53. Annotating by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But an electronic book means that you can search the entire text for a phrase. And not only would a proper one allow you to write in the margins, but it would be able to index your annotations.

    Do you really need to dog-ear the pages if you can simply do a search on the book for everywhere you wrote 'cool quote'?

    --
    Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
    1. Re:Annotating by 3Bees · · Score: 1
      Do you really need to dog-ear the pages if you can simply do a search on the book for everywhere you wrote 'cool quote'

      Or, to continue off the wall speculation, just underline the section (touch screen, or stylus) and draw up a page with all of the underlined sections together. Add the ability to make notes, etc and attatch them to the section and this becomes a primo study aid. I wish that I could hit a button and get a page or two of all the notes that I've made in the margins of many books (seperately, or together...hmmm cross inexing...)!!!

      --
      "I think we should tax people who stand in water! " - Mr. Gumby
  54. it's a little real already by fortunatus · · Score: 1
    my work-mate here has a cell phone with "Organic LED display." i put that in quotes because that's what the cell phone says on it, i've not done any research to be sure they mean what they say.


    anyway, it has BRIGHT blue display... i thought it was vacuum florescent when i first saw it.

    1. Re:it's a little real already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (me again: same Anonymous Coward as the grandparent post)
      Yup, point taken; I'm aware of the fact that they're making mobile phone displays using this technique. My original comment could have been more specific - my point is that a 1" square monochrome (or even colour - have they got that yet?) display is a far cry from a 15" or larger full-colour display. And yet I've seen a re-run of the "CDT working on full-size displays" story a dozen times over the last couple of years.
      Hmm..

    2. Re:it's a little real already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a few 15" full colour OLED displays in existance, but they not for sale. (Though I saw a quote from one lab, after a journalist asked how she could get one: "Well, two million dollars would be a start...")

  55. hear, hear! by tps12 · · Score: 2

    While I don't expect you to find much support for this idea on Slashdot, I agree completely. Technology will always advance, and the TV you buy to replace your current one when it craps out will doubtlessly be marginally better than today's state-of-the-art. You might even have a wristwatch communicator in a couple years.

    But, really, who cares? People still cry. Children go hungry and cold. Murderers roam free, friends betray, dictators massacre. If you want to take a selfish point of view, then consider whether a roll-up monitor will keep you warm as a lover's arms can. There is no love in stuff. Just stuff.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:hear, hear! by Morky · · Score: 1

      Exactly. My CRT keeps me just as warm as my lover's arms. No way could a cold OLED do that.

  56. I can see it now by discHead · · Score: 1

    Disgruntled employee turns boss's workstation into "paper" airplane.

  57. prior art by YaRness · · Score: 1

    fahrenheit 451, was the interactive show the wife was using specified to be on TV screens or something more similar to a picture window?

    1. Re:prior art by default+luser · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe they were walls. She actually complained to him because he wouldn't spring to have all 4 walls covered, she was stuck with 3.

      But really, the concept of overconnectedness can truely be traced back to 1984, and the telescreens.

      --

      Man is the animal that laughs.
      And occasionally whores for Karma.

  58. I'm sure they'll be at Wal-Mart next week. by rayd75 · · Score: 1

    "CNN are covering the merger of two of the leading companies in the field of OLEDs. This brings the dream of flexible plastic monitors and TVs a step closer to fruition."

    Yeah, nothing speeds up development cycles like reducing the number of competitors.

  59. Merger + Patents = Monopoly = Evil by falser · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Okay, full stop. Slashdot is the main spokesite against patents, digital rights, monopolies, and generally all the bad side effects of big business and capitalism. So now this news about 2 major players in a developing industry sector is heralded as a positive thing? I don't get it. Sure it's a free country and you can pick your philosophies, but it's just not right to change them at will depending on whether it's Monday or not.

    1. Re:Merger + Patents = Monopoly = Evil by hfastedge · · Score: 0
      Okay, full stop. Slashdot is the main spokesite against patents, digital rights, monopolies, and generally all the bad side effects of big business and capitalism. So now this news about 2 major players in a developing industry sector is heralded as a positive thing? I don't get it. Sure it's a free country and you can pick your philosophies, but it's just not right to change them at will depending on whether it's Monday or not.
      Slashdot has no opinion. And u are being shot down for thinking it should.
      --

      -- -- --

      Help my mini cause: My journal

    2. Re:Merger + Patents = Monopoly = Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So basically your point is that Slashdot should not publish links to articles which do not promote your Communist pro-Linux agenda?

