Xerox Demos Self-Erasing, Eco-Friendly Paper 204
Lucas123 writes "The same Xerox lab that brought us Ethernet, the GUI and the mouse has demonstrated paper that can be reused after printed text automatically deletes itself from its surface in a day. Instead of trashing or recycling after one use, a single piece of paper can be reused up to 100 times. 'The paper contains specially coded molecules that create a print after being exposed to ultraviolet light emitted from a thin bar in a printer. The ultraviolet bar itself is very small, so it can be used in mobile printers. The technology could also be useful for network printing.'"
Hmmm... (Score:5, Funny)
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Please.
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I would rather see that America have a system where college educations are free for our children. So many other very civilized countries are able to do this, I don't see why we cannot.
I applaud you for working your way through school. I myself drove a cab here in Chicago to cover my undergrad years and my first two years of grad school. Looking back, it was good experience and I learned a lot, but it caused me a tremendous
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Finally! (Score:2)
Step 2: Buy expensive stuff with it.
Step 3: Profit!!!
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Hacking the paper? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Anyways, can't you still shred this?
Ultra violet? (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in the 1980s we used UV erasable EPROMS. With the correct UV lamps you could erase them in seconds or minutes. If you had natural light coming onto your desk then they'd get erased, but it would take a few days. Many an engineer was stumped as to why his circuit that worked fine yesterday was behaving badly today.
Now the same problem will extend to accountants!
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Light on chip internals (Score:2)
I once had the inverse problem: a circuit that worked fine under normal light and crashed as soon as someone turned on the florescent lights. We at first thought it must be some poer surge thing and put scopes on the power etc etc. Eventually someone inadvertently covered the circuit and the problem went away,
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In any case think yourself lucky that you spotted it before moving to a device in a non windowed (hence not erasable) package.
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I'm seriously skeptical of this invention's utility. Besides not lasting more than 24 hours, what happens when people do normal "paper things" to the sheets; Highlight, annotate, fold, staple etc? Plus I've recycled paper as scrap (print on other side) and the paper tends to curl rather dramatically after a few passes through. Unless the special printer that's required has a straight path I can't see a sing
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They forgot to mention that each sheet is a 1/4" thick and as stiff as plywood.
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How can you look in to the past? (Score:2)
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There, FTF those of us who do not understand the meaning of "ex" unless it precedes -othermic, -ternal, or -tra fries please.
JK. She's now your ex... I'm guessing she found something... sounds like you should say that she was just-the-right-amount-of suspicious, not overly suspicious.
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OFC if your printing secrets on reusable paper your then given to your enemies, you probably have other problems.
If they can extend the lifetime of the pages to month or maybe even years, this would really help academic institudes and the such, where lots of stuff gets printed but is rarely needed for more than a couple of weeks.
But will the paper start to jam after a few uses? (Score:4, Interesting)
100 times is a lot of it to get jammed in the printer after a few uses.
Re:But will the paper start to jam after a few use (Score:2)
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Whitehouse use? (Score:1, Funny)
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Perfect timing! (Score:1)
Politics (Score:2)
Kids, don't print your homework with this. (Score:2)
etch-a-sketch (Score:4, Funny)
useful (Score:2)
say i go to a meeting, i print up a plan, diagram, couple pages of schematics for everyone at the meeting. that's a lot of wasted paper. then you do the presentation and everyone chucks it in the trash.
only the ludittes keeps the paper copies after the meeting, since you're likely to send them the documents by email anyway. it's just more useful to ha
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*goes home to work on hacking his Kindle*
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But seriously, they're nothing alike. The kindle is basically a paper replacement display and some guts to do it's job. Make it thinner, and you don't need paper in the office anymore. And no, a "handheld computer" is not the same thing.
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Let me break this down for you. You want something with Wi-Fi and bluetooth to push and pull notes from meetings. To easily create notes in electronic form, you need a touch screen. Use color e-ink with that touchscreen and you end up with a tablet PC or handheld computer that has an e-ink display or a "Kindle-type" device with extra functionality. We are simp
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im 25, young by any standard, and i still find paper has its uses, especially in meetings, or when comparing large amounts of data side by side.
you just try making a large 10' DDL on your computer . not intuitive by any stretch
obvious future use: white house emails (Score:2, Insightful)
bush white house officials were heard saying 'yippee!' and we seen frolicking to and fro.
paper that erases itself: no need for any explanations about servers not being backed up, outlook doing this or that or any of those other handy excuses. "we didn't realize we used self-erasing paper. honest, we didn't."
