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BusinessWeek April 29, 2010 Cliff Edwards |
Qualcomm's Bright Low-Power Screen So-called reflective displays use microscopic mirrors to create iridescence. |
The Motley Fool August 23, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Qualcomm Fires a Bullet with Butterfly Wings The patent prince bets more than $2 billion on a next-generation display technology. |
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. |
InternetNews September 10, 2004 Michael Singer |
Qualcomm Buys Display Technology Startup Qualcomm develops and applies advanced technologies for wireless telecommunications products and services. The company will purchase iMoD display technology as part of its acquisition of Iridigm. |
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 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 August 2012 Prachi Patel |
Quantum Dots Are Behind New Displays They make LCDs brighter and could challenge OLEDs for future TV dominance |
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. |
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. |
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. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Alfred Poor |
What's New With Displays Our guide explains state-of-the-art display technology and looks ahead. |
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). |
PC World March 1, 2008 Melissa J. Perenson |
Good Looks Ahead: What's Next for HDTV? Thinner, more stylish, and better-connected sets are on the way. But don't expect huge price cuts anytime soon. |
BusinessWeek April 29, 2010 |
How 'Mirasol' Imitates Butterfly Wings Qualcomm's low-power screen imitates nature. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2012 Alfred Poor |
Next-Generation Display Technologies New materials will mean brighter, sharper screens |
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. |
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. |
Home Theater December 9, 2003 |
Flat-panel Frenzy The buying public can't seem to get enough of new flat-panel televisions. The coming months should be good ones for manufacturers and retailers, according to a December 9 report from DisplaySearch, a research firm specializing in the flat-panel market. |
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 July 27, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Cage Match: LCD v. OLED Some rivalries are more exciting than others. A few even offer obvious investment opportunities. |
PC World July 23, 2007 Dan Tynan |
Shopping for a Big-Screen TV? Think LCD Good-bye, plasma; hello, LCD: The HDTV tide is turning, and LCD is rising to the top. |
The Motley Fool January 27, 2004 Dave Marino-Nachison |
As the E-Page Turns Philips' rollable screen might help rekindle interest in electronic reading. |
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. |
IEEE Spectrum September 2011 Ritchie S. King |
Expectations Dim for OLED Lighting High costs could keep white organic-light-emitting diodes off the shelf |
The Motley Fool May 26, 2010 Anders Bylund |
When Will the Incredible OLED Shortage End? OLED screens look great, but only if you can get a hold of one. Patience, young grasshopper. |
The Motley Fool July 14, 2010 Anders Bylund |
New iPads Are Coming -- but OLED Screens Aren't Some dreams are too beautiful to become a reality ... yet. |
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 December 2006 Gary Merson |
Philips 42PF9831D LCD HDTV Philips' 42PF9831D is the first and only LCD reviewed that doesn't exhibit one of LCD's biggest problems: motion lag. |
Macworld July 2000 Frith Breitzer |
Flat Panels: The Next Generation Macworld Lab Evaluates 6 New Displays to See Whether Digital Makes a Difference |
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. |
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. |
Technology Research News January 26, 2005 |
Oil and Water Drive Display Researchers from Extreme Photonix and the University of Cincinnati have combined water and oil in a technology that promises bright, energy-efficient displays. |
National Defense April 2009 Grace V. Jean |
Computers That Even Soldiers Can't Break In a few years, soldiers could pull from their pockets paper-thin mini computers that they can unfold or unroll to display maps, streaming video and the latest mission briefings. |
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? |
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. |
The Motley Fool December 13, 2011 Anders Bylund |
How Universal Display Plans to Grow Beyond Samsung Another global electronics giant is getting very cozy with the OLED technologist. |
The Motley Fool July 19, 2004 Rich Smith |
NYSE LCD IPO TBA LG Philips LCD, a 50-50 joint venture between Philips Electronics N.V. and Korean electronics king LG Electronics, should debut on the New York Stock Exchange this week. |
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. |
The Motley Fool July 1, 2004 Rich Smith |
The Three Faces of Glut The reason that LG Philips Electronics will be going public to raise some investment money is already jinxing the expected results of the public offering. |
The Motley Fool May 8, 2009 Anders Bylund |
Behold The Future! OLED Gadgets Arrive Several of Universal Display's licensees and partners are finally bringing real OLED-based products to the shelves of Best Buy and the electronic aisles of Amazon. |
The Motley Fool March 24, 2011 Eric Bleeker |
Should Qualcomm Be On Your Watchlist? With 3G booming, Qualcomm is finally living up to its dot-com hype. |
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... |
PC Magazine October 12, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
Readius: The Ultimate E-Reader? E-books and e-readers never lived up to their hype, but Philips Polymer Vision has a slick, easily portable, new rendition. |
The Motley Fool May 31, 2011 Anders Bylund |
How OLED Really Hits Its Stride The real OLED revolution will come when we redefine the term "screen printing." |
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. |
The Motley Fool July 7, 2010 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
B&N, Amazon, and Sony Race to Zero Sony fires the latest shot in the e-reader price war. |
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. |
The Motley Fool January 6, 2012 Tamara Rutter |
Which Stock Will Control the Future of Mobile Devices? Intel and Qualcomm go head-to-head in mobile computing. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2008 Courtney E. Howard |
Small science makes a big influence Micro-electro-mechanical systems and nanotechnology continue to solve challenges in military and defense applications. |
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. |