  60. This idea is old hat by hfastedge · · Score: 1, Informative

    Since 1975 a researcher at Xerox has had the idea of *some* form of paper-thin rendering device.

    Over the years, and until I heard of this article, there were two main labs with two different approaches.

    One is a shootoff from xerox. It uses microbeads with a different color on each side, and voltage to rotate them. www.gyriconmedia.com. This company has been in production mode for a year now, and has just built a massive new factory. It will be the initial leader. It only has 2 color versions right now, but more stuff in the works.

    The other effort has been at MIT using a process spawned off of the lab technique electrophoresis. These displays seem to be more refreshable (eg ive seen a movie playing off on). http://www.eink.com/

    So thats that, old hat.

    --

    -- -- --

    Help my mini cause: My journal

  61. boy oh boy oh boy!! by 3-State+Bit · · Score: 2
    "Flexible plastic monitors and TVs"!!!
    Do you know what I would do with a flexible plastic monitor? Here's my top ten list:
    1. Roll it up like a newspaper and hit you upside the head with it! Endless fun for the whole family.
    2. Attempt to tack it to my wall, because the damn thing keeps draping over itself. The result is mild electrocution, and a non-working flexible plastic TV / monitor.
    3. Jury-rig a make-shift laptop by rubber cementing the flexible plastic monitor to a folded cardboard box, gluing a small-form keyboard to the other folded half. The monitor and keyboard lines recede into a large briefcase I carry with me.
    4. Laminate several flexible plastic TVs into one large tablecloth. Tired of the same old design? Downloadable "themes" allow for endless variety in your dining experience!
    5. Rig my pirate ship with flexible plastic TVs instead of pirate flags -- then, I can change to "friendly" colors (for the purposes of dupement) without having to re-rig. Added bonus: the looks on people's faces is even more astounding when all our flags suddenly "morph" into that scary-looking pirate thing than it is usually, after we board and hand out business cards.
    6. Affix flexible plastic monitors back-to-back, fold the whole mess over itself to creat four pages (two physical pages), and bind a bunch of these monstrosities, with some smart software, into the next Killer Application. Peddle outside cafes and bookshops.
    7. Because flexible plastic monitors are light-weight, and because, like LCD's, they're "always-on", as opposed to each pixel being on only for an instant, you can create a row of flexible plastic monitors along the diameter of a "huge spinning thing" (details proprietary), and, with creative software and timing, get your effective screen size increaesd by a factor of pi, impressing geeks everywhere in the process. (Also, there's money in it, if you set up the web site you make about it to go into "banner-mode" whenever the slashdotting starts to rev up.)
    8. Get an MIT scientist with too much time on her hands or his to design for you a saddle-shaped form factor such that when your flexible plastic monitor is pressed into the shape, it creates an area directly in front of the opening (occupied by the horse on an actual horse saddle) from which each eye sees a disjoint set of pixels on the screen. (Some pixels on the "other" side will be visible, but from an angle in which they don't really emit light.) Design clever software, or find an overeager MIT grad student to design for you clever software, to take advantage of this unique form to create breathtaking 3D effects. Extra points for eye-tracking and on-the-fly adjustment to the precise location of your head, so that you can view the 3D worlds within the saddle from a range of angles. Make millions. (That's step 3; step 2 is a patent-pending business plan, currently trade secret.)
    9. After mastering origami, astound the world by solving NP-hard problems in topology in linear time. Disappoint the world again by telling them that you can't actually see the answer, but it's in there. (Astound them again by telling them that there is, however, free ice cream for everyone! etc[1])
    10. Be a travelling slashbot, regaling slashdotters the world over with your wit and humor. Accrue mod points for fun and profit. Then, spend it all on flexible plastic monitors or TVs, plastering a spare room with them until you have your very own holodeck! (special glasses required; no other objects may be present.)

