Similar Articles |
|
PC World April 2005 Melissa J. Perenson |
OLED: New Star of the Small Screen A raft of sharp, bright, and power-thrifty displays for new small devices arrive. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 Tekla S. Perry |
OLED TV Arrives For the past decade, two television display technologies -- liquid crystal and plasma -- have fought for supremacy, and although the LCD won the battle, it is about to lose the war. A third contender's is the organic light-emitting diode, or OLED. |
Information Today September 2000 |
E Ink Agreement with Lucent Will Help Develop Electronic Paper Agreement may accelerate the time when e-books and newspapers resembling flexible plastic sheets will be available for millions of users. |
Chemistry World June 5, 2009 Nina Notman |
Color e-books just over the page E Ink Corporation is to be brought by Prime View International in Taiwan for approximately $215 million. The companies say this should speed to market the colored ink devices that are currently being trialled. |
Technology Research News February 11, 2004 |
All-plastic display demoed Researchers from Philips Research in the Netherlands have demonstrated a fast, flexible computer display that is nearly as thin as paper. |
The Motley Fool July 8, 2011 Arunava De |
How to Capture Returns During a Lighting Revolution OLED displays mean glitzy screens and an eventual opportunity for profits. |
CIO August 1, 2001 John Edwards |
Easy Writer Digital paper promises to revolutionize publishing... |
The Motley Fool April 21, 2005 Carl Wherrett |
Universal Displays Its Potential The nano company sees its stock jump 30% after a deal with Samsung. The OLED market is in its infancy, but it's growing fast. |
Home Theater April 13, 2007 Mark Fleischmann |
OLED Coming This Year The long wait for OLED may be over before the end of the year. Sony says it will begin selling these next-generation flat panel TVs in late 2007 and other manufacturers are readying them for 2009. |
The Motley Fool December 8, 2009 Anders Bylund |
A Kodak Moment for OLED Displays The final chapter of Kodak's OLED history has been written. The company is selling its OLED technologies to Korean technology giant LG Group. |
PC Magazine June 25, 2003 Alfred Poor |
The Big Screen Giant displays and TVs get big backers. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2012 Prachi Patel |
Quantum Dots Are Behind New Displays They make LCDs brighter and could challenge OLEDs for future TV dominance |
Technology Research News May 21, 2003 Eric Smalley |
Flexible display slims down Researchers from E Ink Corp. have produced a high-resolution electronic display that is 0.3 millimeters thick. |
PC Magazine March 10, 2004 Alfred Poor |
Flexible Display Forecast After years of slow but steady progress, momentum is picking up for one of technology's Holy Grails: the flexible plastic display. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Alfred Poor |
What's New With Displays Our guide explains state-of-the-art display technology and looks ahead. |
PC Magazine April 20, 2005 John R. Quain |
A Display's Best Friend Displays can never be too flat--or too bright. Scientists are using diamond nanodust to create FED (field-emitter display) displays that combine the best of CRT with the packaging of the LCD. |
The Motley Fool October 1, 2007 Anders Bylund |
Sony Launches the OLED TV Revolution Sony fires the starting shot of the inevitable race to replace the television screens of the world with organic light-emitting diode technology, which Universal Display develops and sells. Investors, take note. |
BusinessWeek September 20, 2004 Otis Port |
The Signs They Are A-Changin' Startup Magink's "digital ink" may change everything from billboards (a $5 billion U.S. business) to laptops. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2006 John McHale |
Universal Display to Provide Portable Flexible Communications Device to Navy Under terms of the contract, Universal Display engineers will deliver an active-matrix PHOLED display prototype built on flexible metallic foil integrated into a wrist-worn wireless communication device. |
Defense Update Issue 3, 2005 |
How OLED Works? OLED devices use less power and can be capable of high, higher brightness and fuller color than liquid crystal microdisplays. |
Home Theater June 7, 2005 Darryl Wilkinson |
High-Definition OLED Panel Gets Supersized Samsung announced that they've developed the world's first 40-inch active matrix OLED display. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2005 Stephen Forrest |
The Dawn of Organic Electronics Organic semiconductors are strong candidates for creating flexible, full-color displays and circuits on plastic. |
The Motley Fool August 26, 2008 Anders Bylund |
How to Profit From the OLED Explosion The total market for advanced active-matrix OLEDs should skyrocket in the next few years. Which companies will benefit form this explosion? |
The Motley Fool January 27, 2004 Dave Marino-Nachison |
As the E-Page Turns Philips' rollable screen might help rekindle interest in electronic reading. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2012 Alfred Poor |
Next-Generation Display Technologies New materials will mean brighter, sharper screens |
Home Theater July 23, 2008 |
Powers Join to Make Next-Gen Flat Displays The Japanese government is bringing together several major TV makers in a joint effort to mass-produce next-generation OEL (organic electroluminescent) displays of 40 inches and up within a decade or so. |
