Slashdot Mirror


Paper Capable Of Playing Videos Developed

Makarand writes "Nature has posted an article describing paper capable of displaying video using rearrangeable electronic ink, being produced by Philips Research Labs (in the Netherlands). The paper-display draws power from a lightweight battery, and displays data stored in a portable chip. The display consists of pixels containing a drop of colored ink that can spread over a reflective white background under electrical control to create colors. With fast switching times and lower switching voltages, these paper-displays are capable of displaying video images."

53 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. It's a porno AND a tissue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    How convenient...

    1. Re:It's a porno AND a tissue. by blake8087 · · Score: 2, Funny

      All slashdot readers will care about is whether it runs linux. Porn comes second.

      --

      --Slashdot readers delight in generalizing the behavior of other Slashdot readers.
    2. Re:It's a porno AND a tissue. by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Insightful

      More and more, it seems like a large percentage is sex-starved, I-want-to-be-funny goofballs

      This part is +1 insightful, rest looks like a typical flamebait. Note most nerds ARE sex-starved, funny goofballs - and this is their site with their news and their style comments! If you don't like that, move elsewhere, there are many science news sites on the web. The fact that slashdot is not as classy as YOU would like it, doesn't mean it needs to be changed. It means that YOU need to look for a more classy place.

      And hell, somebody mod me offtopic or flamebait and I'll get really pissed off!

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
  2. Marketing madness! by Empiric · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Okay, it might be way too late at night for me to be posting, but...

    I wonder if the advent of multimedia paper, as it were, will create a sea-change in the nature of all types of advertising.

    As it stands now, most every box/can/available-surface of products is in some way branded advertising for the product, like, your coke can says, naturally, "Coca-Cola". This advertising must translate into some approximately-calculable value for the Coca-Cola company, in terms of more coke sales.

    But... is there an inflection point at which an ad for something else (say, Porsche cars) would be more valuable than the advertisement for coke? If so, might companies sell space on all manner of products wrapped in this multimedia-paper like banner ads?

    It might be interesting to open my refrigerator and see a few-dozen multimedia presentations on various consumer goods, changing every morning, but... well, maybe a final trip in that Porsche to some Amish community might be more sanity-preserving.

    --
    ~ Whence do you come, slayer of men, or where are you going, conqueror of space?
    1. Re:Marketing madness! by jestill · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I am afraid that as costs come down you may be right. Combine this with low cost sound systems and you have a recipe for complete madness. This sort of thing has been explored in the Minority Report Movie, and to some extend in Neal Stephenson's 'The Diamond Age'.

      --
      "Asleep at the switch? I wasn't asleep, I was drunk!" -- Homer
    2. Re:Marketing madness! by Simon · · Score: 5, Interesting
      It's not all bad news. These things will contain computers. Imagine hacking your wheaties box to show something more interesting. You could directly recycle and reuse all of the 'paper' you receive.

      If annoying animation gets out of hand, a few seconds in a microwave oven will probably fix the problem. ;-)

      --
      Simon

    3. Re:Marketing madness! by irving47 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'll welcome them when slashdot runs the first story on some geek with too much time on his hands taking apart the displays from 200 (insert product here) packages and wrapping them around his car, putting cameras here and there, to build a cloaking device.

      You know it's coming...

      But seriously, when? I saw this stuff being touted by Xerox 5 or 7 years ago at EPCOT. They tried to impress so much with the little props and videos, only to try to gloss over the distinct LACK of Epaper on site. No true demo...

      --
      I had a sucky sig.
    4. Re:Marketing madness! by bidaum · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know much about electronic paper but I pressume
      A) it needs power
      and B) its easy to damage.
      As far as food products like soda are concerned I would think it might be taboo to package a product that holds a charge.
      Also, the way stores ship, store, and bundle all the bulk they buy would run down the batteries (or if its got some sweet solar array keep it out of the light) and probably damage the display. Magnets are probably used in much of the equipment used or kept around bundles of products while in some scattered shipping state. I could go on, but it just doesn't seem feasible to me...

