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IEEE Spectrum November 2006 Paul O'Donovan |
Goodbye, CRT The cathode-ray tube is on the way out. What will replace it? (Hint: it won't be plasma). Here's a look at all of the players. |
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. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2010 Jacques Lincoln |
March of the Pico Projectors They all do the same thing-get a big picture out of a tiny device. But there are lots of ways to do it |
IEEE Spectrum September 2012 Alfred Poor |
Next-Generation Display Technologies New materials will mean brighter, sharper screens |
Home Toys August 2005 Rainer L. Kuhn |
Gen II LCoS: The Power Behind the Perfect Picture Liquid-crystal-on-silicon (LCOS) is an innovative reflective microdisplay architecture that combines semiconductor and liquid crystal display technologies to provide clear performance advantages in image clarity and quality, black level performance, response time, and accuracy of color rendition. |
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. |
Technology Research News June 1, 2005 |
Computer Displays: Points of Light Different types of displays use different means to produce and control pixels. CRT, LCD, and plasma technologies manipulate light electronically. Another way is through micro-opto-electro-mechanical systems (MOEMS). |
IEEE Spectrum August 2012 Prachi Patel |
Quantum Dots Are Behind New Displays They make LCDs brighter and could challenge OLEDs for future TV dominance |
IEEE Spectrum January 2013 Glenn Zorpette |
Lighter, Brighter Displays Electrowetting combines the best of LCD and E Ink. The Korean technology colossus Samsung will be the first to market a display based on electrowetting. |
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 Toys February 2003 Richard Railey |
Projection: Which is the best choice for your needs? When it comes to Home Video Projection there seems to be a compromise between the amount one is willing to spend and the quality available at the right price. DLP, LCD or CRT projectors; what do these terms mean and does the latest buzz mean it is the best? |
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. |
PC Magazine June 25, 2003 Alfred Poor |
The Big Screen Giant displays and TVs get big backers. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2011 Wager & Hoffman |
Thin, Fast, and Flexible Semiconductors Amorphous oxide semiconductors promise to make flat-panel displays faster and sharper than today's silicon standby. |
IEEE Spectrum October 2011 |
LCDs' Bright Future Three separate advances are making TVs lighter and cheaper |
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 November 2012 Benjamin Gross |
How RCA Lost the LCD RCA owned the early patents but failed to commercialize the liquid crystal display |
Home Toys June 2005 |
A Consumer Guide: Choosing the Right Large Screen Display for Your Home You don't have to be a "techie" to use a large screen display. In fact, many are as easy to use as a regular TV. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2006 Tekla S. Perry |
Winner: Black, White, and Readable The low-contrast flat-panel readouts ubiquitous to today's consumer electronics products may soon be obsolete, thanks to a tiny Dublin-based start-up |
BusinessWeek February 2, 2004 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Buying The Right HDTV: Which Type Of Screen? Tips for choosing a high-definition television display panel, part two |
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? |
T.H.E. Journal June 2004 |
Glossary of Audiovisual Terms The following is a primer of terms you'll likely encounter when purchasing projectors, monitors and other presentation products. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2010 Joshua J. Romero |
Winner: Pixel Qi's Everywhere Display Pixel Qi's screen gives you color when want it, power when you need it |
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. |
Home Theater April 3, 2002 |
Sharp's 30" Widescreen LCD TV Arrives The two hottest trends in video displays are DLP projection and LCD television. Sharp Electronics Corporation is on top of both of them. On April 3, Sharp announced the retail availability of its first 30" widescreen liquid crystal television... |
IEEE Spectrum February 2013 Andrew J. Steckl |
Electronics on Paper Paper electronics could pave the way to a new generation of cheap, flexible gadgets |
Home Theater May 27, 2002 |
Madrigal Imaging MP-D1 Want the best big picture available for under a quarter million? Madrigal lays claim to that title with its new MP-D1... |
CIO January 1, 2003 Mindy Blodgett |
Thin Is In Displays for computers and handheld devices keep getting lighter and thinner, and now two new technologies -- OLEDs and E Ink -- promise to take this trend to the next level in 2003. |
Technology Research News November 5, 2003 |