    And remember -- the suggestions above are just the beginning -- with your own flexible plastic monitor or TV the possibilities are endless!

    Enjoy responsibly!!!

    [1] but the ice cream is poisoned (that's bad). But it comes with your choice of free toppings! (that's good) the toppings are also poisoned. (that's bad.)
    1. Re:boy oh boy oh boy!! by Cyn · · Score: 1

      Re:[1]
      I believe the toppings were cursed, or the ice cream was cursed and the toppings were poisoned. My coworker is a S buff, so he'd be the logical choice to verify this, but in his name I question the full accuracy of your statement blah blah blah

      nice ideas though, too bad I don't have any mod points... yer at 2, you'll do alright I'm sure. [3-4 by archive at least]

      --
      cyn, free software and *nix operating systems enthusiast.
  62. Why voice control? by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

    The Apple guys then asked us what was the missing link preventing anyone from producing the contraption. The answer: "folding glass." Of course, we know now (and probably did then, just we didn't want to admit it) that the CPU's and graphics processors of the time would have choked on the OS needed to pull off the magic.

    What I don't understand is why people think controlling your computer by talking to it is a good idea. Information transfer is more precise and (often) faster via keyboard (and that's ignoring mouse-based tasks that have no easy verbal-command equivalents).

    Even on a PDA, I have a hard time believing that verbal commands are faster than stylus gestures. Perhaps as a very limited set of shortcuts...

    Remember when touch-screens were going to be the new thing in input devices for desktop computers? Remember how ergonomics rapidly ripped that idea to shreds? Same deal. Use input modes only where they make sense.

    [Another ObNitpick: They should have worried more about speech recognition, which is still only a partly-solved problem. A pair of rigid screens is an adequate, if annoying, solution to the folding problem.]

    [Last ObNitpick: Good luck getting any computer that's not sapient to understand and appropriately react to naturally-spoken English, as opposed to rigidly defined commands.]

    1. Re:Why voice control? by sco08y · · Score: 1

      I think the advantage of voice control is *not* for PC but for a special purpose system.

      Voice control is advantageous when you don't have a desk to put the keyboard on and when the system needs to handle a few simple tasks. Using biometrics it can provide a modest amount of security. (Though I'd prefer to have a smartcard.)

      The real reason it hasn't caught on is that there's still no good way of integrating these appliances with PCs. I'm pessimistic about that because XML is actually a step backwards.

  63. Don't believe the hype by airrage · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wow. With headlines like "Roll-up TV screens to hit living rooms" and "This brings the dream of flexible plastic monitors and TVs a step closer to fruition", you'd think that these are ready to be rolled off the shelf. Actually, it doesn't. It simply means that instead of fighting with each other, they'll now work together and thus hopefully save some money. However, imagine if you will, that betamax and vhs joined forces before the marketplace was well defined? Who would win? Exactly, it wouldn't matter because the winner would already be decided and we'd all have betamax players. So this is probably not seen as a good thing because a) these companies will no longer compete (something I'm sure all /.ers see as a negative) and b) they will carve up/patent this technology and innovation will stagnate (HDTV) and c) it will ripple to other technologies which may or may not rely on this in the future because they will have a stranglehold on the technology. Finally, when companies merge with similar products and or technologies, the resulting product-lines are often lowest-common denominators of the two. A little research and you'll find business history littered with just such examples.....

    --
    "This isn't a study in computer science, its a study in human behavior"
  64. The Register. by hopbine · · Score: 1

    The register also has this write up. http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/54/27807.html

    --
    Semper ubi sub ubi
  65. Thank GOD! by Greedo · · Score: 1

    The two companies hope to blend their technologies to improve the lifetime of the dendrimers.

    Soon I will finally see all the contributions I've made to the "Save the Dendrimer Society" and "Dendrimers Unlimited" pay off.

    --
    Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
  66. Whoa! by tlambert · · Score: 2

    Whoa!

    To hell with folding laptop monitors!

    With this, you could make electric silly-putty!

    -- Terry

  67. Super Sweet! by scotch · · Score: 2

    Finally, I'll be able to shove porn down my pants!!! Super-sweet!!