    5. Re:Marketing madness! by shokk · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Think of how quickly a marketing campaign gets old. I've seen cases of Coke lately with Star Wars Episode 1 (not 2!) on the side. What if this could be kept in sync with the latest marketing campaign so that cases on the display shelves all showed the latest logo or ad? RFID can keep track of what the product is and only display the ad for that particular brand out of the thousands that might be playing on shelves that day. Imagine a stack of sode cubes on the shelf displaying ads and leasing time to the supermarket to show promos. Little subtleties like an old trademark character occasionally winking at the customers as they pass by. Imagine the Trojan condoms horse dancing around on the box. Then hook that up to some sort of RFID for people and the shelves can recognize you a la Minority Report. Fantastic reminders like "Say Mr. Jones, isn't it time you refilled that gonorreah medication?" follow you around the store.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
  3. Impressive. Now, when does it ship? by silentbozo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Color e-paper, great for display devices, able to replace LCDs, etc. Now when do these things go into mass production? I'd love to have flexible solar cells at pennies per yard, but I can't get those yet either.

  4. BBC News story... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Informative

    Here's the BBC's slant on the news: Electronic paper prepares for video.

    They're already up to 80 Hz refresh (12-13 ms respnose times). That's pretty damn impressive for a technology that's still in the basic R&D stage, and it augurs well for the future.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:BBC News story... by dmoynihan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Bistable nematic screens can do 25 hz--difference is they're shipping it out right now.

  5. The Daily Prophet by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 5, Funny

    Boring...they had all that in Harry Potter two years ago, and oil paintings that talk ;-)

    --
    When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
  6. But how do you get color? by panurge · · Score: 4, Informative
    The picture in the article has to be misleading. Although a camera has adjacent color receptor sites, print color doesn't work like that at all. If the cells are adjacent, they can only produce an approximate gray. In the CMYK standard printing process, the ink markings superimpose, so grays are achieved with different sizes of black dots, and red is obtained by superimposing yellow (-blue) and magenta (-green). This means that instead of being adjacent as in the picture, the cells would have to be stacked. There would also need to be some way of ensuring that when the cells were partially colored, the upper colored areas were not directly over the ones below (or they would be obscured and only the top color would show.)

    There may be some magical solution to this, but it looks to me as if color is very, very much more difficult than mono.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:But how do you get color? by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 3, Insightful
      In the CMYK standard printing process, the ink markings superimpose

      This is partially true as I understand it. When the ink is layed down the screens for the four colors (cyan, magenta, yellow and black) are not aligned perfectly. They are offset so many degrees apart and a printer could tell you the optimum settings to avoid moire patterns. Perhaps this could have something to do with it.

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    2. Re:But how do you get color? by MalachiConstant · · Score: 5, Informative
      In the CMYK standard printing process, the ink markings superimpose, so grays are achieved with different sizes of black dots, and red is obtained by superimposing yellow (-blue) and magenta (-green). This means that instead of being adjacent as in the picture, the cells would have to be stacked.

      I worked in a pre-press shop for a couple of years, so I've worked with printing on a very low level. The color dots don't need to be directly stacked on one another to achieve a certain color. In fact each color is printed at a seperate angle so the dots are rarely directly on top of one another

      Take a magnifying glass to your sunday comics and you can see that the black dots are at one angle (usually straight up and down) and each other color is rotated slightly. Even at relatively large dot sizes (72 dpi) the dots seem to merge together to form whatever color they're looking for.

      Since the dots are arranged in groups of four in this paper you could achieve the same result, except it may look a bit more like a computer image (made up of distinct pixels in a grid) as opposed to a magazine picture (pixels for each color are rotated). It also sounds like they can make the dots whatever size they want, which is how it is done in printing:

      The larger the applied voltage, the more the ink retracts. The ink is therefore capable of a continuous grey scale, not just of a two-tone contrast.

      And even if the dots were stacked directly on top of each other it would still work. The ink is spread so thin that it's transparent, that's why yellow on top of magenta shows as red. So if they could stack it somehow it would show correctly (assuming the ink they use is like regular ink in that way).

    3. Re:But how do you get color? by pVoid · · Score: 2, Informative
      Hmmm, the painter Georges Seurat was a pointilist. I'm not going to post a link to his picture because we would melt down any server I link, but a quick google for his name will find you pictures.

      My point is: if you look closely at those paintings, the dots aren't superimposed. They are side by side. And they are quite big: the size of small brushes... So it *does* work.