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Dilbert (Score:4, Funny)
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I think at one point Dilbert cartoon suggested edible paper (to be consumed right after reading---for secrecy!)
Solve printing, waste, AND world hunger all in one product!
They've been touting this for years (Score:2)
Considering how Xerox writes contracts, I wouldn't be surprised if they developed this technology for their own use!
"I know that oppressive contract I signed with Xerox had a service level agreement...Where is it?! IT WAS RIGHT HERE!!"
Print this story (Score:4, Insightful)
Next thing we'll have is DRM enabled printing that refuses to print this story unless it gets printed with self-erasing ink. But you can print it on permanent ink if you are a registered user. Registration is free. Enter your SSN here.
Wha?? (Score:2)
Or did I just come to the realization that too many 20-hour days is bad for reading comprehension and eyesight, and taking a break on slashdot is possibly not the best course of action?
Is next big thing (Score:2, Insightful)
The mouse, GUI and ethernet: these guys know what people want.
Perfect timing for all these companies who say they want to become environmentally friendly. Same companies that go through reams of paper every day.If there's cost savings involved as well this is a no-brainer.
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The big hurdles to this paper is simple the work it will take to gather the old paper up, stack them neatly, and make them fit for printing. How much premium will this paper command? What % will
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While a niche certainly exists for what you describe, e-readers in anything even vaguely like their current form will simply never replace paper.
Now, if/when nanotech lets us make them so thin, cheap, and high resolution that telling the difference from real paper would require more than casual inspection, they might really replace dead trees. I don't see t
I've seen this before... (Score:2)
They reinvented thermal paper! On purpose!
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Fortunately the end data had been saved - to mag tape.
Thermal printers - blech... (Score:2)
Paper IS already "eco friendly" (Score:2, Interesting)
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Paper? Oh, How seventies...... (Score:2)
I moved about a month ago, and still haven't unpacked my printers. I think I printed three or four pages on a friend's printer last month, but that's it.
Virtually everything that I do these days is electronic - letters, ordering, resumes, photos - you name it. The only times that I print anything are handouts for meetings once in a long, long while, and drafts of really important proposals where I find that actually reading them
I remember using this at school... (Score:2)
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The Same Lab? (Score:2)
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UV from the sun? (Score:2)
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That would be really useful... except... (Score:2)
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Exactly. The vast majority of copiers and printers are anal compulsive about feedstock. I can't imagine that paper that had been printed, read, filed, stuck in an envelope and run through in baskets / out baskets would sit prettily in the printer for the next go around.
Maybe this is an end run to getting more Xerox printer service co
For those of us who like to make annotations... (Score:2)
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paper handling (Score:2)
let me guess... (Score:2)
computers MAKE more paper, not less of it. why do you think printers have been getting faster and faster. paperless office is a myth.
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Just had a random thought... I bet some of the spammers have a paperless office.
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Makes sense (Score:2)
Politician's wet dream! (Score:2)
newspaper? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Only from the Xoo (Score:2)
customer (Score:2)
logfile printing (Score:2)
The Ghost of Xerox Parc is shaking its head. (Score:2)
How will reuse work if any of these things happen? I have to wonder how reusable the paper will be if the slightest, stain, or other ink-mark touches the page.
I can also imagine desperately trying to read the faint, disappearing words when someone forgot to change out the paper-tray for more indelible printing.
Electronic documents were/are the solution to this. I can hear moans from the ghost of Xerox Parc. . . after inventing the modern computer Xerox is st
Environmentally Friendly (Score:2)
Well, the aloe is okay.
So many uses (Score:2)
And Xerox invented photons and fluffy kittens! (Score:2)
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Re:Possibilities... (Score:4, Funny)
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I agree it sucks though that you can't read the reciepts. I have mine tucked away in the empty boxes from what I buy and with no light at all they are blank... how you supposed to honor the warranty?
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The receipts are printed using Thermal printing [wikipedia.org], not thermal transfer [wikipedia.org]. Dye Sublimation [wikipedia.org] is similar to thermal transfer, where you have the dye separate from the paper in a plastic sheet that holds the dye, and the dye holder is heated, forcing the dye on/into the paper.
Thermal printing is where the paper turns black where it has been heated, without adding or removing anything from the paper.
Dye Sublimation is actually fairly durable, with the coating layer that is often used.
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You think this is some sort of coincidence still, right?
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Yeah, but they stole this technology from the wallet photo in 'Back to the Future'.