    --
    XML causes global warming.
  68. Re:COOL - You mean... by freeze128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You mean this:

    Takes out his pen. Opens it. Unrolls the OLED display inside. Connects it to the 15 LB desktop computer he was carrying. Watches some mpegs.

    The computer technology is still bulky. You still need a power source to run it on. If you want fast internet access, you need a wire. Want to type a quick email? You still need a keyboard!
    The future is when ALL of these needs are eliminated.

  69. Not likely... by PseudoThink · · Score: 3, Informative

    Some things I learned about displays in Psych 342 at Cornell: Display quality can be primarily measured by luminence, resolution, refresh rate, color gamut, and contrast ratio. While it is relatively easy to produce the necessary refresh rate to fool the human eye and display resolution is improving (also depends on how far from display you are), the rest are hard. DLP probably does the best job of current displays, and it maxes out at about 1000:1 contrast ratio, but it doesn't really count since it operates by reflecting light, and this thread is about flat-panel displays. I forget the exact values for daylight-level luminence and contrast ratio, but they are at least two orders of magnitude larger than what is currently available in CRTs or LCDs.

  70. The Sims by Aexia · · Score: 2

    but to take a small room and create a large, totally synthetic environment with an extended synthespian family, all via subscription service. And there you sit all day, listening to their dramatic, interesting lives while your own dull, wasted existance drains away.

    It'd be an interesting exercise with the Sims. Watch them walk around and interact with each other... see sims from the neighbour's house come over.

  71. You CAN wait for your lightweight laptop... by gsfprez · · Score: 3, Informative

    you've been doing it for over 5 years now..

    or did you all miss the fact that their first press release - which reads amazingly similar to their latest ones (without the patent listings) came out in 1997?

    http://www.universaldisplay.com/newsroom.php?pr= 19 97-08-05

    until i can buy a monitor based on this technology, i'm putting it up there with 10 GB sugarcube sized holoraphic memory, a actual Windows/Mac desktop-replacement Linux, and 3G.

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
  72. Re:Super Sweet! by t0qer · · Score: 2

    Dude I can fit a 21inch CRT in my pants with all the weight loss from being laid off :P

  73. technical explanation of a "Predator Suit" by SHEENmaster · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A "predator suit" would need to reflect differently to different angles, which no pixel system can do.

    You could use some form of sensor ($5 webcam mounted on a helmet) to detect the location of a single viewer and match the image to their location based upon the current shape of the suit, but you couldn't match the image to more than one viewpoint with this technology.

    Adjusting the image to account for viewer focus would be another design consideration.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:technical explanation of a "Predator Suit" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee thanks. Always helpful to have somebody like you come along and explain things. Your rad solutions are a bonus.

      Again, really appreciate it.

      Off you go now, I think there is a group of kids who need to know Santa's not real.

      Again, thanks............

    2. Re:technical explanation of a "Predator Suit" by spike+hay · · Score: 2

      You could use some form of sensor ($5 webcam mounted on a helmet) to detect the location of a single viewer and match the image to their location based upon the current shape of the suit, but you couldn't match the image to more than one viewpoint with this technology.

      Holographic displays have been developed. (Shitty ones, anyway) But to render a panoramic 3d image around your whole body would take more computing power than Deep Blue. (Note: I'm not talking about the 3d monitors that are available now. This is true 3d which changes perspective as you change your angle.)

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    3. Re:technical explanation of a "Predator Suit" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Santa's not real?

  74. Better videos by _bug_ · · Score: 1

    UD's video directory has file listing enabled. So point your browser over to http://www.universaldisplay.com/video/ and look through the other videos displaying this tech inaction.

    There's only two videos, with copies available in varying size.

    The video not linked from the site is http://www.universaldisplay.com/video/foled99.rm and shows a larger animation being displayed. However the demo-er doesn't twist or bend the display much to really show off its flexibility.

  75. Why is lifetime of screens important? Replace em! by gsfprez · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If a screen only lasts a year or two with the current OLED technology, why is that a big deal?

    Make the screens replaceable. I mean, this technology makes it sound like they're pretty cheap to make since they are built using a modified (granted, more complex) inkjet technolgy. You've also now got a whole new after-market for laptop screens.