    4. Re:But how do you get color? by MalachiConstant · · Score: 2, Informative

      Here's an image showing a close-up of a CMYK image.

      (And if I remember correctly black is actually printed at 45 degrees, not straight up and down like I said)

    5. Re:But how do you get color? by AlecC · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is not a question of working differently at a molecular level. In the thin film that actually ends up on the page, the inks are translucent - think Jello, not paint. Each ink absorbs the light at some frequencise and passes others, which then bounce of the white paper behind - unsess abosrbewd by another ink at the same point. It is not perfect, and in bulk the inks look opaque. But the inks are actually printed over each other.

      You are right that, if the dots are really small, the eye will average them out. This is, actually, how screen printing works: there are actually rows of dots in shaded areas. However, they are of the order of 30 times smaller than pixels on even the best screen, so it takes quite a powerfule glass to see them.

      What the article doesn't say, but the picture does, is that Cyan+Magenta+Yellow, which should theoretically produce black, actually produces a durty purplish brown. So you need some real black to get a good rendition. Each pixel will have to have four cells.

      Grandparent is correct. Because the cells are spatially separate, 100% red will actually only have 25% of the the background red, the rest remaining white. So I would expect a colour display, while having good readability, to be rather flat an uninteresting. The B/W display should be very good. Because it is reflective not emissive technology, it should have excellent readabilty and low poer consumption (but not the zero power consumption of the e-Ink in /. a coupel of weeks ago).

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  7. "Great" frequency? by WegianWarrior · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The frequency would be great, would hurt your eyes after a couple minutes I would guess...

    I guess that depends on what you mean by a "great" frequency. In Europe, television has a frequency of 50Hz (it's 60Hz in the US) - even if I've heard that two and two frames are alike, in other words that the frequency is 25 or 30Hz. Movies in theaters are usually run at 24 frames per second, in other words a frequency of 24Hz.

    There is no real need to have frequencies running much higher than that to watch a movie - since a frequency of 72Hz would just mean that the same picture would be drawn three times over, and thats a waste on a device like this.

    In addition, there might not make much sence in talking about frequeny at all on a device like this; if they want to save on power, they only alter the state of the pixels that actually changes between each frame.

    --
    Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
    1. Re:"Great" frequency? by ejito · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Video and televsion are recorded on film, which has a delay on each frame. this delay captures a set amount of time, also known as motion blur. When people move on film, their body movements are actually slightly blurred (but not so much that it coudl be noticed easily), creating the illusion of smooth animation. If you play videogames on your monitor, you'd immediately see the difference between 24FPS and 60FPS. If you're a habitual gamer, you'd even be able to see the difference between 80 and 100 FPS (depending on the game). As someone else has pointed out, interlacing plays an important role in visual perception as well. I can actually see my monitor flickering right now, while I'm running at 60hz (i have an old monitor). It's even more apparent on cheap screens, where I can see the mouse cursor flicker. On nice TFTs that interlace the image updates and also hold their "color"(persist between updates), it looks really smooth. On horrible flatpanels, it looks really awful, even at 80hz, if they don't use good refresh techniques.

    2. Re:"Great" frequency? by whm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In addition, there might not make much sence in talking about frequeny at all on a device like this; if they want to save on power, they only alter the state of the pixels that actually changes between each frame.

      This neglects that it takes power to simply maintain the image. As the article states, it's an application of voltage that controls the size of the inkdot pixel. The energy usage is only zero when displaying a completely black image.

    3. Re:"Great" frequency? by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 4, Informative
      Movies in theaters are usually run at 24 frames per second, in other words a frequency of 24Hz.

      Actually, movies are run at twice that, i.e. in order to reduce the flickering each frame is projected twice. And 48Hz is just barely acceptable for straight on viewing. You'll see the flicker clearly out of the corner of your eye.

      So, they actually need more than that, 72Hz is actually about right for something that you're sitting close to (such as a computer screen).

      There's a lot of info on the net if you want to dig deeper.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    4. Re:"Great" frequency? by AlecC · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I guess that depends on what you mean by a "great" frequency. In Europe, television has a frequency of 50Hz (it's 60Hz in the US) - even if I've heard that two and two frames are alike, in other words that the frequency is 25 or 30Hz. Movies in theaters are usually run at 24 frames per second, in other words a frequency of 24Hz.