The Motley Fool October 7, 2010 Travis Hoium |
Should Cree Be Worried About OLEDs? OLEDs pose the biggest threat to the surge in LED usage. |
BusinessWeek May 19, 2011 Karen A. Frenkel |
Innovator: Carnegie Mellon's Richard McCullough Through his startup Plextronics, the professor is working on conductive "ink" that could lay the groundwork for thin, flexible phones and TVs. |
The Motley Fool September 26, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Universal Display Making Big Strides The company has announced a string of technical advances that appear to bring OLEDs closer to our everyday life than ever before. Investors, take note. |
PC World March 2001 Yardena Arar |
Big and Flat: LCD Monitor Prices Thin Out Prices for big LCDs and bigger plasma displays are falling. Could one of these screens be on your desktop (or wall) soon? |
The Motley Fool October 11, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Dead Pixels at LG.Philips High-tech doesn't necessarily mean high profits -- or any profits at all. It's awfully hard to turn a profit when your cost of goods sold exceeds revenues, and that's how bad things are at LG.Philips right now. Investors, take note. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 John Matson |
Tech Watch: Theater Home A new wave of ultra-efficient light-emitting diodes could one day turn your entire house into a flat-panel display. |
Fast Company Mark Sullivan |
Report: Samsung To Ramp Up Manufacturing Of Flexible iPhone Displays Samsung's display business is planning to spend $7.47 billion to expand its capacity to manufacture flexible OLED displays for future mobile devices, including iPhones. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2010 Jason Heikenfeld |
The Electronic Display of the Future Kindle, iPad, Droid -- these compact mobile devices are essentially all display. But the screens aren't all we'd like them to be. Yet. |
Technology Research News June 30, 2004 |
Paper promises better e-paper It is clear that computer displays will someday be thin and flexible enough to roll up, enabled by plastic electronics. |
PC Magazine April 28, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Digital Paper Display Yes, those are Japanese characters on Sony's LIBRIe e-book reader ($380 street), the first commercial product using Philips' and E Ink's electronic ink display technology. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 Ritchie S. King |
Expectations Dim for OLED Lighting High costs could keep white organic-light-emitting diodes off the shelf |
Technology Research News November 19, 2003 |
Plastic display circuit shines Researchers from the University of Tokyo have taken a step forward by fabricating on a glass surface a circuit that contains an organic light-emitting diode and an organic thin-film transistor. The diode was bright enough to be used in a display, according to the researchers. |
Wired August 2000 Paul Kunkel |
News Flash Scrap the presses - print and the Web are racing toward the biggest media merger in history. |
PC Magazine May 18, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Debut of the E-Paper Watch Seiko Epson and E Ink have announced the first watch ever to use an electronic-paper display. |
BusinessWeek September 10, 2009 Pete Engardio |
Losing Out on Flexible Displays Some high-tech industries based on taxpayer-funded research are gone even before U.S. companies put up their first plants. |
BusinessWeek May 10, 2004 Otis Por |
Just Two Words: Plastic Chips They can endow just about anything with computer smarts -- and they'll be cheap |
The Motley Fool August 23, 2010 Michael Kanellos |
Coming Soon: E-Books in Color Qualcomm has a color screen that looks remarkably similar to paper, shows videos, and consumes very little energy. |
The Motley Fool November 7, 2006 Anders Bylund |
You'll Hear More About Universal Display In the absence of major news, the next-generation display specialist just turned in a respectable quarter, well ahead of expectations. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2007 John Boyd |
Let There Be (a New Kind of) Light Organic LEDs seem set to transform the business of light bulbs. A major challenge all OLED manufacturers face is how to make their products cost-competitive with the ultracheap incandescent and fluorescent lighting products on the market. |
Defense Update Issue 3, 2005 |
Wearable, Wrappable Displays Universal Display Corporation (UDC) has developed Flexible OLED (FOLED) technology that will offer significant performance advantages over LCD displays that are built on rigid glass substrates and contain a bulky backlight. |
The Motley Fool May 12, 2008 Anders Bylund |
Universal Display Isn't Universal -- Yet The OLED revolution in video display and lighting technology is coming, just not quite fast enough for Universal Display. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2009 Rosaleen Ortiz |
Ohio Engineers "Ink" New Electronic Paper Technology Electrofluidic displays could make colorful electronic paper |
The Motley Fool October 5, 2009 Anders Bylund |
I, for One, Welcome Our New OLED Overlords The next generation of big-screen TV sets is coming fast. There are investor profits to be made in this revolution. |
Home Theater February 11, 2010 Mark Fleischmann |
Mitsubishi Shows 149-Inch OLED Display The catch is that it's pieced together from numerous four-inch panels. |