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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."

8 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. frist psot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    yah

  2. FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Too slow bitches

  3. 713-559-1760 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Spammers!

  4. YOU ARE ALL TRENDY ELITIST FUCKS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    See subject.

  5. 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
  6. 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 Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

      The Anti-GPL Mindset FAQ v.00001

      1. The Free Market

      Freedom is a very important, albeit often misused, word. Freedom refers to the ability
      of a person to perform unhindered exchange with other people.

      Just as freedom does not mean the ability to do what you want, like punch your
      neighbor, it does not mean the ability to take whatever you want. People often
      confuse freedom as meaning unrestriction on action, where it actually means
      unrestriction on TRADE.

      The physical manifestation of freedom is the free market, where people have the
      option, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to exchange items with one another. These
      exchanges are not forced, which is why they are free. Both parties agree to the
      exchange.

      2. The GPL is legit

      This is not going to be a document which says the GPL is illegitmate and should go
      away. The GPL merely is a way for authors to ensure that their work is used as
      intended, negotiating a free exchange between the author and user.

      The problem is not the GPL, but the mindset and assumptions it has brought about
      regarding freedom and capitalism. The other problem is that it's generally
      assumed that there is an impossible rift between commercial and free software,
      scalable only by tech support, manuals, and service contracts. I won't settle
      for that.

      3. The Need for Money

      A large chunk of the Linux community has never written a line of code or contributed
      to the world of Linux whatsoever, aside from their misguided rantings on Slashdot.
      Despite their opinions, we are currently, thankfully, living in a free market society.
      The medium for exhange in this market is cash, as we've evolved beyond the barter
      system. With this in mind, the prominent way to obtain physical goods is to
      perform an exchange of value with others.

      Hence, for those of us not still living off of our parents, or who are unsatisfied
      working at Subway by day and exclusively using our programming talents for free at
      night, money is a necessity. Working on the latest build of GIMP is fun and exciting,
      especially if you have the physical goods you need provided for you by someone else,
      but it is impractical to exclusively exchange your work for source code through the
      GPL when you need to exchange some work for money as well to survive.

      4. Making Money is Not Evil

      It seems that a lot of people have fallen into the trap assuming that making money
      is inherently evil. They point to Bill Gates as an example.

      Though the ethics involved can be questionable, making money is not inherently evil.
      Why? Simple -- both parties involved in the exchange of money are doing so
      voluntarily. Don't like Microsoft? Don't buy their software. Don't like the fact
      that your car payments are so expensive? Don't drive. The reason freedom is such an
      important word is because it implies a lack of force. You are not FORCED to do anything
      you don't want to.

      People argue that a Microsoft monopoly provides no choice. The choice is simple: use
      Windows, or don't use Windows. If not using Windows means you have to settle for a
      lesser product, or no product, well, then maybe you understand why Microsoft has so much
      money :)

      People argue that not using Windows or having a car are impossible, but seem to forget
      that in reality the only reason they even have an opportunity to use these things are
      due to the creators who made them.

      5. What about source code?

      The commercial software model in the past has often neglected to include source code
      with their products. The reason for doing so is most likely because algorithms, techniques,
      or even the entire product itself could be re-branded by a competitor and sold on
      the free market as their own work.

      However, for most users who are not software houses looking to steal the work of
      others, source code can be a useful tool. An ideal system would:

      1. Allow software distributors to include their source code without fear of a
      competitor theft.

      2. Allow end-users to modify the software for their own needs.

      3. Allow these changes to be exchanged in the free market, with compensation being
      given to all parties involved in creating the current product. (The original
      developers, and the end users.)

      This surely strikes a chord in many people who are accustomed to repeating the
      axiom that the GPL is the "one true way" to freedom. The GPL makes source code
      available, overcoming point 1 and 2, but does so at the cost of allowing developers
      to participate in the outer free market. Some of us, believe it or not, would
      love to be able to have end users jump in, or jump in ourselves as end users,
      in developing our favorite products. However, we would not like to do so at the
      cost of our ability to eat.

      In other words, for those of us who want to develop software as a living, the
      most viable action to take is to work on GPL stuff as a hobby on the side and
      work by day for a traditional software developer. We don't want to get paid
      for tech support or "service," we want to get paid for our work on the code.
      Despite the cries of the masses, working on GPLed software 24 hours a day does
      nothing except make our computers work better and get us a few lines of praise
      in IRC.

      The challenge is twofold: 1) Getting people to evolve their mentality past the
      "GPL is always #1" axiom and 2) Developing a new methodology which allows these
      points above. It won't be easy, it might be impossible, but the first step, as
      with most mental deficiencies, is realizing that you have a problem.

      As a final analogy: Someone writes a 1200 page book over the course of two years.
      If they "GPL" the book, they exchange their two years of work and potential ability
      to trade it on the free market for the editing and updating ability of the masses.
      If they sell the book, they can exchange on the free market but they lose the
      publics' help. These are not the only options. If the public could be brought "on board"
      for writing an extra chapter here and there, being compensated accordingly,
      all parties could be satisifed in a different way if they do not want to sacrifice
      one thing for the other.

      6. Source code is just speech!

      Sure. And so are an architect's plans, a musician's written compositions, an author's
      well researched thesis, and an artist's latest painting. If you honestly think that
      someone's statement of "George Bush Sucks!" should be considered of the same moral value
      as a symphony, then you're beyond help.

      Source code is more than speech. One could argue that it's analagous to an architect's
      plans, but it's even more than that. Only if there were a universal house machine
      that could take an architect's arbitrary drawings and instantly turn them into a house
      would this be the case.

      Source code, for 99% intents and purposes, IS what it DOES. A 10 line "Hello World" program
      is not, and should not be considered, just a 10 line text document. It should be
      considered as an entity which prints out "Hello World." The source code to Microsoft
      Windows is not merely set of text files, but is an operating system.

      It amazes me that programmers can downplay their work so much as to categorize the 10
      lines of code they potentially spent weeks writing in the same category as the idiotic
      rantings of a drunkard: "speech."

      7. So why not just trade source code?

      This is what the GPL offers now. But, as stated above, there is potential for another
      alternative. No system exists which allows me, with peace of mind, to trade my source code,
      my hard work, for cash, both as the original developer or an end-user.

      8. But I cannot afford it!

      Such is life. You have a few alternatives. Don't use it. Work to earn it.
      Build your own alternative. Steal it and risk the consequences.

      In any case, don't dilusion yourself that you are somehow entitled to the work of others
      by the nature of its existence.

  7. 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