      TV has a field rate of 50/50 hz. Fields are alternately the odd and even lines of the picture, so the frame rate is 25/30 hz. The two fields are spatially slightly separated, so even on a still picture they are not the same; the second field gives you more information than the first. But if the original capture mechanism was a video camera, the two fields are captured at different times as well as different places, so it gives better motion display.

      There is no real need to have frequencies running much higher than that to watch a movie - since a frequency of 72Hz would just mean that the same picture would be drawn three times over, and thats a waste on a device like this.

      You are correct that film is at 24 hz. However, cinema projectors deliberatly flicker the light at 48 hz to give an impression of better movement. Once you get the trick of it, it is quite easy to spot 24-frame film material on TV, and it can become annoying.

      50/60 hz field rate, and making a frame out of two fields, are both in fact economy measures. When TV was first invented, high rates were difficult and expensive, and there was a tradeoff between picture quality and cost. In fact, percieved movement quality increases up to frame rates in the low 70s of Hz - hence 80Hz being "as good as you will ever need".

      A frame will be displayed 3 times at 72 hz only if it is sourced from a traditional film camers - a breed which is slowly dying out. All news cameras are now electronic, and Lucas is filming the Star Wars series electronically - othere will follow, slowly. Some of the new HDTV standards have 60 true frames, not 60 fields, per second.

      As I say, existing TV standards are a compromise for the tradeoffs of an earlier day. We will eventially get newer standards, and hence better pictures. But once a set of standards are embedded in the comsumer marketplace, there is a massive lag in the adoption of new standards.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    5. Re:"Great" frequency? by RedWizzard · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually, movies are run at twice that, i.e. in order to reduce the flickering each frame is projected twice. And 48Hz is just barely acceptable for straight on viewing. You'll see the flicker clearly out of the corner of your eye.
      Got any references to back that up? Everything I've ever seen says movie projectors run at 24 fps (see HowStuffWorks for example). A movie projector doesn't refresh an image like a CRT - the light source is always on, displaying whatever is on the film in front of it. So you can't really project each frame twice anyway, it's projected for exactly how long it's in front of the light for (1/24th of a second minus transport time). Any perceived flicker in movie projection is due to the border between frames of film, not the light source going on and off.
    6. Re:"Great" frequency? by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 2, Informative
      Got any references to back that up? Everything I've ever seen says movie projectors run at 24 fps (see HowStuffWorks for example).

      Sure, see for example the explanation from the Australian film commision. But really searching for '48 fps' and 'projector' will get you tons of hits (though granted many will be about proposed improvements to the current system). Also my original post had a link with the same info, albeit from a TV-guy's perspective.

      A movie projector doesn't refresh an image like a CRT - the light source is always on, displaying whatever is on the film in front of it. So you can't really project each frame twice anyway, it's projected for exactly how long it's in front of the light for (1/24th of a second minus transport time). Any perceived flicker in movie projection is due to the border between frames of film, not the light source going on and off.

      While howstuff works is generally good, they're wrong on this particular point. However, had you read their description more carefully, you'd see that what you're saying isn't exactly right. While the lamp in the projector is always 'on', the light doesn't actually always reach the screen. There's a shutter (called 'gate' in projectionist circles) that blocks the light path as the film advances. Without it, you'd see the actual film advance, and that would look funny, to say the least. Now, just gating the movie at 24 Hz produced noticable flicker, and hence the film is double gated, i.e. the shutter (really a rotating disc with two holes in it) is closed twice for each film advance.

      Now if you want to go into the details of why the human perceptual system has a higher tolerance for the resulting experience, it gets involved and I don't actually know all the details, even though I really should (I do research in visualisation).

      It's interesting you make the comparison with a CRT though. It's almost the reverse. The afterglow from the phosphorous in the CRT between electron beam refresh is considerable, much more so than the film frame, the light through which is just cut off between frames (and once during). I've made a post about CRT's before, you might find interesting, though it's not exactly related to the subject at hand.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    7. Re:"Great" frequency? by phliar · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Not exactly. With CRTs, the dot has to be refreshed every so often i.e. refresh rate so the image doesn't flicker. If the pixel stays the same colour i.e. doesn't fade, then it only needs to be refreshed at 24 Hz, the movie's frame rate. If you only care about showing a cine movie, you don't really need a refresh rate any better than 24 Hz. This is why LCD screens can get by with lower refresh rates. This is also why digital graphics can show much nicer movement, your refresh rate is not limited to 24 fps.