Process prints silicon circuits Researchers from Princeton University have demonstrated a way to use a flexible stamp to print thin-film transistors. The researchers' eventual goal is to directly print electronics on flexible surfaces. |
PC World December 2003 Michael Riggs |
Really Big Shows Got your eye on a supersize digital TV? Should you spring for plasma, LCD, or DLP? What about HDTV? The choices can be daunting, but we can help. |
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. |
T.H.E. Journal November 2005 Todd Moffett |
Display Technology `Tradeoffs' Educators face an array of options when shopping for the latest displays. To choose wisely, first carefully assess the needs of your schools. |
Popular Mechanics September 28, 2009 Tyghe Trimble |
Is Qualcomm's Mirasol The Future of Low-Power Displays? What makes Mirasol a unique display technology? |
IEEE Spectrum November 2006 John Boyd |
Flat Panels on Display This year's FPD expo, in Yokohama, Japan, boasted triple-view screens, triple-duty pixels, and a squished-down version of the old TV picture tube |
IEEE Spectrum October 2006 Brian R. Santo |
Acronym Addiction When you live on the cutting edge of technology, there are, literally, no words to describe it. Instead we have acronyms. Lots and lots of acronyms. ABT... BEOL... CSP... etc. |
IEEE Spectrum April 2005 Alan Sullivan |
3-Deep New displays render images you can almost reach out and touch. A few small companies are just now emerging to try to carve out a piece of a market for volumetric displays that could be worth $1 billion by 2006. |
Chemistry World April 28, 2011 Mike Brown |
Carbon nanotubes in large panel displays US researchers have incorporated carbon nanotubes into organic light-emitting transistors to create devices that rival the performance of their silicon counterparts. |
PC Magazine February 17, 2004 Bill Howard |
What's New With Notebooks Notebook technology is about to get better, cooler, faster. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2008 John McHale |
Today's Military Simulation Displays More Accurate and Cost Effective Engineers at Barco-Xenia say liquid crystal on silicon or LCoS will provide the next generation of military simulation displays with real-world resolution. |
Technology Research News September 10, 2003 Kimberly Patch |
Display brighter than film Computer screens can't hold a candle to film where dynamic range is concerned, but that could change. A display with 10 times the brightness range of film and 300 times that of the average LCD promises to dramatically liven up medical images, video games and eventually even television. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2004 |
Display technology leaps to the next generation Liquid-crystal displays still dominate military and aerospace applications, but new technologies are set to introduce flexible, conformal displays that could be part of clothing or rolled up like a scroll. |
CIO September 1, 2002 Cormac Foster |
Painting a Rosy View Philips Research has developed a fabrication process that allows them to "paint" liquid crystals on any substrate without the need to sandwich it. The resulting displays are less expensive, faster to produce, and can eventually be far larger and more flexible than current LCDs. |
PC World July 22, 2002 Sean Captain |
Future Gear: Spielberg's Computer Many technologies from the movie Minority Report are tantalizingly close to becoming real. They just need more attention from developers. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2008 Monica Heger |
Microsoft Engineers Invent Energy-Efficient LCD Competitor Telescopic pixel display lets more light out than an LCD |
Home Theater March 26, 2002 |
Next Wave: Hi-Def LCD Screens Liquid crystal displays have been around a long time, but only in the past year or so have they gotten the engineering attention they deserve -- as potentially movie-quality displays... |
Home Theater September 30, 2003 |
Philips 55PL9773 Liquid Crystal on Silicon display leads new evolutionary branch of rear-projection high-def monitors |
IEEE Spectrum May 2005 Samuel K. Moore |
Back From the Brink It was supposed to be easy. Marry two mature technologies--liquid-crystal displays and silicon complementary metal oxide semiconductor devices--and you'd get instant entry to the market for wide-screen, high-definition televisions. |
PC Magazine August 30, 2004 Alfred Poor |
LEDs Light Up LCD TVs Light-Emitting Diodes could offer richer colors and more environmentally friendly LCD monitors. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 Ritchie S. King |
Expectations Dim for OLED Lighting High costs could keep white organic-light-emitting diodes off the shelf |
Home Theater October 1, 2003 Mike Wood |
Philips Cineos 44PL977S LCOS HD Monitor The Philips Cineos display utilizes a relatively new technology called Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCOS), which creates an image in a display that's about half as deep as a typical CRT-based rear-projection system. |