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LCD Screens Almost Paper-thin

DarklordSatin writes "Nature.com has an article up about new LCDs that are thin enough to roll up and can display black and white at 96 dpi. More coverage by Wired and Scientific American. Thanks go to Arstechnica for the heads up." Wow. Let the speculation for new uses begin! Update: 05/10 14:59 GMT by CN : Whoops, this is really a dupe of an older story that slipped through because I only searched for LCDs. Ah well, it's still cool.

4 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. Uses by brejc8 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Let the speculation for new uses begin!
    I always wanted to wallpaper my house with something that I could change at a flick of a swich.
    At night it would turn into little moons and stars.
    In the morning it would reflect what the weather is like.
    During the day I could watch tv or browse the web on any wall in the house.
    Or even implant cameras in the other rooms so it would look like you have see through walls.

    Ah well back to the reals world.

  2. A cool use... by Flounder · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Walls covered with these displays on the inside that can display anything. No need for windows, just make the displays show what's outside. The appearance of glass walls without the privacy issues. The only thing missing will be natural sunlight and opening a window for a breeze. But you can make any s**thole apartment seem to be a cabin in the woods, or beachfront property, or floating 150 miles above the planet's surface.

    --

    No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

  3. Why not an electronic newspaper? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sure, you can't fold it, but you could roll it up in to a 1" tube that contains batteries, communications, etc. Carry a 1-foot long 1" diameter tube that rolls out into a 19" screen. And it could be much smaller if you wanted.

    This would be perfect for "paperback" e-books. Even with the quarter-second refresh time on the screen it would acceptable for "turning the page". Or you could produce a book of the screens, and have the pages fill in with whatever you are reading.

    How about electronic blueprints? Dynamic wall art that you can move around easily? Status displays on pillars in the airport?

    If they can reduce the refresh time it would be incredible. Imagine a roll-up 19" screen for crowded server closets.

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
  4. My Use for This... by naelurec · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am a musician (pianist) ... Currently I play at a church and for each service, I have to pull music from 5 different books + sheet music, etc..etc..

    Needless to say, first, its a pain to carry around those books with me, flipping through them during a service, finding particular songs, etc...

    So back in 1999 when I bought my Visor Deluxe PDA, I thought it would be cool to scan in all of that sheet music and have the PDA hooked up to some e-paper sheets (probably two of them) and then use a foot switch to "turn the pages" ..

    The setup would be very cool, small and portable. Before a service, I'd simply download the lineup into the system and everything would be ready to go. No carrying around the books, no page flipping, etc.. Heck .. given the way I play the piano (music laying flat on top of the piano), it could possibly make it look like I memorized all the music to the congregation :-)

    Of course, I heard about e-paper back then as well.. and so far, no products.. so by the time it *IS* released, i might already use something like a tablet PC ....