LG Display Reveals an 18-inch Flexiblem OLED Panel
Tags:
- lg-display
-
Display
-
Monitors
Last response: in News comments
exfileme
July 11, 2014 1:18:42 PM
HDTVs that can be rolled up could arrive in 2017.
LG Display Reveals an 18-inch Flexiblem OLED Panel : Read more
LG Display Reveals an 18-inch Flexiblem OLED Panel : Read more
More about : display reveals inch flexiblem oled panel
Amdlova
July 11, 2014 1:47:38 PM
As cool as this is (and it is pretty damn cool), I am really confused as to what you would practically use this for.
Maybe a HUD on a car? But soon the robots will drive us everywhere, so that isn't needed. Outside of a few extremely small niche markets I just don't see why all of the pressure to develop these kinds of flexible transparent displays.
Maybe a HUD on a car? But soon the robots will drive us everywhere, so that isn't needed. Outside of a few extremely small niche markets I just don't see why all of the pressure to develop these kinds of flexible transparent displays.
Score
2
TheMentalist
July 11, 2014 3:51:15 PM
memadmax
July 11, 2014 5:01:48 PM
SoupRice
July 11, 2014 6:18:06 PM
wurkfur
July 11, 2014 6:27:37 PM
Quote:
lol, One million megapixels! That would be fantastic! Sadly this is a mere 1 megapixel, or 1 million pixels. Take your pick, but you can't pick both.I just thought he was talking about the next generation of smartphones. They need 1 million megapixels for their 5 inch displays. Meanwhile, Angry Birds is running at 2 frames per second.
Score
0
The only practical use that I can think of for this is curved displays (Stick with captain obvious here)
Rather than having an Eyefinity/Surround setup with monitor bezels and multiple angles, wouldnt it be nice to have a single, ultra wide screen flexible monitor that can be flexed to fit your preferred viewing angle?
Rather than having an Eyefinity/Surround setup with monitor bezels and multiple angles, wouldnt it be nice to have a single, ultra wide screen flexible monitor that can be flexed to fit your preferred viewing angle?
Score
7
Solandri
July 12, 2014 1:24:20 AM
Quote:
As cool as this is (and it is pretty damn cool), I am really confused as to what you would practically use this for.This is the future of displays. The worst possible way to enclose a volume is with an object which is broad and flat. That maximizes the surface area for the enclosed volume, forcing you to waste material (additional space, weight, and cost) on casing. Phones, tablets, and laptops are all broad and flat - primarily because the screen forces them to adopt this shape.
With a rollable display, your phone or tablet can carried around in the form of a fat pen which houses the electronics and battery. Simply unroll the screen when you want to use it. A round shape minimizes the surface area for an enclosed volume, so is the most efficient use of materials and minimizes space, weight, and cost.
Have you ever transported a projector screen? Nobody carries it around fully extended - that'd be silly. They roll it up, then carry it around. Well, carrying it around fully extended is what people currently do with phones, tablets, laptops, monitors, and TVs. The same solution for projector screens is going to apply to your HDTV. The electronics will shrink to where it will all fit into a thin bar along one edge. You'll simply carry that around, hang it on the wall, and unroll the screen to watch TV.
Score
2
falchard
July 12, 2014 1:51:21 AM
knowom
July 12, 2014 2:56:23 AM
Not even a mention of price so we can assume these are "priced up the ass" as the phrase "wood" go!
This article was really more to do with flexible OLED paper-thin panel, but the transparent screen mention is far more interesting the applicable ways that could be useful is enormous would be perfect in devices like Google glasses love or hate the device or not and for stuff like car windshield huds for a more heads up display.
This article was really more to do with flexible OLED paper-thin panel, but the transparent screen mention is far more interesting the applicable ways that could be useful is enormous would be perfect in devices like Google glasses love or hate the device or not and for stuff like car windshield huds for a more heads up display.
Score
0
TadashiTG
July 12, 2014 8:24:47 PM
Quote:
lol, One million megapixels! That would be fantastic! Sadly this is a mere 1 megapixel, or 1 million pixels. Take your pick, but you can't pick both.The Source of this article itself made the same mistake. Probably the writer of this article didn't care much about correcting the obvious, or wanted to be honest in covering the news.
Score
1
Reaver192
July 13, 2014 5:46:41 AM
Haravikk
July 13, 2014 8:47:59 AM
Quote:
As cool as this is (and it is pretty damn cool), I am really confused as to what you would practically use this for.I'm not so sure about the use for smaller screens, but this could be an awesome technology for replacing projectors; instead of a huge TV permanently fixed to the wall, you could have a more discrete roll-up screen more like a projector screen (minus the projector), allowing you to hide it away when not in use. It would also avoid the contrast issues of projection since it's more like a regular screen. This could also be very useful as an alternative for curved screens with a fixed radius; with a suitable mounting kit you could instead curve the screen to the correct radius for your viewing distance, to get the experience just right.
Score
-1
biggestinsect
July 13, 2014 9:32:14 AM
dennisburke
July 13, 2014 10:19:57 AM
Quote:
The only practical use that I can think of for this is curved displays (Stick with captain obvious here)Rather than having an Eyefinity/Surround setup with monitor bezels and multiple angles, wouldnt it be nice to have a single, ultra wide screen flexible monitor that can be flexed to fit your preferred viewing angle?
+1 _ That's my thinking to. A wrap-around screen with a 170 degree viewing angle would be awesome for pc gaming.
Score
1
southernshark
July 13, 2014 2:24:06 PM
geraldfryjr
July 13, 2014 7:25:55 PM
loosescrews
July 13, 2014 8:42:12 PM
wtfxxxgp
July 14, 2014 12:21:49 AM
Pretty cool for multiple monitor setups, as someone has already said. Can you imagine a round room with full on wrap-around screens, an amazing sound system and a server filled with the most potent hardware to run this type of setup while playing Crysis (pick any one, they're all pretty unforgiving on hardware) in 4k? That's the future I'm looking forward to
Score
1
Brendan Goodbody
July 14, 2014 2:19:11 AM
broafka
July 14, 2014 11:38:47 AM
Quote:
Pretty cool for multiple monitor setups, as someone has already said. Can you imagine a round room with full on wrap-around screens, an amazing sound system and a server filled with the most potent hardware to run this type of setup while playing Crysis (pick any one, they're all pretty unforgiving on hardware) in 4k? That's the future I'm looking forward to
4k? You mean Over9000k?
Score
0
belardo
July 14, 2014 3:49:40 PM
belardo
July 14, 2014 3:52:26 PM
Not sure what the consumer application of this would be... costs have to be affordable, it'll need to be 4K and the option to NOT BE transparent... do we really want to see what is behind the display?
I also miss bigger BEZELS around big screen TVs... as they help separate the display from surroundings (Doesn't mean I prefer super huge bezels)
I also miss bigger BEZELS around big screen TVs... as they help separate the display from surroundings (Doesn't mean I prefer super huge bezels)
Score
0
danwat1234
July 14, 2014 8:19:46 PM
Durandul
July 15, 2014 12:43:13 PM
!