    Don't need super-hgh rez - get a cheaper one.

    Want to have a tri-fold-out screen at the office, and a lighter, energy efficient one for on the plane?

    So what if the screen goes out if you can just buy a new screen for a few benjamins?

    If i could get a lot more battery life, have a much more rugged screen, and it was mch brighter - i'd pay $200 for a newer screen(with higher rez, of course) every year and a half.

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
  76. I really loathe LCDs, will I like OLED displays? by boredman · · Score: 1

    LCDs are hideous. Even the ultra high-end ones suffer from the same problems: poor viewing angles, inconsistent color rendition w.r.t. viewing angle, high pixel response times, and poor dynamic range. Nothing I've seen can, as yet, touch a well-built CRT.

    With that said, can I expect OLED displays to address these issues, or will I be lugging around my CRT well into the mid 2030s?

    -boredman

  77. LAN Parties by miketang16 · · Score: 0

    These would be a dream for LAN parties... F*** the flat screens, just grab your monitor, and roll it up!

    --
    -------
    "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
    -- George Orwell
  78. Re:Super Sweet! by scotch · · Score: 1
    I've been unemployed so long I keep an entire microvax in my pants, which is apprpriate since that's the last platform I programmed on. I'm thinking of updatin my resume with a beowolf cluster in my pants.

    --
    XML causes global warming.
  79. Heck With Rollup by Gadgetmeister · · Score: 1

    I don't care about rollup at the moment. How about a plain old piece of 5' by 2.8' glass with my HDTV/monitor printed on the back? I want it now! :)

    GM

  80. OLED clothing? by DickBreath · · Score: 2

    This sounds almost like it could be incorporated into clothing.

    Great business idea: instead of logo'ed clothing, how about clothing with annoying flashing, pulsating, scrolling advertisements on the back and front!

    --

    I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
  81. OLED clothes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  82. Re:Why is lifetime of screens important? Replace e by terraformer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Where do you propose the old ones go? At least with CRT the environmental nightmare is on a ~5 year life-cycle. With this it may be just as toxic (not to mention the mfg process used) but it would be on a much faster life-cycle.

    --
    Who are you? The new #2 Who is #1? You are #617565. I am not a number, I am a free man! Muhahaha.
  83. Capitalism by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Oh, so Capitalism only works when you're not scrapping for cash.

  84. American English vs British English by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Americans consider corporations single entities, while Britain considers them collective, or something like that. Actually it may not be a language issue but a mentality issue.

  85. But... does it come in a by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    wrinkle free version?

  86. Re:How soon? ..... EL Panels Now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EL technology has been made that can be put on a shirt with a little care. It can be animated pretty well. It isnt dynamic, but it is a good indicator of things to come.
    http://www.exoticlights.com follow the link for the Linux lamp.

  87. It won't be long before we see people imatating... by cmdrwhitewolf · · Score: 3, Funny

    The road runner and using this to plaster a fake image of a tunnel enterance over a some brick wall, in hopes that some poor schelp will try running through it...

    (And it'll probably be a terrorist too!)

    --
    [Now, I'm off to lift my le... Um, visit... at another place.]
  88. Re:Dream?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And how about the new factory to build these things? (Probably in China were the toxic effluents can just be dumped into the nearest river! Hey, if it doesn't pollute *your* backyard, it's 'green', right?) And all the universities (ie cults) that need to be in existence to supply the steady stream of brainwashed techno-clones to design these things? And all the SUVs these overpaid bozos will drive to work everyday? (Nortel comes to mind. The [now empty] parking lot was like a showroom of North American excess)And the delivery infrastructure to get these toys to your home? And the SUV you probably drive to get it home? And all the computers you use to play useless video games with your new monitor?

    Everything is interconnected. Can't we all get along with the technology we have now? I now I can. Build good stuff that lasts for decades and costs 10 times more. THEN we can have responsible purchasing and manufacturing.

  89. Re:COOL - You mean... by glenstar · · Score: 2

    not if you had one of these babies!

  90. Re:Dream?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a pretty asinine comment. What do you think is building current CRT & LCD displays? The Monitor Fairy?

    I'll take my new monitor in a more landfill-friendly design thankyouverymuch.

