New LCD Flatscreen Concept: A Wedge of Plastic 94
SimianOverlord writes "The Register reports on an innovation in the field of flat panel LCD screens that promises cheaper screens with the same quality using existing manufacturing technology. A Flat Projection Display is created by bouncing light into a thin wedge of plastic from the bottom of the screen, at just the correct angle to allow the rebounded light to escape at the correct pixel. "We have to play around with the image to make sure that the pixels don't bunch up" explained Prof. Travis, the inventor. "If you don't do that the image can appear a little like an image reflected off water" The new technology has already attracted interest from a major TV maker, but don't expect them in your laptop until projector minaturization catches up."
HUD / glasses (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:HUD / glasses (Score:5, Insightful)
The display still requires a traditional projector to transmit the image through the display. I suppose that having two projectors attached to your glasses may induce a small amounts of neck strain.
Re:HUD / glasses (Score:4, Funny)
Re:HUD / glasses (Score:3)
Lasers can be built onto a chip, so why not build a laser-based projection device and use optical fibers to route the light to the screen?
First stage of this though would be to build a laser-based projector to couple with this technology for laptop displays.
Re:HUD / glasses (Score:1)
The problem may be one of size and not weight, in which case HUD's could be a lot easier than laptop displays.
Re:HUD / glasses (Score:1)
Some where I saw some on is working on stearing light by non mechenical means. So combind both and large display with large & variable resolution could be possible.
transparence and miniaturisation (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Too Late (Score:1, Informative)
The idea may be simple (even I thought of it when I was about 13) but there are problems to be overcome, such as the pixels bunching due to the rays coming out at different angles, and black spaces between pixels due to the same problem. (Both overcome using a screen placed at a critical distance) He's also written completely new raytracing software (as you'd know if you'd read the w
Re:Too Late (Score:1, Informative)
Slippery pixels (Score:4, Funny)
Anyone else picturing all their pixels sliding down to the corner of the screen in a pink mess..?
Maybe (Score:2)
TV Windows? (Score:2, Interesting)
official site: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:official site: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:official site: (Score:2)
Re:official site: (Score:3, Insightful)
To be fair, projected images don't photograph well.
Re:official site: (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:and, like all innovation and progress.... (Score:2, Insightful)
If I had a dime... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know exactly why it is but it's a fact. I'm thinking of making a list. It may make for funny reading ten years from now.
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:1)
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:2)
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:2)
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:2)
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:1)
Re:If I had a dime... (Score:2)
another term might be handy... (Score:5, Interesting)
The big advantage that I can see with this is that a reasonable quality plastic wedge/prism should be much cheaper to replace when it gets damaged. I'm sure the initial cost will still be high, but the expensive stuff can be a little more protected.
eric
Re:another term might be handy... (Score:2)
And also inside most binoculars and also, surprisingly, when you use the 'night' position of your rearview mirror.
Re:Still Not Cheap Enough (Score:3, Insightful)
CRT alignment is still adjusted by a human. Injection molding does not require human intervention.
I call bs... (Score:2)
Must be why Samsung makes CRTs with onboard magnetic alignment systems (rudimentary GPS aqs it were) that don't require realignment based on hemisphere...
Injection molding does not require human intervention.
I've got 30 injection mold machines lined up and working just outside my office, and the amount of human intervention required to keep them producing error free products keeps several staff busy making adjustements, to everything from the pvc recipe to
Re:Still Not Cheap Enough (Score:2)
LCDs have been sliding in price too, and faster since they're at an earlier tim in the curve, and will eventually catch up. Techniques with cheaper production facilities will have a steeper price curve and cross into the lowest section sooner. Provided they get it to work wel
HUD on fighter aircraft (Score:5, Interesting)
Cheap silicon wins again -- it's been supplanting copper, now optics.
In other news.... (Score:5, Funny)
"With it, ladies all over may customise their clothing with any pattern or picture they want", beamed the millionaire dressmaker.
However, he declined comment on what would happen to the otherwise transparent dress after it's power supply, rated for 23 minutes of use, failed.
