Samsung Announces 'largest Ever' Organic LED Display
Talkback The main point of interest to me is the Epson use of inkjet technology to "print" the organic layer on the TFT screens. I think that the new technology promises not only a slimer, lighter screen but it may well be much less expensive than LED to...
[May 21, 2004, 22:45]
Samsung Announces 'largest Ever' Organic LED Display
Talkback OLED Technology is the Display for the future! A good Adress for more Infos: http://www.oled-display.net small, thin, low energy and so on!
[September 13, 2005, 14:38]
Display Screens Go Organic
News The two companies formed Polyink, which will create equipment and provide services to display companies looking to manufacture organic light-emitting diode (OLED) screens. Inkjet printer company Seiko Epson and start-up Cambridge Display Technology...
[June 17, 2002, 14:38]
Samsung Announces 'largest Ever' Organic LED Display
Talkback The same (or similar) material can be used for thin film transitor, organic memory etc. OLED is not just used as display. It is going to be imprtant technology in 5 years. A software company called OD Software Incorporated (ODSI) (http://www.odcad...
[June 4, 2004, 16:35]
Q&A: The Future Of Display Technology
News CDT, which licenses its patents and technologies to other companies, is working on polymer organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display technology, which promises thinner, lighter and less power-consuming displays than today's LCDs.
[September 2, 2002, 9:33]
Toshiba Goes Organic With New Displays
News Toshiba is applying its experience with liquid-crystal displays to create the next generation of screen technology known as organic light-emitting diode displays. Organic light-emitting diode displays -- also known as organic electroluminescent...
[May 31, 2001, 9:02]
Samsung Funds Organic Displays
News One manufacturing challenge, for example, is the sensitivity of the organic matter used in the display to moisture and oxygen. Samsung is teaming with Vitex Systems, a start-up developing organic light-emitting diode (OLED) technology, to build...
[February 26, 2003, 9:51]
Sony's New Display Prototype Lets Video Shine
News On Wednesday, the consumer electronics giant announced a prototype active-matrix display that takes advantage of organic electroluminescence (OEL) display technology. OEL displays use an organic polymer material with self-luminous properties that...
[February 8, 2001, 8:15]
Monitors: Your New Flexible Friend
News DuPont will provide technical input for combining organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, technology to flexible substrates, or bases, and for the manufacturing process. Lucent will be subcontracted to develop the organic materials and the design of...
[October 30, 2002, 10:19]
3D Displays Emerge As Commercial Reality
News Several three-dimensional display technologies are in the works, and organic light-emitting displays are poised to grow quickly, research firm iSuppli/Stanford Resources said on Wednesday. The market for organic light-emitting displays (OLEDs) will...
[November 13, 2003, 9:45]
Samsung Announces 'largest Ever' Organic LED Display
News Samsung SDI, the Korean giant's display division, has announced prototypes of a 17-inch active matrix organic light emitting diode (OLED) display. Organic LEDs are luminescent plastic semiconductors with the theoretical potential to replace LCDs...
[May 18, 2004, 18:35]
Plastic Electronics Factory Gets Funding
News Plastic Logic's organic TFTs are embedded within layers of conducting, semiconducting and insulating polymer materials. Silicon is produced at high temperatures and in vacuums this [organic polymer production] is a low-temperature process and...
[January 3, 2007, 16:12]
Xerox Scientist Sees Promise In Plastic
News Ong's work described how to create organic polymers, which could, in a sense, be used as ink to print circuits that would sharply lower the cost of manufacturing displays. Organic polymers are molecules that contain a long string of carbon atoms...
[December 4, 2002, 9:55]
Kodak's Tech To Allow 10p-depth Screens
News OLED (Organic Light Emitting Diode) is based on organic semiconductors that are able to emit light when fed with electricity. Kodak presented a new kind of display technology at CeBIT today. Philips, Seiko-Epson and Hoechst have all aquired OLED...
[March 23, 2001, 10:21]
Rupert Goodwins' Diary
Blog And now we have plastic light-emitting diodes: lumps of organic material that you can mix up like any other plastic, but that glow when you put a voltage across them just like the ordinary LEDs that have to be made in huge expensive semiconductor...
[November 1, 2002, 17:42]
Sony Speeds Development Of Next-gen Mobile Screens
News Sony is increasing its commitment to organic light-emitting diode display technology by further investing in a joint venture to produce OLED screens and use them in mobile devices. The joint venture, called ST-LCD, currently produces liquid-crystal...
[June 13, 2003, 8:46]
Double-sided LCD Screen Breakthrough Claimed
News Flexible display technology using organic polymers is also an emerging market, with Plastic Logic announcing on Wednesday that it will open a factory to make e-paper components in Dresden in 2008. Our new double-sided mobile display underscores...
[January 4, 2007, 14:41]
Sony Cranks Up OLED Screen Production
News Sony will begin high-volume production of next-generation displays using organic light-emitting diode technology. Many analysts had expected Sony to delay its OLED display production over technical issues.
[September 15, 2004, 10:05]
Rupert Goodwins' Diary
Blog One such is looking at what's going on with organic light-emitting diodes -- colourful glowing devices made out of plastic instead of semiconductors. As one panellist said, his kids were going to pick the organic LED Game Boy over the LCD model...
[May 27, 2002, 17:26]
Flexible LCD Unveiled By Samsung
News Other companies, meanwhile, tout organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), which also consume less energy than LCDs. The display is functionally similar to the LCD panels used inside TVs and notebooks, but with a crucial difference.
[November 29, 2005, 8:50]

