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A ITBIT ABOUT "O LED" T.V.'s
This new technology could replace plasma and LCD as the must-have for flat-panel displays.
Functionally, OLED is as similar to plasma and LCD as it is different. Like LCD, OLED comes in two flavors: passive and active. The active version is the one we care about, as it allows for accurate video display. An active OLED, like an active-matrix LCD, uses thin film transistors (TFTs) to regulate power to each pixel directly. Each pixel gives off its own light when supplied with electricity, which is more like plasma. Unlike plasma, the OLED substances (which have names like substituted dinapthyl anthracene and quinacridones) emit the light themselves, as opposed to the excited plasma emitting UV while a separate phosphor emits the visible light in response. This electroluminescence means that OLEDs don't need the power-hungry backlight of LCDs. Both of these factors mean that OLEDs require significantly less power than either of the other technologies. You Don't Know Thin That's not all. OLED offers even more possibilities. There's Flexible OLED (FOLED): Imagine a TV you can roll up like a newspaper or wrap around your arm. Then there's Transparent OLED (TOLED): Picture a TV on the windshield of your car. Won't that be great for the morning commute? (Other drivers will be so jealous as you plow into them while watching Spiderman 4 on your in-car HD DVD player.) More realistically, it could be used to superimpose a map that's linked to your car's GPS to tell you where you are and where you're going. Or maybe it could turn your eyeglasses into your own private movie screen. Perfect? The amusing thing is, you may not have to wait for OLED, at least on a small scale. You might even have one already. Some new cell phones, digital cameras, and car radios use OLEDs instead of LCDs because they require so much less power. Unfortunately, full-size OLED displays are, at best, years away. But a guy can dream, can't he? Images courtesy of Kodak and Universal Display Corporation
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