Re:In other news.... (Score:1)
Re:In other news.... (Score:2)
http://us.news1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/rids/20041
Actually seen something like this (Score:3, Interesting)
The "dress" had the panes on certain strategic locations if you know what I mean. The controller was setup in such a way that the panes were opaque most of the time but now and they would flash very fast transparent.
The trick of course being that your brain requires time to see things. Especially when you are not trying to look like a complete pervert. You clearly saw the thing become transparent but
Re:Actually seen something like this (Score:2)
Instead of making it cheaper (Score:3, Insightful)
And manufacturers, here's a clue for your QC people: there is no such thing as "acceptable amount of defective pixels". I don't care if they're not touching or not, if they work above 30 degrees Celsius or when submerged in KY jelly. If I'm buying a new car there are no dents or scratches on it, so why should your screens be any different?
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:2)
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a 'good point', but that's not what the topic is about. He was likely modded as troll for bitching about something that has little relation to thi
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:4, Informative)
> that produces millions of displays. It's hard to do. Life sucks, sorry.
Throwing in high numbers isnt really a convincing counter-argument. After all
you also return defective 512MB DIMMs, although they contain 536,870,912 individual
bits. Or defective 160GB harddrives which contain, let me see, how many bits?
I know that its difficult to produce such a large panel without any error. But
OTOH there are ways to fix the problem:
a) panels can be binned. Actually the ISO standard suggests this, but manufacturers
simply dont do it. If they were to sell zero-defect panels as such, all non-
zero-defect panel would have to have at least 1 defect. Currently manufacturers
prefer to sell "0-5 defects" instead of "0 defects" and "1-5 defects".
b) panels can be repaired. The most visible types of defect are stuck-on pixels,
and stuck sub-pixels (which change the color of the intended pixel). With laser
technology any pixel can be "burned away" and be turned into less annoying
stuck-off pixels. While this doesnt make the panel "zero-defect", it certainly
would combine well with suggestion a), because getting a "1-5 defects" item at
lower price would only mean 1-5 dark pixels. Which is more tolerable than todays
surprise-bouquet of colored pixels.
c) panels can be designed fault-tolerant. It would perfectly be possible to use
redundancy to tolerate the loss of pixels. If, eg, 2 transistors were used
instead of one, with separate control wiring, the loss of one wouldnt matter.
Only when both were to be damaged (both of any one pixel), the pixel would
actually be unusable. This method costs panel space to implement, of course.
You wouldnt be able to fit the highest resolution into lowest dimension anymore,
or would have to improve the process resolution. This is the price to be paid
for higher yield.
Unless customers start to vote with money, things wont change. Today people complain
about defective pixels, but only few actually go out and get a "zero defects
guaranteed" product. Most just hope the best, and some try to return the bad ones
with a made-up excuse.
Marc
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
All sofas have holes in them. So it does matter how small they are.
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:2)
What a brilliant idea. Let's skip building a new cheaper technology that couldn't possibly have this problem and instead perfect a method that insures that 786,432 pixels are working! Afterall, any engineer who works with prisms for a living is an ideal candidate to switch gears over to LCD production!
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:2)
Scrapping an LCD screen because of one dead pixel at the QC stage is out of the question; however the screens could be sorted and the good ones could be sold at a slight premium. After all, how long does it take to perform a dead/stuck pixel test? 5 seconds? 10?
And if a new technology comes along and solves this problem, then h
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
And forces anyone who cant afford the premium displays to buy one which definitely has a dead pixel.
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:2)
Troll or not, I just had to reply to this one sentence in your ramblings.
I you're buying a new car, there are no scratches or dents on it. True. But you do NOT want to know what happened with your car before your received it.
I know a lot of people in the automotive industry, ranging from people who build cars to people who sell them. There are a lot of things that could happen to your car prior to
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:2)
Hello?
Please, I'm begging you oh please get me of this 233 with broken battery compartment. I cannot bear it!
No more... No MOrE I cAN't TaKE iT.
Hello?
Thank you.
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
Re:Instead of making it cheaper (Score:1)
Prism... (Score:3, Insightful)
First thing that came to mind was the film Brazil [filmsite.org] and the tiny CRTs with big lenses.
Pretty clever.
