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Aasemoon =)

EETimes.com - Sony develops 'rollable' OLED display - 1 views

  • Sony Corp. has developed a highly flexible OLED display that can be rolled around a pencil and continue to operate. The 4.1-inch diagonal isplay is 80-microns thick and offers 432 by 240 by RGB pixels resolution at 121 pixels per inch. It is an organic LED full color display driven by an organic thin-film transistor matrix.
Alister Cook

Buy Large 7 Segment LED Display - 1 views

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    Buy Large 7 Segment LED Display with very cost-effective rates from the leading company Qkits.com. Connects to your pc using a 3-wire RS232 connection.Has been tested at cable lengths of over 50 meters.
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: The Electronic Display of the Future - 0 views

  • It’s 2020, and it’s sunny outside. In fact, it’s so bright in your kitchen that you have to squint to see your grapefruit. You flip on your e-reader and the most recent e-issue of IEEE Spectrum pops up on-screen, the colors and text sharp and brilliant in the sunlight. There’s e-mail to answer, but you want to make the early commuter bus, so you roll up your e-reader and stuff it in your jacket pocket.
Syeda Arshiya

Samsung Galaxy Tab S Features: Be Updated - 0 views

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    Samsung Galaxy Tab S Features: Be Updated. Samsung is expected to release Galaxy Tab S which features largest display screen, finger print scanner. These days, Smartphones and Tablets became the storage of personal and even confidential data. Thus it is too important to present convenient and low level security options which helps to keep data locked tight. Most of the smart devices are now coming with finger print scanner. Rumors are on peak that Samsung developing a new Tablet as Samsung Galaxy Tab S with a finger print scanner embedded in it. This Tablet is expected to be released by the end of this year. Further they are launching this Tab in 8.4 inch and 10.5 inch variants. Rumors are also spreading as this Tab is using 2560 X 1600 resolution AMOLED display. Read on to know more about Samsung Galaxy Tab S. Read More: http://goo.gl/Cl0QIP
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: Organic Transistor Could Outshine OLEDs - 0 views

  • A transistor that emits light and is made from organic materials could lead to cheaper digital displays and fast-switching light sources on computer chips, according to the researchers who built it. Small displays made from diodes of the same type of materials (organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs) are already in commercial production, but the transistor design could improve on those and lead to applications where OLEDs can’t go. The new organic light-emitting transistor (OLET) is much more efficient than previous designs. It has an external quantum efficiency—a key measure of how much light comes out per charge carrier pumped in—of 5 percent. An OLED based on the same material has a quantum efficiency of only 2 percent. Previous OLET designs had an efficiency of only 0.6 percent.
alex devey

Compare the Market - 0 views

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started by alex devey on 22 Aug 12 no follow-up yet
Alister Cook

Buy Robot Electronics Kits Online - 1 views

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    Buy Robot Electronics Kits Online from the world biggest company qkits.com at very fantastic price rates. We are also providing audio tone control, Large 7 segment LED display, motor speed control etc.
Aasemoon =)

DNA-assisted solution processing for high-performance thin-film transistors - 0 views

  • Single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT)-based thin film transistors (TFTs) could be at the core of next-generation flexible electronics – displays, electronic circuits, sensors, memory chips, and other applications that are transitioning from rigid substrates, such as silicon and glass, to flexible substrates. What's holding back commercial applications is that industrial-type manufacturing of large scale SWCNT-based nanoelectronic devices isn't practical yet because controlling the morphology of single-walled carbon nanotubes is still causing headaches for materials engineers.
Aasemoon =)

QTC Technology - 0 views

  • The potential for the QTC material to transition from an insulator to a conductor (i.e. change its electrical property) is influenced by how much deformation the material is experiencing as a result of the applied mechanical pressure. QTC can be used to produce low profile, low cost, pressure activated switches or sensors that display variable resistance with applied force and return to a quiescent state when the force is removed. The difference between a QTC switch and a QTC sensor is arguably only the speed and amount of physical input required to achieve the required switching point or resistance range.
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: Flexible Flash - 0 views

  • 4 January 2010—Though flexible devices such as roll-up displays have been promised for several years, their commercialization has been stalled by a missing ingredient: a flexible form of flash memory. But researchers at the University of Tokyo have recently developed an organic, floating-gate nonvolatile memory that behaves like flash memory, which may solve that problem. While silicon-based flash memory is fine for the mass data storage found in cellphones, digital music players, and thumb drives, fabricating it requires high processing temperatures, thus ruling out its production on flexible substrates like plastic. Organic semiconductors, however, can be processed at temperatures well below the melting point of most plastics. What's more, "the cost of flash memory is too high to use in applications that require large arrays of memory," says Tsuyoshi Sekitani, an assistant professor in the University of Tokyo's department of electrical and electronic engineering and one of the researchers who developed the new memory. "But we can print our organic memory on flexible substrates and over large areas using inkjet printers. So costs will be low."
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