Transparent Screens on the Horizon?
mhesseltine writes "According to United Press, researchers in Japan are developing transparent transistors. This could bring about see-through screens like those in Minority Report. Also, I imagine would be better heads-up displays (HUDs) for vehicles, layered flat panel displays, and new methods of interfacing with information screens."
I can surf pr0n while driving!
Cause just talking on my cellphone, drinking coffee and eating a donut weren't distracting enough...
...on the horizon? I'll definitely need to invest in some binoculars.
I've got enough trouble seeing the opaque monitor on my desk.
Finally I will be able to get rid of that CRT taped to my windshield.
I actually think it'd be hard to see a full colour image behind a HUD type display. The colours in the background would blend with the colours in the HUD display. That's why HUDs always use monocrome green.
But I can see right through this little transparent scheme.
Vonal Declosion
I would hope the editors would try and be a little less transparent.
I swear, sometimes I feel invisible around here.
So a blue screen of death while driving would block your vision while you careen into a wall, and really die. Cool!
But how would you set the alpha channel?
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
how in the hell am i supposed to pick my nose at work?
By embedding reflective but transprent phosphors and other chemicals/compounds into plexiglass or glass one can project images onto that glass with a normal projector.
I did this as an experiment just after Minority Report using a tiny xb31 HP projector and plexiglass. Gives a really neat effect - just need low light / dark room (also as in Minority report)
Although the layered screens i suppose couldn't be done this way.
Yell & scream & rant & rave... it's no use... you need a shaaaave ~ Bugs Bunny
This is already possible with one-way mirrors reflecting the screen, but one-way transparent screens would make it easier.
Instead of having the camera at the top of the screen and looking back and forth, put it directly behind the middle of the screen, about 2/3 of the way up. Or have smart software that would track where the other person's eyes are and put the camera between their eyes so you could look directly at them.
I believe that this is a big factor in why videoconferencing always "feels strange" and perhaps part of why it hasn't caught on.
Am I the only one who would put something solid behind the transparent screen so I wasn't distracted by the stuff behind it? People walking around back there, maybe the dog running through my documents...it'd tick me off pretty quick.
That may just be me though...
Now I don't have to waste valuable CPU cycles on creating a wallpaper.. I can just put real wall paper behind my display.
Heh, first thing that came to mind in that scene was, "Hey, Zion runs on Macs".
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
Look through this
There's a show going in Baltimore this week that has other vendors of this sort of technology too.
For regular computer display purposes, a transparent screen doesn't seem terribly useful, due to contrast and "visual noise" interference from whatever is behind the screen (mitigated a bit if the screen is frosted).
Still, there's plenty of possible applications for this:
## W.Finlay McWalter ## http://www.mcwalter.org ##
Sheesh. Remind me to never carpool with you.
If you open yourself to the foo, You and foo become one.