  91. Who cares.. by SargeZT · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If we could make a better TV? We should atleast get 1/4 the quality of the picture into the programming. Lets take a look at the Chronology of Televison, Shall we? Old Shows - Honey Mooners, Lucy, Etc, all Hilarious and very well thought out shows. Then we goto Color, with the New Lucy Show, Etc... As we got color, the programming quality reduced to produce more gimmicky affects. Then we came to The 70-80's, where cable comes along somewhere. We get terrible 80's sitcoms like Webster and Small wonder. Then, HDTV, We get shows which have no plot, but the earlier counterparts were well thought out shows. Take enterprise, perhaps THE most overrated TV Show of all time, and even though it's overrated, people watch it. It's linear, the better the TV, the worse the shows. Here's a little equation. For each year TV Exists (N), and Shows on a scale from 1-100, We have n=100-n

    --
    And why did you staple the trout to the RAM?
  92. Robert Jordan? by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 1
    Did he say "Robert Jordan, a second semester junior, requesting a second extension on his term paper..."?



    Damn, that guy <A HREF=http://www.tor.com/sites/wheel_of_time/>Jorda n</A> just can't finish *anything* on time, can he?

  93. Will this mean roll up displays a la 'Red Planet"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The movie Red Planet had roll up displays like this. Now if I could only capture Val Kilmer's view of my favorite Lust Bunny, Carrie Ann Moss coming out of the shower on one I could roll it up and keep in a pocket...

  94. Don't hold your breath by Bozovision · · Score: 3, Insightful
    In September we (Cambridge Hi-Tech Association of Small Enterprises) had CDT talk to us. (CHASE is a club for people interested in technology and business and is based in Cambridge, UK. Come and visit the site, but not all at once.)

    The head of technology and strategic planning spoke. Despite the hype-ticle on CNN, it was clear from what he said that you shouldn't expect flexible displays any time soon - probably not inside 10 years. I don't get a T-shirt with space invaders on it any time soon. You can expect conformable displays within a few years - i.e. rigid, shaped screens. However it's likely that you will see other companies building these; CDT is an IP company. They hold fundamental patents on light emmiting polymers. They aren't just a holding company; they do develop technology, but their basic strategy is to licence to others. They will have bought Opsys to strengthen their patent portfolio.

    If you are currently building hardware that needs small mono screens you should definitely check out CDT. Their displays have superb characteristics - an almost 180 degree viewing angle, bright even in sunlight, and very low power requirements. The examples of the technology that he showed were very 'version 1.0', but show brilliant promise.

    Next CHASE meeting - 12 Nov - Invisible Networks are building community broadband networks in rural villages around Cambridge. Currently using 802.11.

    Jeff Veit
    www.tanasity.com and www.tangledtime.com

  95. merger? by russellh · · Score: 1

    A merger brings the dream closer?

    --
    must... stay... awake...
  96. Robert Jordan? by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 1
    (curse that preview thing)
    Did he say "Robert Jordan, a second semester junior, requesting a second extension on his term paper..."?

    Damn, that guy Jordan just can't finish anything on time, can he?

  97. At last ... by Mind+Socket · · Score: 3, Funny

    The good ol' days of the pr0n centerfold return.

    Never thought the pages of my monitor would get mysteriously "glued" together, but once again, technology has an answer.

  98. Oh, good... by kitzilla · · Score: 2

    ...a monitor I can roll up and put in my pocket. That will be SO much more convenient to carry around than a PDA, huh?

    "Is that a Pentium in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?"

    --
    This is my post. There are many others like it. If you don't like what you read here, go try one of the others.
  99. It's called British English by Ontotheological · · Score: 1

    Collective nouns in (British) English are plural. E.g., "my family are."

  100. Nutrition information from The Simpsons by ocie · · Score: 2

    Edna: You've cut back on everything: salaries, supplies, the food -- [takes a bite] -- I don't care what you say, I can taste the newspaper.

    Skinner: Posh. Shredded newspapers add much-needed ruffage and essential inks.