      On the other hand, I find movement in movies very distracting because the image flashes painfully. Widescreen movies are the worst because your peripheral vision is more sensitive to movement. I think 24 fps for movies is too low, we should have a new cine standard with a higher frame rate. Maybe 36 fps.

      Well, I can dream, can't I?

      --
      Unlimited growth == Cancer.
  8. Excellent by SpiffyMarc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We're that much closer to those creepy animated singing cereal boxes from Minority Report...

  9. I welcome our new e-paper overloads... by teamhasnoi · · Score: 2, Funny
    That's right - I said overloads. As soon as this is cheap enough, it's going to go on every bit of packaging, junk mail, and flat surface. Each one will vie for your attention. Imagine walking into a Target or Krogers or Walmart and seeing aisle after aisle of seizure-inducing, moving displays that blur into a undulating mass of 'buy ME!' and over-stimulation.

    When is it enough? How much can our wee little monkey brains take? I'm guessing that the 'eXtREEEM' of the future will be advertising that may kill old people or small children.

    Of course, the perfect app for this is e-paper voting! Now elections can be rigged *and* everyone can have a copy of their vote!

    (Note: Votes subject to change)

    1. Re:I welcome our new e-paper overloads... by stuffman64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was at a gas station in the Southside (a part of Pittsburgh) the other day to get some crappy coffee, and there was a monitor at the cash register playing ads for various car-related products and other crap. Since there was a line, and I have a short attention span, I just kept watching the ads when I was waiting. Apparently, the cashiers hate the thing because it repeats every few minutes or so (I would imagine this would be the only thing worse than listening to a pop or hip-hop radio station for an hour). It will only be a matter of time before these are everywhere.

      --
      --- At my sig, unleash hell.
    2. Re:I welcome our new e-paper overloads... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Your point almost makes sense, until you consider the fact that all people are in fact suffering from more stress and enduring more psychological problems than previous generations.

      You can blame better diagnosis (or misdiagnosis) if you want, but really I'm not sure the typical human is really meant to be as smart as society now days expects it to be. A natural human living off of the land really needs to know nothing more than how to make a spear, run from big beasts, and keep out of the rain.

      Technology (be it tending crops or inventing holodecks for wild endless regret-free sexual encounters), builds on technology. Each generation has tools and knowledge that previous generations didn't have. At what point will it reach a level where few people can cope? Even now days most poeple haven't got a clue what's going on inside a computer. Most people haven't got any idea how a telephone, automobile, or television works.

      How many times have you heard someone say "I don't need that many features on my TV/VCR/Microwave/etc"?

      Some people evolve with the times, others just learn to cope, but more and more I think we're going to see people who simply can't hack it all. As more and more people become unable to deal with it, I can honestly see us finding a name for whatever disorder they supposedly have, fiding some medication for it, and then sending them on along their way.

      We'll think they're slow, or stupid, or have no common sense, but in reality, these people could probably make a spear and hide in a cave as well (maybe even better) than the other overly cereberal upright hairless apes.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    3. Re:I welcome our new e-paper overloads... by ZackSchil · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Scott Adams, author of Dilbert, addresses this in one of his books. He calls it the competancy line. It's rising every day. He realized that he'd been overtaken it when a trip to the airport to sign up for a flight, use free airline miles, and run through the whole process got so complex that he couldn't do it all by himself. The problem is, it's a pretty scary truth. People these days have to remeber how to do so many things just to get through everyday life!

      Most of us are so used to all the things we need to know by now but many people out there, my parents for example, are afraid of ATM machines, TiVo, computers, cell phones, fax machines, digital answering machines, call waiting, cd players, DVD players (why do you need a menu, I want to push in the tape and press play!). They just simply can't deal with much modern technology. My mother doesn't want to have to remeber how to do anything. If she can't figure it out on intuition, then she won't be bothered. That said, many Slashdotters may be aware of the sudden loss of literacy many people suffer from wjile in front of a computer :^D

      (I get a call in my room at school. It's my mother. It's [I assume the computer] asking me: "Do you wish to save this document," what should I do? Well, do you want to save it? Yes. Then press Save. Oh, ok, that took care of it, thanks, click)

      I end up being goaded into doing all her typing because she simply doesn't want to learn how to use a word processor. They can't cope for some reason.

