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Paper Thin Video Screen - The morning news video? | ||
Discussion by kaputnik with 22 Replies.
Last Update: December 15, 2005, 8:02 pm (View Latest) | Page 1 of 2 pages. | ||
According to this story the paper thin screens are able to project any form of recorded video content as available on our modern day monitors and t.v. screens with a little bit of hazyness. Seems astounding.
The implications of this will be the slow loss of the written word. Imagine picking up a box of serials, with instructions of usage, on the back of the box playing a demonstration movie instead of having out a few paragraphs on the most enticingly mouthwatering way to eat your crunchies. Or, imagine handing out your business card with the rear face playing out a video of yourself making a presentation on your product or service. Now that really would make an impact.
Someday you may just end up staring at someone while on the rapid transport system and the person being stared at would find it 'very normal' because he/she has regular TV broadcasting being played out all over the jacket.
Fri Oct 14, 2005 Reply New Discussion
QUOTE (kaputnik)
It seems that Siemens has pulled out one from the hat. Now, I've wondered what it would be like to be reading a news paper with video clips in it before, Siemens' researchers have gone and actually made it happen.According to this story the paper thin screens are able to project any form of recorded video content as available on our modern day monitors and t.v. screens with a little bit of hazyness. Seems astounding.
<snip...>
The first thing I thought of was picking up a paper and seeing a moving wanted poster, right out of Harry Potter. Truth stranger than fiction, huh?
I do not think this will kill the written word (by itself, anyway). People are already inundated with TV and Internet video. Also, it will be quite expensive to use on food packaging for some time. The article I read said about 27 Pounds per square meter. What, $60 a sheet?
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
But really, how durable would these screens be? And how safe, what kind of power would they use? Surely you wouldn't need to plug your newspaper into a electric socket...
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
QUOTE (little0run)
Harry Potter style newspapers, that's what I first thought too when I read the newspapers part.But really, how durable would these screens be? And how safe, what kind of power would they use? Surely you wouldn't need to plug your newspaper into a electric socket...
Well, the article said 27 Pounds ($60?) per 1 meter sheet. If you only use them for the front page photos, you can probably get quite a few newspapers out of one sheet, so add only, say 20 cents per newspaper to the cost, which can be made up by one more advertisement. The newspapers are almost all ads these days anyway. The newsstand price is not what the paper costs; papers have sold at a loss for years. The ads pay for the production.
Durability I cannot speak to, but they are aparently very low power and I know there are paper-thin batteries in production. They should last long enough for anyone but my mother to read them (she piles up papers for weeks), but I would imagine library archiving will be difficult.
What they should do is put a small mylar solar-cell on every paper so you can recharge them
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
1. Paper doesn't have defective pixels
2. Paper can have a lot of damage and be still readable, try that with epaper
3. Paper doesn't need a powersource
4. Paper lasts much longer than a screen
5. Paper can be folded and put away
6. Paper is cheap and it is throwawayable.
7. Paper can be written on with about everything, you don't need a special stylus.
8. Paper can cut in about every size thinkable, and therefor has a lot of uses, tags, covers etc etc
Here ends my reasoning about why paper owns.
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
I, too, thought of Harry Potter right away! xD Could imagine hanging myself on the wall and moving around .. would be sorta cool.
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
You non-recycling person you.
And Kaputnik, you are full of it recently. Where do you phish for all this informatio
Cool though.
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
I can't imagine having this kind of technology in the near future. It seems like a giant leap that is too giant. A lot of things you see only in sci-fi movies would come true with this.
Sat Oct 15, 2005 Reply New Discussion
Sun Oct 16, 2005 Reply New Discussion
QUOTE (szupie)
Hmm, I want to know what these screens look like. Even if they are paper-thin, they may not have the properties of paper, like being able to bend and being non-shiny (If the screen is shiny, lights can reflect off of it into your eyes and prevent you from reading parts of the screen).I can't imagine having this kind of technology in the near future. It seems like a giant leap that is too giant. A lot of things you see only in sci-fi movies would come true with this.
I've been doing some research, and it can bend...

It's pretty cool (if we got to see the font...
But really, it is pretty thin...
Tue Oct 18, 2005 Reply New Discussion
As for the written word slowly disappearing: I don't see it happening for decades, if not longer. Unless Siemens or some other company can make their paper-thin screens fold up like newspapers to fit into briefcases and pockets, many commuters and other such people will still read the daily news the old-school way. And if the screen is small enough to fit into the pocket or briefcase without taking up all the space ... a lot of people aren't going to like it because they'll only get a few lines of text at a time (most newspaper readers scan in chunks to find leads, teasers, points of entry and other areas of interest before they actually jump into a story).
Anyway .. it's still fascinating to hear about what this company came up with. I'd love to see it evolve into something practical so that lots of people will want to use it.
Tue Oct 18, 2005 Reply New Discussion
However, it would also be quite cool because the graphics would be very much improved, the quality of the colour and it's resolutions would be increased and it would be a great seller! I think it would be a good thing to have but surely really expensive at the same time?!
Tue Oct 18, 2005 Reply New Discussion
basically it is going to be used to wrap round lamp-posts and such for advertising.
but it does have a more exicting future i surpose
Sat Oct 29, 2005 Reply New Discussion
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