    --
    JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
  101. Re:Dream?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PLEASE!!! don't you see the 2 goals of the computer world right now??? SMALLER computer, and BIGGER monitor. if you can roll it up and take it with you then you get BOTH OF THEM!!! now only if they can get a touch screen to roll up with it... then the keyboard won't be a problem either.

  102. get the picture? by phallen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I can't help but notice that, in all the articles that I've seen on this over the past year, including the 3 links listed by /., there is not a single photo or computer-generated example of this so-called "roll-up TV".

    I'm suspiciouse of any physical product that get's this kind of press, but still cannot show some sort of demo, hell, even some FakeWare cardboard cutout or something! I mean, my God... it's a TV -- show it to me. You'd think if they were making real progress that they would be all over showing people the future, rather than talking about it.

    --
    If Slashdot is where the spelling-challenged go when they die, I'm in heaven.
  103. just like in "Lain"... by ultramk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    i was struck, when watching Lain for the first time, just how much the creators must have loved Scully-era Apple dreams of the future. ("Navi" stood for "Knowledge Navigator", and ran something futuristic called "Copland OS", i.e. what was going to be Apple's new modern OS before they canned the project and bought NExT, begetting OS X)

    The machines in Lain are surprisingly close to the newest Palm handhelds, and Copland OS looks a lot like OS X (ok, maybe a bit more 3-D).

    m-

    --
    You catch enchiladas by picking them up behind the head and holding them underwater until they don't kick anymore -VeGas
  104. Wow, I can roll my screen up! by rew · · Score: 2

    Ehmm. can anybody tell me why I would like to roll up my screen? My laptop has a big rigid part, and the screen fits right along the top. My worstation has a flat screen sitting on top of the desk. Now if the screen would be higher quality than either, I can see myself rolling it up and taking it home. But for me to be rolling up screens they have to be cheap. You don't just do that with an expensive screen, do you? But if they are cheap I'll just buy one for at home and one for at work.

    I just don't see a combination of cheap/expensive and usefulness that would make the "able to roll it up" feature essential.

    Now there are a bunch of geeky things you can do with a rolable screen. But that's just geeky. Nothing really very useful.

    If these things would become very, very cheap, then maybe. However, as they are going to have to have adressable pixels, you will have to have per-pixel electronics, and even when the price of those drops below 0.01 cents per pixel, you still want more than a million of them. And it's not pretty if there is a "dead" one. On a digital camera, you can map the dead pixels out. Nobody is going to notice. But on a screen there is not much you can do about a dead pixel.... Getting a million pixels "just right" is going to stay tricky and expensive.

    Roger.

    1. Re:Wow, I can roll my screen up! by Mac+Degger · · Score: 2

      Nothing usefull? What about my PDA? Ever try using an LCD screen in the sunlight (you know, that bigass lightbulb outside) ? Not pretty...it's either e-ink or oled which'll fix that.

      Also, what about wrap around workspaces? That's basically a monitor that spans your desk and curves...too expensive to do with solid screens. And of course there's all the other fun, as-of-yet unthought of stuff which will appear.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  105. road warriors by csguy314 · · Score: 1

    Roll up monitors and roll up keyboards together with a small pc like the cappuccino could make a pretty good on the go solution. Now all we need are some portable fuel cells for power to complete the picture...

    --
    This is left as an exercise for the reader.
  106. Re: Non-toxic OLEDs by ghutchis · · Score: 1

    Uh...

    OK, so I'll grant that most of the OLED devices I've seen at seminars and read about aren't horribly toxic. No lead, cadmium, or some of the other nasty stuff in your TV.

    But *you* eat the OLED. I think I'll stick to eating something with tried-and-true edibility.

    (Honestly, I doubt they're really "non-toxic" yet. Maybe they won't kill you outright immediately. Maybe someone *could* design a non-toxic one. But it'd be pretty inefficient.)

    Mmm.. Donuts.

    -Geoff

  107. Re:Next logical troll... by Bob+Vila's+Hammer · · Score: 1

    Hey, you could watch porn on your hand! Wait, um...maybe not.

    --


    --"The perfect example of the man of action is the suicide." - William Carlos Williams
  108. Or you could read the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which claims that they are both in competition with Kodak, "one of the pioneers of OLEDs."