      I, however seem to maybe force a bit too much of it on them because I'm a huge technophile. Gotta go, my mother is in the next room screaming: "What is this TiVo central thing. WHERE IS MY TELEVISION!"

  10. Not e-books, perhaps, but... by achurch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'll still take real dead trees over electronic paper for my leisure reading, I think, but how about the opposite application: writing? "Print" a document to the paper, mark it up in a meeting, and have the changes all saved without having to go back and mark it up again on your PC. Alternatively, take the paper to your favorite country getaway, write up a story, and (assuming your handwriting is decently legible) have it automatically OCR'd into text for later editing, without needing to lug a laptop around and all the associated annoyances.

    I dunno, sounds good to me . . .

    1. Re:Not e-books, perhaps, but... by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'll still take real dead trees over electronic paper for my leisure reading, I I think, but how about the opposite application: writing? "Print" a document to the paper, mark it up in a meeting, and have the changes all saved without having to go back and mark it up again on your PC.

      With a touchscreen-enabled piece of electronic paper writing shouldn't pose a problem. Combined with advanced text recognition it might even be superior to regular prints, as the document could be updated on the fly.

      --
      .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    2. Re:Not e-books, perhaps, but... by lipi · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...but how about the opposite application: writing?

      Xerox has been there, done that:

      "Through a chemical process that Xerox is holding as a trade secret, "each ball is given an electric charge, with more on one side than on the other," Sheridon explains. So when an electric field is applied to the surface of the sheet, the balls are lifted in their oil-filled cells, rotated like the needles of tiny compasses to point either their black or their white hemispheres eyeward, and then slammed against the far wall of the cell. There they stick, holding the image, until they are dislodged by another field. At high voltages, the balls stick before completing their rotation, thus producing various shades of gray. Sheridon's group has also produced red-and-white displays and is working on combining balls of various hues to produce full-color ones.
      (...)
      But the real goal, Sheridon says, is also the most distant: an electronic surrogate for paper. Engineer Matt Howard hands me a wooden pencil that is plugged into a weak power supply. As I write on the sheet, the tiny electric field conducted through the pencil's graphite core darkens the screen wherever the tip touches. Howard is working on a handheld wand that will receive text and images from a computer and scan them onto a Gyricon page, which would then be annotated, photocopied, erased--but not discarded."

      Copy of the Scientific American article is here , but you may find other references.

  11. does anyone else here feel old? by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    remember those old, cabinet-sized gothic beautiful wooden radios with huge glowing tubes visible from the back? some of you might have only seen them in museums

    did you think to yourself "good gosh, what archaic times" when you saw them? we probably all did

    and then i see news like this, and know how people like us, who grew up with crt screens and space heater-looking computer cases with noisy fans in the back, will be seen as archaic some day ;-P

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  12. Magazines will never be the same. by CherniyVolk · · Score: 4, Funny


    Tired of the bored centerfolds that just sit there?

  13. Animation on paper? Try LSD-25 by minnkota · · Score: 3, Funny

    Who needs this type of technology?

    Shit, we've had all we need to watch the drawings on our paper move around since 1938!


    Turn on, tune in, drop out!

  14. Re:high tech? by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Funny

    If you can operate your Etch-a-Sketch quickly enough to display 80Hz video on it, then you really need to cut down on the caffeine...

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  15. Filter:It's a porno AND a tissue? by Porthwhanker · · Score: 3, Informative

    With the quality of certain top posts on Slashdot, you really start to wonder what the general mentality is around here... Taco, we need better filters.

    There *are* better filters: Preferences, Comments, Scroll down to Reason Modifiers, -6 for "Funny", Scroll down to Save. No more funny jokes.

    Personally, I like to laugh once in a while.

  16. When can I paint my Yugo with this? by InsaneCreator · · Score: 2, Funny

    How about "video" car paint? I'm sure noone would notice I don't own 5 different cars or that I'm not really sitting in a Porsche. :)

    1. Re:When can I paint my Yugo with this? by GMontag451 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Forget paint, imagine your car's paint job as one giant, instantly changable bumper sticker. Now you can finally tell the guy who just cut you off, or the jackass who is sitting on your bumper just where he can stick his tailpipe in large-type plain english!