One way to acheive is mirror array at 'base' ala DLP. DOn't know if this is the approach, but if so, corrections for each pixel would be pretty easy to handle in firmware.
I also have a fantastic new tech! (Score:4, Funny)
Take off anywhere, land anywhere. Fast, secure, simple.
Just wait until airplane miniaturization catches up.
--
Wiki de Ciencia Ficcion y Fantasia [uchile.cl]
Uneven shrinkage & warpage = distortion (Score:3, Interesting)
Invention is easy. Manufacturing in high quantity, high quality, low price is the actual hard part. And undercutting the deflating price-performance curve of other well-established competing technologies is even harder. That said, I do wish them luck.
Re:Uneven shrinkage & warpage = distortion (Score:3, Informative)
From the article, it sounds like they correct for this in software. You'd need to calibrate the firmware specially for each new display, but it's doable and can be automated.
Skeptical that calibration can fix this (Score:2)
I hope so, but don't see how it can work. The problem is getting a seamless image between the part of the image that bounces N times inside the wedge before exting versus the one that bounces N+1 times. The upper edge of the light that bounces N times inside the wedge before exiting to the screen must magically fall adjacent to the
Re:Skeptical that calibration can fix this (Score:1)
Re:Uneven shrinkage & warpage = distortion (Score:1)
That being said 500k sounds about right for the tool if it is a large lens (the 50" screen mentioned perhaps). The cycle times would I think be longish...perhaps 2 or 3 minutes if it is thin, much longer if it is thick. That means that in a given day you can make less than 500 of these even if everythi
Re:Uneven shrinkage & warpage = distortion (Score:2)
It's not too difficult to make corrections in firmware after assembly. As for the injection molding, follow on steps could make the prism faces really flat. Lapping comes to mind. Lapping works well for glass too. Pouring prismatic glass sheets is not difficult. In manufacturing think in terms of cycle time for each step. Production is limited by the longest step. Glass prisms can be poured as a contimuous process, sheared, and lapped. This works for polycarbonate as well.
So, no, I don't see any manufatr
Re:Uneven shrinkage & warpage = distortion (Score:2)
We anneal them in an oven for a couple of hours.
Now, how could this be used to produce perfect optical-quality surfaces inexpensively as doing this without softening the plastic to an undesireable quality? Simply anneal the part in the oven at a high pressure. Whatever surface that it rests upon MUST BE OF PERFECT OPTICAL SMOOTHNESS AND QUALITY. Done correctly, it can even allow
Watch out for patents because (Score:4, Interesting)
This is basically doing the same but replacing light with a projector source.
Imagine a specially moulded radially displaced set of panes, that had a central gun firing at them in a 180 arc, and the timing
Make sense?
the viewing angle would have to be compensated a bit...
Check new scientist for the story on lighter windows.
Re:Watch out for patents because (Score:2)
Transparent aluminum [thefreedictionary.com] gets closer and closer!
EricWilliam Shatner on my cereal box [ericgiguere.com]
Re:Watch out for patents because (Score:2)
"Computer, using computational chemistry find transparent aluminium alloy"
"bleebly bleep"
"Coleco? Hang on, we went to far back in time!"
Re:Watch out for patents because (Score:1)
Now I can finally relocate my work area to that hot-air balloon I've had my eye on.
Free Space Display (Score:3, Interesting)
Vaporware redefined (Score:1)
Hrm, what about this? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Oblig: That guy's my lecturer (Score:1)
But, back on topic, I did see (what I assume was) an earlier prototype of this last year on an Open Day. From what I saw of it, the picture was quite good, however it had the same shortcomings as any other image produced by a projector - it wasn't that bright. So people who say this will not replace CRTs are probably right, but this isn't really its intended market.
This is designed for people who want a home cinema but don't ha
English displays (Score:4, Interesting)
There was a memorable conversation with Alan Sugar who bought the Sinclair
Reviewer: Do you have the rights to the Pandora display?
AS: We have the rights to all the Sinclair patents
R: Do you plan any products based on Pandora?
AS: Have you seen it?
R: Yes.
AS: Well then.
Oddly, no Pandora based products were ever produced.
New? (Score:2)
why not just do away with the screen completely? (Score:1)