Thursday, 4 December 2008

Kodak announced its impressive, but expensive, world’s first consumer-level OLED photo frame back on September 17th. We now have a couple of video reviews of this little marvel (one from CNET below), giving us a better look at the 7.6-inch OLED display and its touch-sensitive border.
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Monday, 24 November 2008

A video has surfaced of a new innovation in OLED technology which is thought to be from the recent Japanese Flat Panel Display (FPD) trade show. It shows a full-color OLED display by Samsung which is capable of being folded in two, much like a sheet of paper. The display joins Samsung’s .05mm thick OLED that was also present at the show – flapping in the wind.
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Wednesday, 29 October 2008

Samsung has developed a new OLED display that is so thin, it literally flaps in the wind. The 4-inch “Flapping Display” is just 0.05mm thick, can produce 480×272 pixels with a 100,000:1 contrast ratio and reproduce 100% of the NTSC color gamut, making the picture quality comparable to that of most flat-panel displays on the market.
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Monday, 27 October 2008

The Japanese cell phone operator KDDI has today announced the release of the impressive, feature-packed Casio EXILIM W63CA cameraphone, featuring an 8.1-megapixel camera, a 3.1-inch AMOLED display, face detection, anti-shake technology and a simple feature rarely seen on cameraphones…a flash.
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Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Sony has produced a new line of OLED TV’s that are just 0.3mm thick – about the thickness of a playing card.
The super-thin panel was unveiled at a trade show in Toyko this week without official announcement.
Impress, a Japanese-language site says in a report that the 0.3mm-thick panel matches the older XEL-1 OLED in resolution (960 x 540) and characteristics but is 1/10th the thickness.
The display is 11 inches in size and is as yet unnamed.
Also on display at the show was a 0.2mm thick OLED display, but it is very small at only 3.5 inches.
There aren’t any technical specifications available as yet (besides the resolution) but reports say the picture is surprisingly sharp.
Sony has said the display could come to market easily within two to three years.
Photo credit: watch.impress.co.jp