Forget LCDs and LEDs, Here Come LPDs 244
waderoush writes "It's not every day you hear about a brand new display technology, but San Jose, CA-based Prysm came out of stealth mode yesterday to talk about its plans for manufacturing laser phosphor displays, or LPDs. The new devices, which the company will show off at the Integrated Systems Europe trade show in Amsterdam next month, reportedly use 25 percent as much electricity as equivalently-sized LCD screens. And they should be easier to manufacture too, since they don't have a backplane of transistors like LCD screens: the image is generated by a laser beam that sweeps across phosphor stripes under the control of a scanning mirror. The venture-funded startup, which plans to build and sell LPD screens under its own brand, is promoting them as a low-cost, low-maintenance way to display information in lobbies, airports, broadcast studios, command centers, and the like."
Argh (Score:4, Funny)
I had a similar idea, only instead of a scanning mirror, I was going to use chunks of neutronium to bend the light beams. I've had a little trouble sourcing the materials, though...
Good one! (Score:1, Funny)
"It's not every day you hear about a brand new display technology"
And to this I say: good one, you funny guy!
Similar idea (Score:5, Funny)
I had a similar idea once, except using electrons instead of lasers. It also required a vacuum tube for the electrons to travel through. I called it the Fluorescent Electron Cathode Konduit, or FECK for short. After considering it a while, I thought the concept was rather ludicrious and without merit, so abandoned it.
"Command centers" (Score:5, Funny)
dont look at TV (Score:4, Funny)
with remaining eye
Re:Hmm (Score:2, Funny)
"Do not break screen and stare into laser"?
"I can't let you do that, Dave."
The screen is not... it's not (Score:3, Funny)
Something you can just refresh all at once. It's not a big lump of transistors.
It's a series of cathode ray tubes!
Re:LPD screen or LPD screen? (Score:5, Funny)
If it is new, it is unfortunate not only to reuse an acronym, but reusing one in the same domain.
There are only 17,576 three letter acronyms. We've been warning people for years of the need to upgrade to TLAv6, which allows for a wider range of three letter acronyms, including punctuation and numbers as well as unicode support. But many major buzzword providers have refused to upgrade. The last unique TLAs will be depleted within 18 months in our field. Thanks to AAT (Acronym Address Translation), there are already far more TLAs than there are available spaces -- we've been using CIAR (Classless Inter-Acronym Routing) to separate namespaces based on subject matter and field, but it's only a matter of time before even that fails.
Re:LPD screen or LPD screen? (Score:5, Funny)
A gentleman? I think you missed a minor detail there...