magine a device about the size of a pen that can replace your smartphone, tablet, and even your wearable devices. Hidden inside this slender canister is a large, rollable touch screen with unparalleled resolution and contrast that will let you Skype, watch movies, or map out directions, and it’s all powered by a battery that lasts for days, not hours. That might seem far-fetched, but this isn’t some futuristic prop from the set of the next Star Trek film. It’s called the Universal Communications Device, and it’s coming to a store near you in as little as five years.
The device described above is the unofficial mascot of one of today’s top companies that’s hard at work to transform our future with the displays of tomorrow, Universal Display Corporation. Known affectionately (and confusingly) as the UCD from UDC, it’s one of a plethora of new devices that will employ advanced applications of OLED display technology to, quite literally, change how we see the world.
OLED takes the spotlight
Short for Organic Light Emitting Diode, OLED screens are often touted for their incredible picture quality, which is considered by videophiles to be superior to traditional Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs). But it’s the malleability of OLED screens that has captured the public’s attention, and will create a paradigm shift in how we use displays in the near future. That’s because OLED displays can be created not only from glass substrates (as is common right now) but also on bendable plastic materials that allow for a host of other applications.
To find out more about how and why OLED will become the dominant display technology in the coming decade, we recently spoke to Janice Mahon, who serves as VP of Technology Commercialization for Universal Display Corp.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/the-future-of-seen-rollable-oled-displays/#ixzz40pVATbGR
Follow us: @digitaltrends on Twitter | digitaltrendsftw on Facebook
magine a device about the size of a pen that can replace your smartphone, tablet, and even your wearable devices. Hidden inside this slender canister is a large, rollable touch screen with unparalleled resolution and contrast that will let you Skype, watch movies, or map out directions, and it’s all powered by a battery that lasts for days, not hours. That might seem far-fetched, but this isn’t some futuristic prop from the set of the next Star Trek film. It’s called the Universal Communications Device, and it’s coming to a store near you in as little as five years.The device described above is the unofficial mascot of one of today’s top companies that’s hard at work to transform our future with the displays of tomorrow, Universal Display Corporation. Known affectionately (and confusingly) as the UCD from UDC, it’s one of a plethora of new devices that will employ advanced applications of OLED display technology to, quite literally, change how we see the world.OLED takes the spotlightShort for Organic Light Emitting Diode, OLED screens are often touted for their incredible picture quality, which is considered by videophiles to be superior to traditional Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs). But it’s the malleability of OLED screens that has captured the public’s attention, and will create a paradigm shift in how we use displays in the near future. That’s because OLED displays can be created not only from glass substrates (as is common right now) but also on bendable plastic materials that allow for a host of other applications.To find out more about how and why OLED will become the dominant display technology in the coming decade, we recently spoke to Janice Mahon, who serves as VP of Technology Commercialization for Universal Display Corp.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/the-future-of-seen-rollable-oled-displays/#ixzz40pVATbGR
Follow us: @digitaltrends on Twitter | digitaltrendsftw on Facebook
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