Electrowetting Promises Power-Sipping, Daylight Readable Color Displays 63
Dutch researchers are working on a new application of an old technology that could mean bright color displays that draw much less power than conventional LCDs, according to the BBC. In this application, an instance of a technique known as electrowetting, droplets of colored oil in suspension are the basis for the display's colors; each pixel's color is determined by moving the colored oils with electrical current. A prototype reader from Dutch firm Liquivista is shown in the accompanying video; color magazines with 50-60hz refresh time using this display technology are at least a few years out, though. Significantly, these screens are daylight readable, which makes me wonder how they compare to Pixel-Qi style screens in power draw, brightness, and maximum density.
1st (Score:1, Informative)
From TFA: Can be build using existing LCD production setups - that's a pretty huge advantage; hope this isn't vapor.
basement dwellers (Score:2, Funny)
Time to invest in those solar tubes to get the sunlight down into the basement for us then.
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How common are dead pixels anyway? I see hot and dead pixels on only the cheapest lowest-end displays. Bad inverters and bad ribbon PCBs are far more common.
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Driver cells may still be broken so yeah.
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AC:
For starters, i can assure you the city Eindhoven in the Netherlands really exists.
Interesting technnology, +1 for open source (Score:3, Interesting)
Notice the movie they use for the demo - Blender Foundation's Big Buck Bunny.
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Better then being sued by sony for using a music video :)
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Ton Roosendaal being Dutch probably made that an easier choice for the researchers, I imagine.
Re:Interesting technnology, +1 for open source (Score:4, Insightful)
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Why? Are the british better at producing displays than the americans?
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Daylight readable? (Score:1, Insightful)
Who cares. Just work at night and sleep during daylight. Problem solved.
The Netherlands, how appropriate (Score:3, Interesting)
The Flemish artist Jan van Eyck is often (exaggeratedly) credited with "inventing" oil paint. He did greatly pioneer its use in the fifteenth century.
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I find you finding it offtopic and irrelevant offensive!
My /. UID is prime. (Score:1)
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It was random chance for me, too. :P
Cool (Score:4, Insightful)
If its low power and cheaper then LCD or E-ink, lets hope it continues. Might even be more earth friendly.
And hey, i see big buck bunny :)
Where's the last breakthrough? (Score:3, Interesting)
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> I'm not holding my breath for this one.
Sorry to hear that. We were looking forward to seeing you turn blue again.
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What do you mean? An African or European blue?
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LCD costs and energy use have been consistently coming down for years now. At some point this sort of stuff is an inevitability if the trends continue.
display technologies (Score:5, Interesting)
IEEE spectrum had a good article in march on display technologies:
http://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/hardware/the-electronic-display-of-the-future/0 [ieee.org]
Electro-wetting? (Score:2, Funny)
Killer name.
Sounds like a combination of Cyberpunk [wikipedia.org] and Depends [depend.com]
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If that's the case, definitely something for iPad 2.0
Eindhoven == Philips (Score:3, Interesting)
The guy in the video mentioned that the firm is based in Eindhoven, where Philips' headquarters are located. After some googling I found out that Liquivista is indeed a spinoff of this company and therefore not a 'real' startup.
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Yes, I know. But Eindhoven = light city = Philips. And a stupid soccer team. It's culture!
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Aren't start-ups almost always spinoffs of a university or research institute? Liquavista is a spin-off of what used to be Philips Research (Natlab), one of last strongholds of real industrial research in Europe. It used to be a pretty amazing place, maybe the closest of what Europe had to the Bell Labs. Unfortunately it was messed up pretty badly during the last decade due to various splits, carve outs and a general move away from industry backed research.
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I had an intern-ship at Philips Natlab in 1997, working on electrowetting for displays in x-ray in their micromechanics department. We worked closely together with the guys investigating organic semiconductors for display technology. I worked on organic semiconductors during my Master Thesis at the University of Groningen.
My point is that from what I've seen, these things take a long time to get anywhere near market ready even if you have a working prototype. I hope they succeed.
I also think it's typical of
Electrowetting (Score:3, Insightful)
After "Hot Electron Injection", Electrowetting has to be one of the sexiest technology terms I've heard in recent years...
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Is it black with white pixels, or white with black pixels?
Baby it don't matter, they're all beautiful on the inside.
eInk? (Score:2)
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flicker-free? (Score:2, Interesting)
I have neurological problems and will lose consciousness if I look at any sort of flickering display, including CRTs. For some reason, plasma screen TVs also affect me (despite not "flickering" per se), and currently the only type of display I seem to be able to safely look at are regular LCD TVs/flatscreen monitors, with LED-lit screens giving me the least amount of trouble.
Even f
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Must be very frustrating. What is your disability called?
I imagine you'd like some motion-blur glasses.. how do you cope with the streets and airports lined with displays?
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Neurologist is unsure at the moment, but his initial guesses, based on symptoms, are photosensitive temporal lobe epilepsy or basilar type migraine. MRI and EEG both showed nothing, but that's true for a relatively large percentage of people who have problems. Neurology has come a l
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Maybe a weird question, but have you tried keeping a DC powered bulb or LED in your line of sight? This idea was triggered by something I once had to do years ago in analogue audio to keep a signal clean (I honestly have no idea what it was - this is from very long ago).
The idea is to enable you to still pick up that other information, but dominate the "signal" (or image, in your case) by data that is acceptable. With HiBri LEDs you can pretty much blind yourself, so maybe there's a point between black an
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Do higher-end CFLs do the same thing to you? They supposedly increase the AC frequency to 10kHz or so to eliminate flicker. I am prone to migraines myself and generally hate flourescent lighting but have used CFLs for about five years without any problem.
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