    Now, I don't know much about the subject, and the article is scant on detail, but I do know that Kodak is a giant company, and these two are not. Joining forces means there's that much more chance they will actually survive to compete with Kodak, rather than Kodak cornering the entire market.

    So you're wrong, based on a sketchy knowledge of the situation gained by reading the entire linked article, I see these two companies not competing with each other as a very good thing.

  109. Re:Dream?!? by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

    Post-its.

    --
    -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  110. Re:Beta vs. VHS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, Betamax is of a better quality than VHS. If you go into professional TV stations and similar sites, you'll notice they never use VHS except for copying to distributable media. Why?

    Because Sony wanted royalties for each betamax film, which makes sense - it wasn't designed by a consortium to be a royalty-free medium. Since the cost of paying Sony would be too high and make Sony EXTREMELY rich, so JVC and several other companies came up with VHS in order to have a competitive product. It wasn't as good, no, but in the end it was cheaper to produce and sell. Sony's grip on the market weakened and pretty soon everyone had VHS players and not a Beta is in sight in peoples' homes these days.

  111. You won't believe it but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My first year chemistry professor last year knows one of the professors working on this at Cambridge. When he was visiting a few years ago his friend unrolled one and hooked it up so it could display a television signal. The friend apologized that it was in black and white.

  112. Heading 6-9 by Snover · · Score: 1
    But that's NOT where this is headed, you know
    Of course not. Everyone knows that these have to be massive porn displays before anyone else starts using them.
    --

    [insert witty comment here]
  113. Really large Sheets! by Durrik · · Score: 1

    Oh I really want a really large sheet that's touch sensitive. I can just see the possibilities.

    Get an Architectural sized E sized sheet and you got yourself the right size for almost any diagram. Make it touch sensitive and you can write notes on it, or even make corrections in the middle of meetings. Or even on a building sight. I don't care if it has a lousey refresh rate. 1 or 2 hertz woujld be perfect for this. The possibilities for coloboration and review are enormous. No longer do you have to print out E sized sheets, mark them up, send them back to the drafter and have him correct it. rinse, lather, repeat....

    Any type of diagrams/plans would be perfect for this type of item. Post your schedule on the wall, and when the big wigs change the schedule it gets updated automatically.

    But the really geeky thing. I'd love a battle map made of this, if it was touch sensitive. You'll be able to tell when a fireball will kill the PCs. You'll be able to figure out who has line of sight. All done with a computer who knows where everything is because the screen is touch sensitive. Hide part of the map, and as the PCs open up the door, reveal that map, no more waiting for the DM to redraw the map.

    Maybe I should stop now before I have wet dreams about this stuff.

    --
    Software Engineer & Writer of Military Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog: petermwright.com Twitter: WrightPeterM
  114. Seriously now ... by LoudMusic · · Score: 2

    When was the last time you said to yourself, "I would really like to roll up my display and carry it with me."

    Do we roll up paper work now? The only thing I can think of is newspapers and large prints that go through the mail. Everything is layed flat and secured as such.

    Now, covering a wall or ceiling in these things ... that's uber cool (: I've always wanted a wall that I could change the decore of on a regular and effortless basis (:

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  115. Computer made entirely of recycled paper by bobobobo · · Score: 1

    Dilbert can now pull this one off... http://www.dilbert.com/comics/dilbert/archive/dilb ert-20021012.html

  116. See also... Philips by asciimonster · · Score: 1

    Philips Natlab in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, has also put some work into this field. See this link

  117. I can see it now. by Sagz · · Score: 1

    A Starter Jacket that can display all the different NFL/NBA/NHL Team logos depending on who is winning that week.

    I can also see some guy walking down the street with a shirt that is displaying full action porn across the front of his chest and any grandma going by fainting.

    Would he get arrested for indecent exposure?

  118. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    Joshu: What is the true Way?
    Nansen: Every way is the true Way.
    J: Can I study it?
    N: The more you study, the further from the Way.
    J: If I don't study it, how can I know it?
    N: The Way does not belong to things seen: nor to things unseen.
    It does not belong to things known: nor to things unknown. Do
    not seek it, study it, or name it. To find yourself on it, open
    yourself as wide as the sky.

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...