  17. A one page book? by MacFury · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Since the "paper" can be refreshed with any content...would there be any practical reason for an eBook to have multiple pages? The only reasons I can think of are; to save power by refreshing multiple pages only one time, thus longer battery life, and to transition between the habit of turning pages of a dead tree book.

    Often time I like the tactile feedback of holding a book in my hands. I like that it doesn't make a noise unless I ruffled the pages, no humming fan or whining battery...but, I don't like turning pages and diverting my eyes from the left to right sides, especially when reading in bed.

    All jokes aside, I like to read with one hand curling the left side underneath the back of the book which makes reading the right side of the book great, and the left side a pain.

  18. Overclocking... by DaneelGiskard · · Score: 4, Funny

    So if I overclock one of these, "burned out" will finally become a whole new meaning...? :)

  19. Re:Impressive. Now, when does it ship? by Hyler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, I would like to have at least monochrome now. It would be great for, for example, (interactive) billboards. I get the feeling that monochrome "electronic paper" could be rolled out tomorrow, but the developers are holding back waiting for the 25 fps, 32-bit color, GeForce compatible version. I don't want to watch video or 3D graphics on "paper".

    --
    It's its. They're their, there. You're your. Who's whose? A looser loser, though those two too threw through the trough.
  20. Re:Nothing more than paper Flash! by KillerHamster · · Score: 2, Funny

    Is this stuff combustible? Whenever I see Flash, I always feel like setting something on fire. This could be my chance to let out years worth of repressed rage.

  21. Voila! by rwaldin · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Print one of these and you'll have all the magic animated paper you need without electronics or drugs!

  22. Re:Impressive. Now, when does it ship? by JohnPM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This type of post is starting to get about as interesting as "First Post!!" and "Imagine a beowulf cluster of these!"...

    Every single new technology article covered gets someone saying "that's all well and good but they've been saying this for years. speak to me when i can buy one.".

    Take the article for what it's worth. It's not a sales brochure or an investment prospectus, it's a science/tech piece.

    --
    Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
  23. Re:guess what: by ColaMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Just wait until someone develops a proxy filter for your downloadable newspaper content.

    Ads? What Ads? :-)

    --

    You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
    There is a lot of hype here.
  24. They already have those by iamacat · · Score: 2, Funny

    Its called paperbacks and they pretty much disintegrate if you read them for 6 months.

  25. a detailed paper (no pun!) by zarniwhoop · · Score: 2, Informative

    on this by the authors is available here

    See how the 'shape' of the pixel can determine where the ink goes when voltage is applied. hmm interesting!

  26. I prefer Magink by *weasel · · Score: 3, Informative


    It's also full-color, but it's static so it only draws power when changing the image, it has a refresh rate of up to 70hz (plenty for displays) and it's not backlit (making it behave just like current paper, and again, draws -0- power when not changing the image).

    It sounds like the way to go imo. backlighting may be a required feature for TVs (cultural emphasis on watching movies in the dark) - but for laptops/pdas/cellphones/handheld gaming/etc - it'd easily be a killer tech. yeah, you'd have to have some sort of a front-light (like the new light on the GBA SP) for Eg. dialing in the dark, using your laptop on a plane, etc.

    But having the light only when you need it will save ridiculous quantities of battery power. Imagine your gadget battery lasting 2-3x as long.
    Good stuff.

    article

    --
    // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
  27. Power Usage by pavon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One thing that has been noted about E-Ink and it's like is that it only needs power to change display, while a static image is retained with no power usage. This is because the fluid that the particles are suspended in is viscous enough that they pretty much stay in place, unless a voltage is applied. This means that they can operate at very low power levels.

    While it didn't say so in the paper, it appears that this new technology requires continous voltage to be applied to keep the ink from spreading out acrossed the full surface of the pixel. So this paper would likely use more power than the particle approach, and would be pure black when no power was applied, basically functionally equivalent to LCD's today. I wonder how the power consumption / price of this device will compare to LCD's once they are being mass produced. Regardless, it would be worth it to have a laptop that was easily readable outside.