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First Dual-emission OLED Display in a Phone

roc_face writes "Japanese electronics joint-venture company ELDis has come up with the world's first dual-emission organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display for a mobile phone. This means the screen can be viewed from both sides. It was on display at the annual Flat Panel Display exposition in Tokyo this week."

27 of 101 comments (clear)

  1. Yarr by Leffe · · Score: 4, Funny
    Dual-emission OLED Display
    Oh my, lots of technical words :) I suspect that I'm a little after in technology. I haven't even got a cell phone :p
  2. Short article by pldms · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Am I missing something? The /. summary is almost as long as the article itself.

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  3. hang on... by tiled_rainbows · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wouldn't that mean that all the text on one side of the screen would come out backwards?
    How useful is that?

    1. Re:hang on... by AllenChristopher · · Score: 4, Informative
      Well, if the phone is closed, then the image flips around. Say for caller id, or an e-mail that's come in which can be navigated with a jog dial.

      It seems like a much better solution than those slide-out keypads on something like the Sidekick. A hinge is an easier mechanism to work with.

    2. Re:hang on... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2, Informative

      The phone would just reverse the text when you close the flip-top cover. This technology allows you to replace the two screens that some phones have (one of each side of the flip-top, with the outside one showing caller id and such) with one screen. Simpler & cheaper.

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  4. Cool by jorleif · · Score: 4, Funny

    Cool, with this device and a mirror I will be able to watch two screens showing the same image at the same time.

    Seriously though, it will make it very hard to hide from your friends what a lousy nibbles player you are.

    1. Re:Cool by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 5, Funny

      !won thgir sgniht eseht fo eno htiw todhsals ot gnitsop m'I

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  5. I don't know if I should call it cool or useless. by mikeophile · · Score: 5, Funny
    I'm sure there are better uses for this tech than cell phones.

    It's all fun and games until your signifigant other sends you some homemade porn during a business meeting.

  6. Applications by ubera · · Score: 5, Informative

    It strikes me that this has a number of great applications, above mobile phone use.

    How about Roadside Signs which are readable on both sides?
    (for that "I wonder what exit I just missed feeling)

    Also, laptop displays that can be viewed on one side while an over head projector reads the other?

    I like this tech. Anyone got any numbers for brightness and power consumption?

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    1. Re:Applications by mikeophile · · Score: 4, Insightful
      With a bigger version of this kind of screen, you could play a proper game of Connect Four.

      It might be adopted pretty quickly by the military though. It would be a great upgrade to those plexiglass tactical map displays you see in every modern submarine movie.

    2. Re:Applications by G-funk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about Roadside Signs which are readable on both sides?

      Or they could just mount another piece of metal on the other side of the poles... I wonder which would be cheaper?

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    3. Re:Applications by sleeper0 · · Score: 2, Informative

      i dont think they'd use it for street signs wouldnt one side always be shown in reverse?

      It seems to me that you would use this tech on those pda's/laptops that have a swivel screen to eiter be used with a keyboard or cover up the keyboard to be used like a pad. Those swivel screens must be hell to design well compared to a switch that just makes the screen draw in reverse.

    4. Re:Applications by wagemonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It might be adopted pretty quickly by the military though. It would be a great upgrade to those plexiglass tactical map displays you see in every modern submarine movie.
      Except that plexiglass doesn't need power, is pretty resistant to shaking and twisting, doesn't mind a little water, isn't affected by EMP...
  7. Great.. by magnesius666 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, next time my girlfriend sends me a... suggesting picture of hers on my mob, you get to see it too?

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    1. Re:Great.. by G-funk · · Score: 5, Funny

      But at least you'll know if she'd sending them to your mates as well :)

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  8. Hmmmm ... by the+bluebrain · · Score: 3, Funny

    Not quite.

    Now, if the back of the screen showed the back of the picture, too ....

    [*bibilip* ... *bibilip* ...]
    [glances at closed flip-open phone]
    - "Dude. Bad hair day?"

    :)

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  9. Coming to a laptop near you by icke · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's an informative article from The Economist which explains that we should soon be able to mould screens and use them in broad daylight.

  10. Sigh by FosterSJC · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OK Guys- the jokes about using a mirror to see both screens and spinning your phone fast are not that funny. This has serious uses, not to mention it is a great example of the mythical OLED technology finally coming to market. For example: you know how your flip phone has that single line of text for caller ID or whatever on the outside? What if it had a whole screen, and you could see the person's picture when the called. How about if it were a viewfinder for a now-smaller ELF like camera? It is clunky moving an open phone around to take pictures. Now you can have Geiss like effects when you listen to your phone as an MP3 Player too. In other words, it just provides the possibility and the convenience of doing everything (non-call related) with the phone closed, that you normally require the phone open for.

  11. I suppose dual-emmission sounds more impressive... by magickalhack · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They consume much less power than current devices and have faster response times.

    This seems like a much more interesting fact about them than that they can be viewed from both sides. I suppose one could take advantage of the dual-viewable nature, but it seems like something we already have an adaquate solution for: place a screen on each surface you want to have a screen on. Duh! ;-)

    On the other hand, I suppose the 2 sided viewability could be potentially beneficial to hybrid tablet PCs, which until now have had to rely on fragile-looking swivel mechanisms to rotate the screen between laptop and tablet functionality.

    Any indication as to whether or not the images on each side are identical (i.e. the back is a mirror image of the front) or if they can be controlled independantly?

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  12. Wow. by Faust7 · · Score: 4, Funny

    To this day is it not known how the ancient Egyptians managed to build the pyramids without being able to read their cell phones from both sides. One theory suggests rotary technology; more audacious mavericks wonder if they perhaps did not have phones at all.

  13. One problem for PDAs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is indeed great for status display on a device like a phone.

    The problem now is in tablet devices- we're seeing a shift to proper capacitative pads, instead of the topcoating matrix used in, say, early Palms and Psions. To create a 'convertible' PDA out of one of these, you're stuck with the older technology- and you'll need to apply it to both sides.

    I also wonder how well these can render black; do they have an LCD layer sandwiched in the middle?

    Verdict: Cool for embedding a TV in your living room window, if you don't plan to watch any porn. (Now, what if it were transmissive, but with microreflectors behind the OLED cells, just enough to aim the light one way and block/diffuse/blur it in the other?)

  14. See-through clear pixels by Cthefuture · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if they have a version that has or can make the pixels clear.

    That would be cool. Imagine a large wall that has graphics on it but is also translucent. You know, like those screens you always see in sci-fi movies. Add some touch sensors...

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  15. Anyone have the company's URL? by CrazyWingman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There's all this talk about "ELDis", but I can't seem to find them on the net. Anyone have an URL for them?

    Also, I remember an article in Scientific American a couple of years ago about trying to create a display that was made of small particles, which could be rotated (or something like that) into the proper position to show the proper color. It was proposed as a great idea for e-books. First, because b&w was easiest. Second, because once the particles where in the proper position, no more power needed to be applied to the screen, they would just stay put, which meant that the only power consumption was in turning pages. Anyway, anyone know whatever happened to that project?

  16. poor design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok guys, the major problem with OLED's is lifetime. In particular, they die after a certain number of Coulombs of charge have been pumped through them (while they are at a given temperature! increase the temp by 10 deg C and the lifetime drops in half!). So this means the total number of photons you get out is limiting. You want it bright so you can see it outside as well. This means that you generally want ALL the photons going to the viewer (using reflective matrix or lenticular material, etc.) to help do this. If half the photons go out the back, you have to drive it twice as hard to get the same usable brightness! Bad idea...

  17. ... and power loss, and phosphor life by bagofbeans · · Score: 3, Interesting

    See http://www.usdc.org/technical/downloads/Web_Report _0101/sld027.htm which is a Philips slide saying a 640x480 display will draw 28W. Not for my laptop, thanks. This is why all the bigger displays are 1 off demos for hype, and only the very small ones (about 2" diagonal max) are in production.

    The other big problem is phosphor life which varies with colour (blue is worst) and getting 10k hours is very difficult unless temperature is kept moderate.

    However, these displays look very good, although maybe too good for reasonable privacy because the viewing angle is TOO wide to my mind.

    IMHO, you won't these even competing with TFTs until 2007.

  18. TOLED double-sided see-thru screens by kobotronic · · Score: 2, Interesting

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

    Soon we'll see all kinds of different neat OLED tech. Smart windows can be transparent, with a lo-rez LCD layer forming solid black backgrounds behind the windows of a transparent OLED display panel. You can imagine embedding this on a mirror or anywhere there is a glass surface, providing full-contrast see-thru windows. Imagine bank tellers and ticket counters of the future -- the display will be right in the middle of the transaction area, with both parties seeing the same image, flipped appropriately on either side. Cool stuff. I want a 50 inch diagonal fishtank that turns into a color television when switched on!

  19. Re:I don't know if I should call it cool or useles by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 2, Funny
    It's all fun and games until your signifigant other sends you some homemade porn during a business meeting.

    Then it's just fun.

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